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Published:2021.06.13 News Sources:Qingdao Gute Ship Supplies Co., Ltd. Views: | |||
4 years! Two of the world's most advanced ultra-deepwater drilling vessels have been delayed
Offshore drilling contractor Transocean has again delayed the delivery of two eighth-generation ultra-deepwater drillships being built at Sembcorp Marine. By now, the delivery of the world's two most advanced drillships is more than four years behind schedule and at a cost of more than $850 million, nearly double the original cost. Even if all goes well, Sembcorp will have to wait another five years until 2027 to get paid in full.
Under the new agreement, the Deepwater Atlas is now scheduled for delivery in December 2021, when Transocean will pay $50 million to Jurong Shipyard, and the remaining $370 million will be paid within five years of delivery under a secured financing arrangement with the shipyard. Transocean has entered into an agreement with Beacon for the Deepwater Atlas, a drillship that will begin drilling in the Shenandoah project in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico beginning in the third quarter of 2022. Transocean expects Beacon to make a final investment decision on the Shenandoah project by July 31, 2021. In addition, the Deepwater Titan drillship is currently expected to be delivered in May 2022. Upon delivery, Transocean will pay 80% of the amount due to Jurong Shipyard, which is approximately $350 million. Under a deferred payment arrangement with the shipyard, the remaining 20 per cent, or about $90m, will be paid within five years of delivery. Transocean initially struck the Deepwater Titan charter with Chevron in late 2018 for $830 million, which at the time was the company's largest charter since 2013. The ship was originally scheduled to begin operating in the Gulf of Mexico in the second half of 2021, but Transocean said in May that Chevron had pushed the start date of the contract further to the second half of 2022. For now, Transocean noted that Chevron's Deepwater Titan lease has been pushed back again to the first quarter of 2023, with the lease term remaining unchanged at five years and the $830 million contract value. "We will receive two of the highest specification ultra-deepwater drillships in the world, as well as the only two capable of drilling and completing 20,000 psi Wells," said Jeremy Thigpen, Transocean president and CEO. Notably, as a key element of the latest agreement, we will have access to shipyard financing, which will significantly increase our liquidity by more than $450 million at the end of 2022." "In the face of the challenges posed by the outbreak, Transocean has demonstrated its understanding of the market situation and confidence in Sembcorp's ability to complete two highly complex drilship EPC projects," said Wong Weng Sun, Sembcorp's president and CEO.
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