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CNA Centrica Plc

136.80
-1.20 (-0.87%)
06 Jan 2025 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Centrica Plc LSE:CNA London Ordinary Share GB00B033F229 ORD 6 14/81P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  -1.20 -0.87% 136.80 136.70 136.80 138.25 136.15 138.05 13,992,216 16:35:18
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Electric Services 26.46B 3.93B 0.7551 146.76 7.18B
Centrica Plc is listed in the Electric Services sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker CNA. The last closing price for Centrica was 138p. Over the last year, Centrica shares have traded in a share price range of 113.00p to 157.60p.

Centrica currently has 5,203,259,123 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Centrica is £7.18 billion. Centrica has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 146.76.

Centrica Share Discussion Threads

Showing 33626 to 33650 of 43725 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
10/1/2021
23:16
Cleverinvester
10 Jan '21 - 22:59 - 1838 of 1838 (Filtered)


0 0 1

START TALKING SENSE O WISE ONE

BETTER STILL START YOUR OWN THREAD O WEAK ONE

grupo guitarlumber
10/1/2021
22:59
Grupo Guitar Lumber, move on would you ? This group is the free speech group.You don't belong here.
cleverinvester
10/1/2021
22:57
Cleverinvester
10 Jan '21 - 22:52 - 1835 of 1836 (Filtered)


0 0 0
Cleverinvester
10 Jan '21 - 22:53 - 1836 of 1836 (Filtered)


0 0 0

grupo guitarlumber
10/1/2021
22:53
Almost like Aspers reincarnated , keeps saying he's filtering .But can't help himself, So embarrassing.
cleverinvester
10/1/2021
22:52
Waldron please move on to the grovey gang.your hanging round like a bad smell.
cleverinvester
10/1/2021
22:34
Cleverinvester
10 Jan '21 - 22:28 - 1831 of 1833 (Filtered)


0 0 0
Cleverinvester
10 Jan '21 - 22:29 - 1832 of 1833 (Filtered)


0 0 0

much like this newbie idiot

never posts any thing helpful but always ready to disrupt the thread with unhelpful information

waldron
10/1/2021
22:31
antonagis
Member since: 24 Jun 2020



516Posts
4Followers
3Following

you must foregive us but we do not take kindly to new boys in the hood trying make us suck eggs

waldron
10/1/2021
22:29
Great Waldron gone, All we need is that clown Aspers to vanish and I will be a very happy man .
cleverinvester
10/1/2021
22:28
Because Waldron is an ass.
cleverinvester
10/1/2021
22:27
Spirit Energy selects Allseas to remove disused oil platforms in East Irish Sea

Oil & GasUpstreamVessel

By NS Energy Staff Writer 08 Jan 2021

Allseas’ vessel Pioneering Spirit will remove the two 11,000-tonne platforms, which started producing gas in 1985
Spirit Energy

Allseas’ Pioneering Spirit being deployed to remove Spirit Energy’s gas platforms in the East Irish Sea. (Credit: Spirit Energy Limited.)

Spirit Energy has selected Allseas to lift the two disused gas production platforms DP3 and DP4 installations in Morecambe Bay in the East Irish Sea.

As per Spirit Energy, final preparations are underway for the removal of the two 11,000-tonne platforms using Allseas’ Pioneering Spirit vessel.

The vessel will operate at a water depth of 22m and will pull out the two platforms and transport them to shore for recycling.

It is also the first lift assignment for the vessel outside the North Sea. Working 40km off the coast of Blackpool, northwest England, the strong currents and shallow depths are expected to throw a different set of challenges for the vessel’s single-lift capacity.

The ongoing preparations include cutting and removing of risers, caissons and conductors, cutting the platforms’ steel legs, strengthening the topsides and installing made-to-measure lift points.

Spirit Energy project manager Donald Martin said: “After two years of preparing the DP3 and DP4 installations for removal, we’re now looking forward to one of the most significant milestones in the project with the removal of both platforms.

“Seeing the Pioneering Spirit in the East Irish Sea will be an impressive sight –its capacity and single-lift methodology made it a good fit to safely execute this project.”
DP3, DP4 are part of Spirit Energy’s installations in Morecambe Bay

The two platforms were used to produce gas and are part of Spirit Energy’s eight installations in Morecambe Bay.

As the field has matured now, the reserves the platforms previously tapped into were produced by the larger, manned Central Morecambe platform nearby.

The 12 wells, which were connected to the DP3 and DP4 platforms, have already been plugged and abandoned. The plugging of the wells was carried out using a slant rig to accommodate the angle at which the wells were drilled in the 1980s.

