Grapple Helps Out in
Storm's Wake
Navy rescue and salvage ship USS
Grapple (ARS 53) returned to its home-
port of Naval Amphibious Base Little
Creek on October 5, returning from the
Gulf of Mexico in support of Hurricane
Katrina relief efforts. Grapple, along
with Naval Sea Systems Command
(NAVSEA) and the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers set up a salvage priority to
clear area ports and restore oil plat-
forms. According to Grapple
Commanding Officer Lt. Cmdr. Kevin
M. Brand, the ship was en route the day
after Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf
Coast, ready to lend assistance.
"We basically restored all of the
Mobile (Alabama) ports," Brand said.
"We went into the Mobile River and
opened up the entire ship channel all the
way down. After that, we went to
Louisiana to re-moor oil platforms."
After evading Hurricane Rita, the ship
went to work in and recovered sonar
equipment that became entangled dur-
ing helicopter operations in the Gulf.
"We are relatively self-sufficient,"
said Brand, "We have everything we
need on board. We have all the divers,
we have our own chamber in the event
that divers need to decompress. If some-
thing happens, they just send us there.
(By Journalist 3rd Class John
Michael Cokos, Fleet Public Affairs
Center Atlantic)
Chevron Invests in
'Blind Faith'
Chevron is proceeding with the devel-
opment of the Blind Faith Field in the
deepwater Gulf of Mexico. The field
will be developed using a semisub-
mersible production facility, with first
production expected during the first half
of 2008. Chevron is the operator and
holds a 62.5 percent working interest.
Blind Faith is located in approximate-
ly 7,000 ft. of water, about 160 miles
southeast of New Orleans, on
Mississippi Canyon blocks 695 and 696.
The discovery well was drilled in June
2001 and encountered more than 200 ft.
of net pay in Miocene sands at depths of
20,900 ft. to 24,300 ft. A successful
appraisal well was drilled in 2004. The
field has an estimated gross resource
potential exceeding 100 million barrels
of oil-equivalent.
Ray Wilcox, Chevron's North
America Exploration and Production
Company president, said "This project is
a key asset in our deepwater portfolio
and is expected to provide significant
new oil and gas resources in the Gulf of
Mexico." Total capital costs for the proj-
ect will be approximately $900 million.
Chevron's partner in the Blind Faith
project is Kerr-McGee Corp., which
holds a 37.5 percent interest.
Initial production is expected to be
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