China completes construction of record

travel2024-04-19 21:11:117

The photo taken on March 12, 2024, shows the construction site of the Haiji-2 deepwater jacket structure in south China's Guangdong Province. (Photo provided by China National Offshore Oil Corporation) SHENZHEN, March 12 (Xinhua) -- China has completed the construction of a record-breaking deepwater jacket structure in the southern province of Guangdong, according to the China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) on Tuesday. The 338.5-meter Haiji-2 jacket will operate at an average depth of 324 meters and weighs 37,000 tonnes, breaking Asian records for structure height, weight, operational depth and construction speed, the company said. Jackets are constructions affixed to the seabed, serving as foundations for offshore oil and gas production facilities. Haiji-2 utilizes a newly developed 420-megapascal ultra-high-strength steel plate that is considered an innovative and cost-effective lightweight design for large-scale ocean platforms, according to Fu Dianfu at the CNOOC research institute. The jacket also showcases the country's capability of building ultra-large deepwater fixed jackets at depths of over 300 meters, said Wang Huoping, an engineer at the company's Shenzhen branch. Haiji-2 is expected to be installed soon at an oilfield in the Pearl River Mouth Basin sea area. 

(Editor:Wang Su)

Address of this article:http://www.fidosfortywinks.com/1819/grinding-shaft-com/

Popular

Lawsuit filed over new Kentucky law aimed at curbing youth vaping

Posts misrepresent a photo of a Ukrainian soldier balancing on his prosthetic limbs

Mixed reaction to Three Waters repeal by end of next week

A new Washington state law does not offer cash for reporting hate speech

Caitlin Clark fans won't receive Indiana Fever jerseys until August due to Nike blunder

Lawsuit seeks to force ban on menthol cigarettes after delays by Biden

Western leaders in Kyiv, G7 pledge support for Ukraine on war anniversary

A Danish hippie oasis has fought drug sales for years. Now, locals want to tear up the whole street

LINKS