Including the Sea Eagle, the third-largest floating production storage and off loading vessel in the world.
 

With the Sea Eagle, Shell Petroleum Development Company increased Nigeria's crude oil production by 140,000 barrels per day. The vessel is designed to receive and process up to 170,000 barrels of gross liquid per day and 100 million standard cubic feet of gas per day, with a storage capacity of 1,400,000 barrels of crude oil.
 

Tyco Fire & Security supplied the emergency shutdown (ESD) and fire and gas (F&G) systems for the entire installation, with a total of 1,800 separate inputs and outputs. Inputs monitor smoke detectors, specialist flame detectors and gas detectors, while outputs are used to operate safety systems and shut down process systems on the vessel.
 

We also supplied water deluge systems made of highly corrosion-resistant materials for open deck areas. In addition, we provided assistance with the communications network design, and configured the triple-redundant hardware. The ship and adjoining 4 wellhead platforms are rated Safety Integrity Level 3, the same as nuclear power plants.
 

Our solution includes separate stand-alone ESD and F&G systems on the Sea Eagle itself, and integrated systems on the mooring platform and each of the wellhead platforms. The mooring platform is classified as a hazardous area, and we supplied systems housed in purged cabinets to meet this requirement.
 

The entire ESD/F&G installation is interconnected via an approved safety local area network running over fiber optic media. The Sea Eagle control room contains a large matrix fascia to give system overview control, with detailed system information being provided through operator workstations.
 

By meeting the complex demands of this hazardous project, Tyco Fire & Security once again proved it was a company you can rely on when it counts.
 

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