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Successful test aboard ‘Norwegian Cinderella’ holds promising future for automated offshore rigs

A successful test in the North Sea aboard a drilling platform named after a fairy tale princess promises to reduce the number of people needed on offshore rigs and shift those jobs to control centers onshore.

Houston oilfield service company Baker Hughes and the Norwegian energy company Equinor successfully tested automated and remote-controlled systems that were recently installed aboard the Askepott, an offshore drilling rig named after the Norwegian version of the fairy tale princess Cinderella.

Working under a contract awarded by Equinor last year, Baker Hughes teamed up with Scottish offshore rig maker KCA Deutag to install systems that would allow the Houston oilfield service company to cut their staff aboard offshore rigs by more than half.

Tasks such as cementing, fluid engineering and directional drilling can now be performed remotely by an operator working out of a control center miles away in the coastal city of Tananger. Connected to Askepott by an underwater fiber optic cable, Baker Hughes staff have performed their first cementing jobs via remote control on a pair of oil wells in the North Sea’s Oseberg field.

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