BRESSAY DEVELOPMENT LTD - Officers (free information from.
Shetland News shares this article from The Conversation by John Underhill, Heriot-Watt University and Patrick Corbett, Heriot-Watt University. A large oil find has been declared 60 miles west of Shetland, off the north coast of Scotland. It’s being described as the UK’s “largest undeveloped discovery”. Taken at face value, this is exciting news for an industry still reeling after the.
This paper discusses the most important field development challenges of Mariner and Bressay with focus on subsurface related issues on Bressay. The fields have 11-14 o API oil. The reservoir viscosity is from 65 cp to 540 cp. No other offshore fields have yet been developed with 540 cp oil viscosity or more. Challenges include achieving high oil rate and recovery. Unconsolidated sand means.
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Bressay Field Development Project. 20 mei 2020. Bressay Field Development Project.
BDL is a community development company based in Bressay. Managed by a team of volunteer directors BDL aims to support Bressay residents, provide on-island facilities and services and promote and encourage visitors to Bressay. Based in the former primary school BDL run the Speldiburn Cafe and Good As New Shop, artist studio spaces, recycling service and offer rooms to hire.
The achievement is thanks to the determination of Bressay Development Ltd, whose members could not bear to see the place stand empty. Mr Scott, once a pupil at the school, said it was “a really important day for the community”. It showed the resilience of the locals and marked the island “moving forward in a positive way”. Losing the school had had a “major impact”, Mr Scott said.
Bressay is linked by a frequent ferry service that takes just 7 minutes to cross to the centre of Lerwick, yet the two might well be a world apart. The irony is that Bressay developed long before Lerwick. The crews of the Viking longships which arrived in Shetland in the 700s and 800s preferred to land in sheltered inlets where the water was shallow. The shore of the Lerwick side of Bressay.