The DP3 and DP4 installations first produced gas in 1985.

waldron
10/1/2021
22:20
IT HELPS ME BLOCK OUT IDIOT POSTS THAT DO NOT GIVE ANY HELPFUL INFORMATION

I HOPE YOU GET THE JEST

BESIDES THIS THREAD HAS BEEN SUPERCEDED BY A NEW MONITORED THREAD THANK GOODNESS set up by Skinny

ANTON give us a break as you are but a newbie, many of us have been playing this game a long time so give us some credit

waldron
10/1/2021
22:14
Waldron... why fill this forum up with non stop huge posts? Too much
antonagis
10/1/2021
22:06
Spirit Energy selects Allseas to remove disused oil platforms in East Irish Sea

Oil & GasUpstreamVessel

By NS Energy Staff Writer 08 Jan 2021

Allseas’ vessel Pioneering Spirit will remove the two 11,000-tonne platforms, which started producing gas in 1985
Spirit Energy

Allseas’ Pioneering Spirit being deployed to remove Spirit Energy’s gas platforms in the East Irish Sea. (Credit: Spirit Energy Limited.)

Spirit Energy has selected Allseas to lift the two disused gas production platforms DP3 and DP4 installations in Morecambe Bay in the East Irish Sea.

As per Spirit Energy, final preparations are underway for the removal of the two 11,000-tonne platforms using Allseas’ Pioneering Spirit vessel.

The vessel will operate at a water depth of 22m and will pull out the two platforms and transport them to shore for recycling.

It is also the first lift assignment for the vessel outside the North Sea. Working 40km off the coast of Blackpool, northwest England, the strong currents and shallow depths are expected to throw a different set of challenges for the vessel’s single-lift capacity.

The ongoing preparations include cutting and removing of risers, caissons and conductors, cutting the platforms’ steel legs, strengthening the topsides and installing made-to-measure lift points.

Spirit Energy project manager Donald Martin said: “After two years of preparing the DP3 and DP4 installations for removal, we’re now looking forward to one of the most significant milestones in the project with the removal of both platforms.

“Seeing the Pioneering Spirit in the East Irish Sea will be an impressive sight –its capacity and single-lift methodology made it a good fit to safely execute this project.”
DP3, DP4 are part of Spirit Energy’s installations in Morecambe Bay

The two platforms were used to produce gas and are part of Spirit Energy’s eight installations in Morecambe Bay.

As the field has matured now, the reserves the platforms previously tapped into were produced by the larger, manned Central Morecambe platform nearby.

The 12 wells, which were connected to the DP3 and DP4 platforms, have already been plugged and abandoned. The plugging of the wells was carried out using a slant rig to accommodate the angle at which the wells were drilled in the 1980s.

The DP3 and DP4 installations first produced gas in 1985.

waldron
10/1/2021
22:04
COURIER UK


Fife jobs boost after ‘milestoneR17; decommissioning award
by Mark Lammey
January 8 2021, 7.45am

e.

Up to 50 Fife jobs will be created after a major decommissioning win.

A Scottish firm has clinched its maiden contract for dismantling offshore platforms at a facility in Methil.

CessCon Decom has announced that the decommissioning base at Energy Park Fife (EPF) will welcome exploration and production firm Spirit Energy’s DP3 and DP4 platforms this year.

The project is expected to create between 30 and 50 new jobs at EPF, with recruitment to get under way in the coming months.

The topside modules for both platforms will be delivered simultaneously by Swiss firm Allseas’ huge Pioneering Spirit heavy lift vessel, which has a capacity of 48,000 tonnes.

CessCon Decom will decontaminate, dismantle and recycle the topsides, as well as the jackets and subsea structures.
An artist’s impression of CessCon Decom’s Fife facility.

In total, the company will process more than 23,000 tonnes of material.

The two platforms were used to produce gas from the Morecambe Bay area of the East Irish Sea, starting in 1985.

CessCon Decom declined to provide a value for the contract, which was awarded by Allseas via a competitive tendering process, but described it as a “major” milestone.

The business is a subsidiary of CessCon Ltd, headquartered in Livingston and owned by chief executive Lee Hanlon and project and operations director Frank Braaten.

Both men used to work for Norwegian firm AF Gruppen’s decommissioning business.

Mr Hanlon said it was “excellentR21; to see his team’s “hard work and determination” to establish the facility being recognised by Allseas and Spirit.

The company first signalled its intent in 2018, when it announced the signing of a head of terms pact with Scottish Enterprise and Fife Council for the project.

The two organisations have supported CessCon Decom with the planning, development and licensing of the facility.

CessCon Decom made further progress last year when the Scottish Environment Protection Agency granted it a waste management licence.

Authorisations for handling radioactive substances and discharging water were expected to follow.

In August last year, the Scottish Government, through its Decommissioning Challenge Fund, awarded Fife Council £645,000 for “a programme of enabling works to facilitate the development of the £3 million facility”.

Mr Hanlon said development work at the facility had been completed.

Upgrades included extending the quayside and equipping it with a strengthened concrete laydown and dismantling area boasting water collection and treatment facilities.

All engineering, decontamination and dismantling operations on the Spirit Energy project will be completed in-house by CessCon staff, Mr Hanlon said.

Spirit Energy, whose majority shareholder is British Gas owner Centrica, went with CessCon because of the decommissioning company’s commitment to building a safety culture.

