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AWI Offers Alternative to Conventional Well Intervention

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A Louisiana-based company seeks to address safety issues by offering what it calls an alternative to conventional hydraulic worker units. The company’s solution for well intervention addresses the risks of well intervention by reinventing what well intervention systems look like, Alternative Well Intervention LLC President and CEO John Stansbury told Rigzone.

The company has replaced the need for ladders and safety harnesses to keep workers attached to ladders as they move up and down by designing a hydraulic workover unit (HWU) that offers workers a totally enclosed work platform. AWI has extended the stroke of its HWU from the conventional 10 feet to 15 feet. According to the company’s website, incorporating the work window into the HWU has allowed AWI to reduce tripping/cycling time by 33 percent as it now only takes two strokes to get a standard joint out of the hole instead of three strokes.

“You don’t solve a risk by solving it with another risk,” Stansbury commented on the approach of adding more safety devices to address safety issues. Founded in the late 2012, the company was established with the philosophical and emotional issues behind safety in the oil and gas field. “We’re trying to give [workers] a platform that minimizes the potential adverse, unwanted effects of working offshore,” said Stansbury.

Hydraulic hoses are housed in a way that allows jumper hoses to connect to quick connects, which are used to provide a fast make or break connection of fluid transfer lines within the control cabin, eliminating hose bundles found in a typical HWU and minimizing trip hazards. The company’s design also minimizes hand-to-iron contact affected by the positioning of the tongs and pipe handling system by removing the ton arm and spring and replacing them with a hydraulically controlled track system that incorporates make-up and back-up tongs, which guide the tong over the well center, eliminating the man-handling of tongs suspended from a spring and roller system. Additionally, a tubular handling arm has been incorporated into the HWU, which moves pipe to the well center as it comes in.  

Oil and gas companies previously have used jackups, platform rigs, coil tubing and wireline services to perform workover and well interventions to remove a well blockage, address holes in tubing or other common well issues. But Stansbury believes that AWI’s HWU offers a solution that will appeal to customers as regulations stemming from the 2010 Deepwater Horizon incident come down in the U.S. Gulf and the focus on offshore safety grows, creating a need for industry to “think outside the box” in terms of operational safety.

 “When we make the decisions that we do, are we just looking at the bottom line or should we be more long-term in our thinking?” Stansbury commented.

In addition to a safer environment for workers and reduced risk of dropped objects, the HWU will reduce man power from a 24-hour crew of 12 to nine to 10 people, comes with a full package, including the blowout preventer stack, features Class I Division II engines that are rated for hazardous environments, and Tier 3, low carbon emission engines to power the HWU and mud pump.

AWI is not manufacturing the units so it can focus on the service side, Stansbury noted, adding that the philosophical angle that he and other officials have taken in putting the company together “has drawn us in a different direction.” Instead, the company has assembled a team of players to build the HWUs. “We’re not in the manufacturing business, so why do something that’s not your forte?”

Stansbury noted that the need exists for companies in the oil and gas industry to be concessional, regardless of whether it’s a service company or oil and gas operator. Noting that the “good ol boy” mentality in the industry has created a reluctance by some to admit when they’re not the smartest guy in the room, Stansbury said the approach taken in founding AWI has been to reach out for help in building the best equipment.

The company’s first HWU was delivery in late July of last year. AWI has initially focusing on the Gulf of Mexico, but is looking at potential investment opportunities worldwide, Stansbury said, adding that the company’s HWU’s could be working in the North Sea in the next year and a half. Mexico-based Petroleos Mexicanos also has expressed interest in the company’s product.

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USNS Henson Provides Data to Support U.S. Navy Warfighters

Military Sealift Command oceanographic survey ship USNS Henson (T-AGS 63) collects and analyzes oceanographic data that is used to support U.S. Navy warfighters.

Henson is a multipurpose oceanographic survey ship that conducts hydrographic, acoustic, oceanographic and bathymetric survey operations worldwide and is currently operating in the U.S. 7th Fleet.

“Henson is a multifunction ship,” said Steven Faber, Mine Warfare Fleet Support lead. “We provide data that assists in the decision making for everything from mine warfare to anti-submarine warfare.”

Data collected by Henson will be analyzed and utilized in numerous different products specifically requested by U.S. 7th Fleet to meet mission requirements.

