Decommissioning oil and gas
installations can cost operators an average of $4-$10 million in the shallow
water Gulf of Mexico. Thus when the US Department of the Interior Bureau of
Ocean Energy Management, Regulation, and Enforcement (BOEMRE) Gulf of Mexico
OCS Region issued a new decommissioning regulation in September 2010, operators
knew they'd take a hit.
NTL 2010-G05 requires wells
that have not been used for the last five years to be to be permanently
abandoned, temporarily abandoned, or zonally isolated within 3 years after Oct.
15, 2010. If wells are zonally isolated, operators have 2 additional years to
permanently or temporarily abandon the wellhead. Plus, platforms and supporting
infrastructure that have been idle for five or more years must be removed
within 5 years as of the Oct. 15, 2010 effective date.
This new NTL on top of the
typical volume of decommissioning work in the GOM will increase demand for
contractors and, in turn, their dayrates.
According to a BOEMRE
statement, the MMS (former name of the BOEMRE) conducted an Alternative
Internal Control Review (AICR) of idle structures and wells on active leases in
the GOM OCS in 2008. The review identified a significant number of idle
platforms that need to be permanently plugged and removed. Why? Idle structures
and wells could be damaged in a hurricane and cause an environmental disaster.
Plus, damaged platforms and wells cost more to decommission than non-damaged
wells.
How Is An Offshore Rig Decommissioned?
There are 10 steps to the
process: Project Management, Engineering and Planning; Permitting and
Regulatory Compliance; Platform Preparation; Well Plugging and Abandonment;
Conductor Removal; Mobilization and Demobilization of Derrick Barges; Platform
Removal; Pipeline and Power Cable Decommissioning; Materials Disposal; and Site
Clearance. Each step is discussed below.
Project Management
Project management,
engineering and planning for decommissioning an offshore rig usually starts
three years before the well runs dry. The process involves:
- · review of contractual obligations
- · engineering analysis
- · operational planning
- · contracting
Due to the limited number of
derrick barges, many operators contract these vessels two to three years in
advance. In addition, much of the decommissioning process requires contractors
who specialize in a specific part of the process. Most operators will contract
out project management, cutting, civil engineering, and diving services.
Permitting And Regulatory Compliance
Obtaining permits to
decommission an offshore rig can take up to three years to complete. Often,
operators will contract a local consulting firm to ensure that all permits are
in order prior to decommissioning. Local consulting firms are familiar with the
regulatory framework of their region.
An Execution Plan is one of
the first steps in the process. Included in this plan is environmental
information and field surveys of the project site. The plan describes a
schedule of decommissioning activities and the equipment and labor required to
carry out the operation. An execution plan is required to secure permits from
Federal, State, and local regulatory agencies. The BOEMRE will also analyze the
environmental impact of the project and recommend ways to eliminate or minimize
those impacts.
Federal agencies often
involved in decommissioning projects include BOEMRE, National Marine Fisheries
Service, US Army Corps of Engineers, US Fish and Wildlife Service, National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, US Environmental Protection Agency, US
Coast Guard, and the US Department of Transportation, Office of Pipeline
Safety.
Platform Preparation
To prepare a platform for
decommissioning, tanks, processing equipment and piping must be flushed and
cleaned and residual hydrocarbons have to be disposed of; platform equipment
has to be removed, which includes cutting pipe and cables between deck modules,
separating the modules, installing padeyes to lift the modules; and reinforcing
the structure. Underwater, workers prepare the jacket facilities for removal,
which includes removing marine growth.
Well Plugging And Abandonment
Plugging and abandonment is
one of the major costs of a decommissioning project and can be broken into two
phases.
The planning phase of well
plugging includes:
- · data collection
- · preliminary inspection
- · selection of abandonment methods
- · submittal of an application for BOEMRE approval
In the GOM, the rig-less
method, which was developed in the 1980s, is primarily used for plugging and
abandonment jobs. The rig-less method uses a load spreader on top of a
conductor, which provides a base to launch tools, equipment and plugs downhole.
