Bongkot is an offshore gas filed in the Gulf of Thailand in operation since 1992. The average
CO2 content of the gas is 23%. Recently the decision was taken to produce gas from reservoirs
containing higher percentage of CO2. Evaluations of the new corrosivity and the efficiency of chemical
treatment are needed to estimate the remaining service life of the sealines which have been subjected
to top of line corrosion (TLC) since the production start-up. After detection of the first TLC case in this
field in 1996, different possibilities were investigated to reduce the corrosion rate to a reasonable value.
Batch treatment started in 2000 using double pig1, 2 and then Top of Line Corrosion Control Pig (TLCCPIG)
3 has been used since 2004. The weak point of the TLC control is the unavailability of a reliable
monitoring system. The development of condensing probe4 for TLC monitoring is completed but the
field testing is not yet performed. However, some of the sealines have been inspected but intelligent
pigging two or three times. The decision is taken to use intelligent pigging results for this study. The
paper describes the field conditions, summarizes the inspection results, and explains the methodology
used for the evaluation of the corrosivity and batch treatment efficiency; the objective being the
evaluation of the remaining life of the sealines.