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The Louisiana Offshore Oil Port (LOOP) is a deepwater
port A port is a maritime facility comprising one or more wharves or loading areas, where ships load and discharge cargo and passengers. Although usually situated on a sea coast or estuary, ports can also be found far inland, such as Ham ...
in the
Gulf of Mexico The Gulf of Mexico ( es, Golfo de México) is an ocean basin and a marginal sea of the Atlantic Ocean, largely surrounded by the North American continent. It is bounded on the northeast, north and northwest by the Gulf Coast of the United St ...
29 kilometers (18 nautical miles) off the coast of
Louisiana Louisiana , group=pronunciation (French: ''La Louisiane'') is a state in the Deep South and South Central regions of the United States. It is the 20th-smallest by area and the 25th most populous of the 50 U.S. states. Louisiana is border ...
near the town of Port Fourchon. LOOP provides tanker offloading and temporary storage services for crude oil transported on some of the largest tankers in the world. Most tankers offloading at LOOP are too large for
U.S. The United States of America (U.S.A. or USA), commonly known as the United States (U.S. or US) or America, is a country primarily located in North America. It consists of 50 states, a federal district, five major unincorporated territo ...
inland ports. LOOP handles 13 percent of the nation's foreign oil, about a day, and connects by pipeline to 50 percent of the U.S.
refining {{Unreferenced, date=December 2009 Refining (also perhaps called by the mathematical term affining) is the process of purification of a (1) substance or a (2) form. The term is usually used of a natural resource that is almost in a usable form, ...
capability.


Description

Tankers offload at LOOP by pumping crude oil through hoses connected to a Single Buoy Mooring (SBM) base. Three SPMs are located 8,000 feet (2.4 km) from the Marine Terminal. The SPMs are designed to handle ships up to 700,000 deadweight tons (635,000 metric
tonne The tonne ( or ; symbol: t) is a unit of mass equal to 1000 kilograms. It is a non-SI unit accepted for use with SI. It is also referred to as a metric ton to distinguish it from the non-metric units of the short ton (United States c ...
s). The crude oil then moves to the Marine Terminal via a 56-inch (1.4 m) diameter submarine
pipeline Pipeline may refer to: Electronics, computers and computing * Pipeline (computing), a chain of data-processing stages or a CPU optimization found on ** Instruction pipelining, a technique for implementing instruction-level parallelism within a s ...
. The Marine Terminal consists of a control platform and a pumping platform. The control platform is equipped with a
helicopter A helicopter is a type of rotorcraft in which lift and thrust are supplied by horizontally spinning rotors. This allows the helicopter to take off and land vertically, to hover, and to fly forward, backward and laterally. These attributes ...
pad, living quarters, control room, vessel traffic control station, offices and life support equipment. The pumping platform contains four 7,000- hp (5 MW)
pump A pump is a device that moves fluids (liquids or gases), or sometimes slurries, by mechanical action, typically converted from electrical energy into hydraulic energy. Pumps can be classified into three major groups according to the method they ...
s, power generators, metering and
laboratory A laboratory (; ; colloquially lab) is a facility that provides controlled conditions in which scientific or technological research, experiments, and measurement may be performed. Laboratory services are provided in a variety of settings: physicia ...
facilities. Crude oil is only handled on the pumping platform where it is measured, sampled, and boosted to shore via a 48-inch (1.2 m) diameter pipeline. The distance to shore puts LOOP outside U.S.
territorial waters The term territorial waters is sometimes used informally to refer to any area of water over which a sovereign state has jurisdiction, including internal waters, the territorial sea, the contiguous zone, the exclusive economic zone, and potent ...
, and special agreements in international sea law are made to allow ships from other countries to come under U.S.
jurisdiction Jurisdiction (from Latin 'law' + 'declaration') is the legal term for the legal authority granted to a legal entity to enact justice. In federations like the United States, areas of jurisdiction apply to local, state, and federal levels. Jur ...
to visit LOOP.


Onshore

LOOP's onshore facilities, Fourchon Booster Station and Clovelly Dome Storage Terminal, are located just on-shore in Fourchon and 25 miles (40.2 km) inland near
Galliano, Louisiana Galliano is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) on the Bayou Lafourche in Lafourche Parish, Louisiana, United States. As of 2020, its population was 7,100. It is part of the Houma– Bayou Cane– Thibodaux metro ...
. The Fourchon Booster Station has four 6,000-hp (4.5 MW) pumps which increase the pressure and crude oil flow en route to the Clovelly Dome Storage Terminal.


Storage

The Clovelly Dome Storage Terminal is used to store crude oil in underground salt domes before it is shipped to the various refineries. The terminal consists of eight caverns with a total capacity of , a pump station with four 6,000-hp pumps, meters to measure the crude oil receipts and deliveries, and a Brine Storage Reservoir. The brine reservoir is supersaturated with salts so as to prevent further degradation of the massive salt dome in which the eight caverns store the crude. This is because the supersaturated brine is much more dense than the crude oil, and as it is pumped into the caverns to push the crude to the surface and into the surface distribution systems. This results in virtually no loss of quality to the crude oil offload.


References

*


Further reading

* Read, William B. ''Loop: The First and Only Offshore Deepwater Oil Port Built in the United States'' (AuthorHouse, 2007) * Sasser, Charles E., et al. "Environmental management analysis of the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port." ''Wetlands'' 2.1 (1982): 249-261. * Theriot, Jason. "Building America’s First Offshore Oil Port: LOOP." ''Journal of American History'' (2012) 99#1 pp: 187-196. * Theriot, Jason P. ''American Energy, Imperiled Coast: Oil and Gas Development in Louisiana's Wetlands'' (LSU Press, 2014) * Thoms, R. L., and R. M. Gehle. "A brief history of salt cavern use." ''Proc. 8th World Salt Symposium'' Elsevier. 2000.


External links


LOOP LLC. - Home Page

LOOP Photos
Photos of the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port and an unloading ship, April 2002. {{Coord, 28.8852, -90.02508, type:landmark, display=title Ports and harbors of Louisiana Petroleum industry in the Gulf of Mexico Oil terminals Petroleum infrastructure in the United States Energy infrastructure in Louisiana