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Butinge Oil Terminal

Butinge Oil Terminal

Historic Project: Groundbreaking Work From Earlier in Fluor’s History

Client: ORLEN Lietuva (formerly Mazeikiu Nafta)

Location: Butinge, Lithuania


Business Segments: Urban SolutionsEnergy Solutions

Industries: FuelsInfrastructure

Map showing the location of Butinge Oil Terminal

Executive Summary


The NAFTA project in Lithuania consisted of two job sites, Butinge Oil Terminal and Mazeikiai Refinery Pump Station. The Butinge Oil Terminal Project provided export and import facilities to handle crude oil for the required six to eight million tons per day capabilities. Mazeikiai Refinery included pipeline pumps as well as a crude pipeline refinery bypass to transport crude oil through the onshore pipeline to the storage tanks at the Butinge Oil Terminal. This was the first major petroleum project investment in Lithuania after the country became an independent republic.

Fluor was the managing contractor and conducted studies for the project, performed preliminary engineering and prepared a cost estimate and a lump sum, turn-key bid package of $300 million. We then carried out detailed engineering, procurement, construction management and commissioning for the offshore single-point mooring and pipeline, an onshore terminal and pipelines and pump stations.

Client's Challenge


The Mazeikiai NAFTA facilities at Butinge, Lithuania, handle an annual throughput of eight million tons of crude oil in the exporting mode and five to six million tons in the import mode. Facilities include a 36-inch, 7.5 km offshore pipeline; 22-inch pipeline to oil tankage; three 50,000-cubic-meter oil tanks; pump stations; and a single-point mooring terminal.

The crude oil single-point mooring catenary anchor leg mooring facility was designed to accommodate tankers of up to 80,000 metric tons dead weight. It is connected to shore by means of a 36-inch-diameter, 7.5-km-long submarine pipeline.

Onshore terminal storage facilities contain three 50,000-cubic-meter floating roof tanks for crude oil as well as fixed roof tanks for storing diesel fuel and slop oil. The facilities also include a pump for loading tankers and for transferring product between the Butinge terminal and the Mazeikiai Refinery some 91.5 kilometers (57 miles) away.

A 22-inch crude oil pipeline transports crude between the refinery itself and the tank storage facilities nearby. A pump station allows crude transfer to the terminal.

Fluor's Solution


Fluor conducted studies for the project, performed preliminary engineering and prepared a cost estimate and a lump sum, turn-key bid package of $300 million. We then carried out detailed engineering, procurement, construction management and commissioning for the offshore single-point mooring and pipeline as well as an onshore terminal, and pipelines and pump stations. The single-point mooring, off the port of Klaipeda, had an offloading capacity of up to 4,932 cubic meters per hour.

Our work scope also included SCADA (supervisory control and pipeline data acquisition system), crude oil shipping pumps, the onshore pipeline, a storage tank for “early oil scheme” piping directly to booster pumps, the 22-inch onshore pipeline linking the Mazeikiai Refinery to the Butinge Terminal, a 110 KV power line from Sventoji substation to the terminal's 110 KV substation, three 50,000-cubic-meter floating-roof tanks for crude oil, fixed-roof tanks for storage of diesel fuel and slop oil, a wastewater treatment plant and three terminal substations.

The engineering, procurement and construction management portion of the project began in July 1995. Construction required that some foundations be kept under steam to defrost the ground.

To meet the expedited construction schedule requirements, the project team chartered the world's largest cargo plane, the Antonov AN-124, to bring in all the needed equipment and supplies.

The project was completed ahead of schedule in July 1999.

Conclusion


The project, on 1,239 hectares (3,062 acres) of land, encompassed the refinery, the single-point mooring (floating buoy) terminal that was the first in the Baltic Sea, tanks, pipelines, power substations, crude oil shipping pumps and a wastewater treatment plant.

Fluor and our contractors (one international contractor, and remaining contractors from within Lithuania) completed the project under budget, while reaching 2.5 million safe work hours.