Well abandonment involves:
- · well entry preparations
- · use of a slick line unit
- · filling the well with fluid
- · removal of downhole equipment
- · cleaning out the wellbore
- · plugging open-hole and perforated intervals(s) at the bottom of the well
- · plugging casing stubs
- · plugging of annular space
- · placement of a surface plug
- · placement of fluid between plugs
Plugs must be tagged to
ensure proper placement or pressure-tested to verify integrity.
Conductor Removal
According to BOEMRE, all
platform components including conductor casings must be removed to at least 15
ft below the ocean floor or to a depth approved by the Regional Supervisor
based upon the type of structure or ocean-bottom conditions.
To remove conductor casing,
operators can chose one of three procedures:
1.
Severing,
which requires the use of explosive, mechanical or abrasive cutting
2.
Pulling/sectioning,
which uses the casing jacks to raise the conductors that are unscrewed or cut
into 40 ft-long segments.
3.
Offloading,
which utilizes a rental crane to lay down each conductor casing segment in a
platform staging area, offloading sections to a boat, and offloading at a port.
The conductors are then transported to an onshore disposal site.
Mobilization/Demobilization
And Platform Removal
Mobilization and
demobilization of derrick barges is a key component in platform removal.
According to BOEMRE, platforms, templates and pilings must be removed to at
least 15 ft below the mudlline.
First, the topsides are
taken apart and lifted onto the derrick barge. Topsides can be removed all in
one piece, in groups of modules, reverse order of installation, or in small
pieces.
If removing topsides in one
piece, the derrick barge must have sufficient lifting capacity. This option is
best used for small platforms. Also keep in mind the size and the crane
capacity at the offloading site. If the offloading site can't accommodate the platform
in one piece, then a different removal option is required.
Removing combined modules
requires fewer lifts, thus is a time-saving option. However, the modules must
be in the right position and have a combined weight under the crane and derrick
barge capacity. Dismantling the topsides in reverse order in which they were
installed, whether installed as modules or as individual structural components,
is another removal option and the most common.
Topside can also be cut into
small pieces and removed with platform cranes, temporary deck mounted cranes,
or other small (less expensive) cranes. However, this method takes the most
time to complete the job, so any cost savings incurred using a smaller derrick
barge will likely be offset by the dayrate.
Removing the jacket is the
second step in the demolition process and the most costly. First, divers using
explosives, mechanical means, torches or abrasive technology make the bottom
cuts on the piles 15 ft below the mudline. Then the jacket is removed either in
small pieces or as a single lift. A single lift is possible only for small
structures in less than 200 ft of water. Heavy lifting equipment is required
for the jacket removal as well, but a derrick barge is not necessary. Less
expensive support equipment can do the job.
Pipeline And Power Cable Decommissioning
Pipelines or power cables
may be decommissioned in place if they do not interfere with navigation or
commercial fishing operations or pose an environmental hazard. However, if the
BOEMRE rules that it is a hazard during the technical and environmental review
during the permitting process, it must be removed.
The first step to pipeline
decommissioning in place requires a flushing it with water followed by
disconnecting it from the platform and filling it with seawater. The open end
is plugged an buried 3 ft below the seafloor and covered with concrete.
Materials Disposal And Site Clearance
Platform materials can be
refurbished and reused, scrapped and recycled or disposed of in specified
landfills.
To ensure proper site
clearance, operators need to follow a four-step site clearance procedure.
1.
Pre-decommissioning
survey maps the location and
quantity of debris, pipelines, power cables, and natural marine environments.
2.
Post
decommissioning survey identifies
debris left behind during the removal process and notes any environmental
damage
3.
ROVs and
divers target are deployed
to further identify and remove any debris that could interfere with other uses
of the area.
4.
Test
trawling verifies that the
area is free of any potential obstructions.
Source: http://www.rigzone.com/training/insight.asp?i_id=354#sthash.BkQQbb5z.dpuf
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