The operator also wanted to create work for the UK supply chain.

Neil McCulloch, executive vice president, technical and operated production, Spirit Energy, and co-chairman of the Oil and Gas Authority’s Decommissioning Taskforce, said: “Having been built in the UK and providing gas for the country for more than 30 years, it is fitting that these two platforms will now be dismantled and recycled at a new UK yard built specifically for decommissioning projects like this.

“The UK is building a strong level of expertise in successfully decommissioning assets safely, and we look forward to working with CessCon Decom on our latest project to return to a Scottish yard.”

Scotland’s Energy Minister Paul Wheelhouse said: “The award of this major onshore decommissioning contract is evidence of the growing strength of Scotland’s decommissioning supply chain and the capabilities, knowledge and skills held within the industry.
© DC Thomson
Paul Wheelhouse MSP Minister for Energy, Connectivity and the Islands

“I am delighted to see how recent investment through the Scottish Government’s Decommissioning Challenge Fund and the Vacant and Derelict Land Fund has been used to develop the decommissioning potential of Methil Docks and to help secure major projects within this key sector.”

waldron
10/1/2021
22:02
Nice one Skinny.
neilyb675
10/1/2021
22:00
Spirit Energy selects Allseas to remove disused oil platforms in East Irish Sea

Oil & GasUpstreamVessel

By NS Energy Staff Writer 08 Jan 2021

Allseas’ vessel Pioneering Spirit will remove the two 11,000-tonne platforms, which started producing gas in 1985
Spirit Energy

Allseas’ Pioneering Spirit being deployed to remove Spirit Energy’s gas platforms in the East Irish Sea. (Credit: Spirit Energy Limited.)

Spirit Energy has selected Allseas to lift the two disused gas production platforms DP3 and DP4 installations in Morecambe Bay in the East Irish Sea.

As per Spirit Energy, final preparations are underway for the removal of the two 11,000-tonne platforms using Allseas’ Pioneering Spirit vessel.

The vessel will operate at a water depth of 22m and will pull out the two platforms and transport them to shore for recycling.

It is also the first lift assignment for the vessel outside the North Sea. Working 40km off the coast of Blackpool, northwest England, the strong currents and shallow depths are expected to throw a different set of challenges for the vessel’s single-lift capacity.

The ongoing preparations include cutting and removing of risers, caissons and conductors, cutting the platforms’ steel legs, strengthening the topsides and installing made-to-measure lift points.

Spirit Energy project manager Donald Martin said: “After two years of preparing the DP3 and DP4 installations for removal, we’re now looking forward to one of the most significant milestones in the project with the removal of both platforms.

“Seeing the Pioneering Spirit in the East Irish Sea will be an impressive sight –its capacity and single-lift methodology made it a good fit to safely execute this project.”
DP3, DP4 are part of Spirit Energy’s installations in Morecambe Bay

The two platforms were used to produce gas and are part of Spirit Energy’s eight installations in Morecambe Bay.

As the field has matured now, the reserves the platforms previously tapped into were produced by the larger, manned Central Morecambe platform nearby.

The 12 wells, which were connected to the DP3 and DP4 platforms, have already been plugged and abandoned. The plugging of the wells was carried out using a slant rig to accommodate the angle at which the wells were drilled in the 1980s.

The DP3 and DP4 installations first produced gas in 1985.

waldron
10/1/2021
21:28
Cleverinvester
10 Jan '21 - 21:07 - 1824 of 1825 (Filtered)


0 0 1
Cleverinvester
10 Jan '21 - 21:09 - 1825 of 1825 (Filtered)


0 0 1

YOU ARE NOW BASICALLY ON A DEAD THREAD

AND NOW WITH THE HELP OF SKINNY WE CAN START AGAIN ANEW AVOIDING UNHELPFUL POSTERS

waldron
10/1/2021
21:09
With regards Aspers,He broke the lockdown rules .he's a covid super spreader , Government advice, Don't travel.Aapers does the opposite!
cleverinvester
10/1/2021
21:07
Yaaa no more NORMA the pathetic clown
cleverinvester
10/1/2021
20:40
Nice one Skinny!
norma_stitts
10/1/2021
19:11
Grupo GuitarLumber Filtered for been pathetic
cleverinvester
10/1/2021
18:38
Cleverinvester
10 Jan '21 - 17:56 - 1820 of 1820 (Filtered)


0 0 1

LOL

NOW I KNOW YOU ARE A PLONKER

AND DO NOT PLAY CHESS NOR GO

grupo guitarlumber
10/1/2021
17:56
Grupo Guitar lumber Filtered
cleverinvester
10/1/2021
17:52
Cleverinvester
10 Jan '21 - 16:54 - 1818 of 1818 (Filtered)


0 0 0

grupo guitarlumber
10/1/2021
16:54
Misca2 10 Jan '21 - 16:25 - 1816 of 1816 (Filtered)In to the filter bin you go
cleverinvester
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