“Henson paints a picture of the environment on the floor of the ocean,” said Brian Hartley, Henson’s data manager. “This is important because it gives warfighters the ability to make decisions based off timeline data the oceanographic survey ships like Henson have collected over the years.”

Henson was designed to provide multiple capabilities including physical, chemical and biological oceanography; multidiscipline environmental investigations; ocean engineering and marine acoustics; marine geology and geophysics; and bathymetric surveying. These capabilities provide an in-depth understanding of ocean conditions, which then helps prioritize search efforts in areas such as mine warfare.

“With the capabilities available to us in our equipment, we can understand how the environment and terrain affects the use of mine warfare in the future,” explained Hartley. “If we know an area is silt and the laying of a mine there would cause the mine to simply sink into the bottom, searching there would be more problematic, say, than for an area with sandy terrain and several hazards. That would be an area to really do an extensive search for mines in the future.”

Henson serves as a platform for surveyors with the Naval Oceanographic Office (NAVOCEANO). NAVOCEANO has technical control of Henson and four other survey ships and uses a variety of platforms, including ships, aircraft, satellite sensors and buoys to collect oceanographic and hydrographic data from the world’s oceans. Henson is operated by the Military Sealift Command for the Commander, Naval Meteorology and Oceanography Command (CNMOC).

NAVOCEANO, the largest subordinate command within the CNMOC, is responsible for providing oceanographic products and services to all elements of the Department of Defense.

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Lake Huron diving accident claims life of Midland dive instructor

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A Midland man was killed in a diving accident in Lake Huron in northern Michigan, the Michigan State Police reports.

Timothy A. Troup, 62, of Midland, died Sunday, Aug. 17, when he attempted to return to the surface from an approximately 166-foot dive to the Persian Shipwreck off the coast of Hammond Bay in Presque Isle County, MSP Sgt. Jeff Gorno said. 

Troupe was diving with a group of eight others after they rented a boat and launched from Cheboygan, Gorno said.

The Michigan State Police Dive Team responded from Cheboygan along with the U.S. Coast Guard and EMS workers, bringing the man to the surface and attempting lifesaving measures. He was pronounced dead.

“At some point he got in trouble with his equipment, he may have gotten entangled and attempted to rush to the surface and it didn’t work. He came up too fast,” Gorno said. “I think he came up without some equipment that he needed.”

The MSP dive team dove on Monday, Aug. 18, to recover some of the gear on the bottom for the continuing investigation. 

Troup was a diving instructor at a Midland dive shop, Gorno said, though he could not confirm the name.

It has been the second fatal diving accident in northern Michigan involving a professional diver in the past two weeks, Gorno said. 

Dennis Javens, 64, of Minnesota, died while diving in the Straits of MackinacSaturday, Aug. 9. He was brought to the shores of Mackinaw City about 1:30 p.m., according to the Cheboygan County Sheriff’s Department.

Investigators believe Javens mistakenly made the dive using his reserve tank instead of his main tank. When he ran out of air, he attempted to switch to the reserve tank, which was empty.

“It’s kind of unusual,” Gorno said. “They’re pretty professional at what they do when they dive 160 feet down.”

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Bureau Veritas develops diving support unit rules

Bureau Veritas (BV) has issued a new rule note covering the Classification of Diving Support Units. Rule Note NR609 sets out requirements for vessels used for manned diving operations, whether they are fitted with an air system for shallow diving or with a complex saturation system for deep diving.

Pierre de Livois, senior vice president, Marine & Offshore, Bureau Veritas, says, “The demand for diving support units is strong, with an estimated order book of more than 20 newbuild vessels. Currently, for these vessels, a special procedure is applied with ad hoc survey schemes and technical requirements. Several operators of offshore support vessels have asked BV to develop classification rules to cover the special needs of these units and particularly the diving support capabilities of multipurpose support vessels (MPSVs) using portable diving systems.”

He adds that the rule note addresses the requirements specific to units supporting professional diving, including the installation of the diving plant onboard, the interface between the ship and the diving system, and the description of the in-service surveys. The rule note deals with fire safety, electrical energy supply, emergency means of escape, communication means, and storage of the oxygen used to enrich the breathing gas. The latest industry practices are adopted, including IMCA recommendations regarding diving.

