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Bangladesh's Summit LNG says FSRU anticipated to resume ops in September

Bangladesh's Top LNG expects to finish rearranging and reconnecting work on its drifting storage and regasification system (FSRU) by Augustend, it said, presuming beneficial weather and sea conditions.

Ship-to-ship transfer operations at its FSRU, which serves as a drifting LNG import terminal, are expected to be prepared in September, the business included.

Top LNG had actually stopped briefly operations on the FSRU after it was harmed by a steel structure when Cyclone Remal lashed Bangladesh in May, and it stated force majeure on LNG deliveries.

The FSRU was then sent out to Singapore for repair work, however then come across problems reconnecting with the disconnectable turret mooring (DTM) plug in the subsea landing pad due to an unanticipated entanglement and damage.

In a statement late Thursday, Summit stated it is working with its partners to resume the FSRU operations, however adverse climate condition at sea and almost no undersea visibility have actually posed considerable barriers for remedying the damage.

To reconnect the FSRU, the DTM plug needs to be repositioned on the centre of the landing pad located on the seafloor, said Summit, including, it has actually contracted a more powerful crane to move the DTM which is anticipated to reach the site on Aug. 22.

Presuming favourable weather and sea conditions, Top anticipates finishing the repositioning and reconnection of the DTM plug by the end of August and ship-to-ship transfer ready in September.

With a population of over 170 million people, Bangladesh counts on LNG to satisfy power need. It has actually seen annual imports increase, and in 2015 shipped in 5.2 million metric tons of the fuel, according to information from analytics firm Kpler.

Summit's FSRU is one of Bangladesh's 2 drifting LNG import terminals, with a regasification capability of 500 million cubic feet each day that products gas to the national grid. It began commercial operations in April 2019.

(source: Reuters)