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Statoil To Hold Back US Shale Ramp Up

Norwegian energy firm Statoil will only slightly raise its U.S. shale oil and gas output in the near term due to spending curbs, well below a potential for a 50 percent surge, the firm said on Monday. Statoil, which produces around a tenth of its oil and gas from its U.S. shale operations in the Bakken, Eagle Ford and Marcellus formations, has even cut back investments in the area, as shale projects are competing for capital within the company, said Torstein Hole, Statoil’s chief for U.S. onshore activities.

Statoil abandoned its 2020 production target earlier this year and cut its capital spending budget, arguing that it needs to save cash and return more to shareholders after a decade of ramping up spending. The firm increased shale production to around 210,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day by the middle of 2014 from close to nothing in 2010, but output levelled off in the second quarter. When asked if output would stay broadly unchanged for the rest of the year, Hole said during an oil and gas conference in Stavanger, west Norway: “I expect it (U.S. shale production) to be approximately the same.

“It will increase somewhat, but it will not be a significant increase. It (growth rate) will not be back to the levels we’ve seen in the past.” “We could easily, with the portfolio we have now, increase it to 300,000 per day. But we have the priority toward profitability.” “We have to compete for capital within the company and the pace of development will depend on how successful we are in delivering high profitability,” Hole said. Statoil earlier targeted daily production of 500,000 barrels per day from U.S. operations by 2020, including 300,000 barrels per day from shale, but also gave up that target when it revised broader projections. –

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SCAR Publishes New Atlas of Southern Ocean Marine Life

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A new atlas, providing the most thorough audit of marine life in the Southern Ocean, is published this week by the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR). Leading marine biologists and oceanographers from all over the world spent the last four years compiling everything they know about ocean species from microbes to whales.

It’s the first time that such an effort has been undertaken since 1969 when the American Society of Geography published its Antarctic Map Folio Series.

In an unprecedented international collaboration 147 scientists from 91 institutions across 22 countries (Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Denmark, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Russia, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland, the UK and the USA) combined their expertise and knowledge to produce the new Biogeographic Atlas of the Southern Ocean.

More than 9000 species are recorded, ranging from microbes to whales. Hundreds of thousands of records show the extent of scientific knowledge on the distribution of life in the Southern Ocean. In 66 chapters, the scientists examine the evolution, physical environment, genetics and possible impact of climate change on marine organisms in the region.

Chief editor, Claude De Broyer, of the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, said:

“This is the first time that all the records of the unique Antarctic marine biodiversity, from the very beginnings of Antarctic exploration in the days of Captain Cook, have been compiled, analysed and mapped by the scientific community. It has resulted in a comprehensive atlas and an accessible database of useful information on the conservation of Antarctic marine life.”

The data, and expert opinions, in the Atlas will help inform conservation policy, including the debate over whether or not to establish marine protected areas in the open ocean. Sophisticated environmental models coupled with existing species distribution data provide a valuable outlook on the possible future distribution of key species as they adapt to climate change.

New advances in genetics have shed light on some of the best known species from the Antarctic sea floor. The giant isopod crustacean Glyptonotus antarcticus is one of those. The animal lives on the edge of the continent at depths of up to 600 metres. Previously considered to be a single species with a circumpolar distribution, molecular barcoding suggests it may, in reality, be a group with up to eleven species inhabiting much smaller geographic regions.

Author, and editor, Huw Griffiths, of the British Antarctic Survey, said:

“The book is unique and contains an amazing collection of information and photos. It’s been an enormous international effort and will serve as a legacy to the dedicated team of scientists who have contributed to it. The Atlas is a must-read for anyone interested in the animals living at the end of the Earth.”

The Atlas contains around 100 colour photos and 800 maps. It will be launched at the SCAR 2014 Open Science Conference in Auckland, New Zealand on Monday 25th August.

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Kemp: Could Shale Revive China’s Flagging Oil Fields?

“I believe and will prove that our country is not deficient in oil reserves. If I can use my 20-year lifetime in exchange for a large oil field, I will.” Those comments, recorded in an illustrated history of the Songliao Basin published by China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), are attributed to Wang Jinxi, an oil field worker who became a hero of Communist China during the 1960s and 1970s.

Wang’s Drill Team No. 1205 was credited with doing more than any other to develop the super-giant Daqing oil field amid the frozen swamps of northeast China. “Despite the harsh and extremely cold environment, he and his (team) members transported and installed rigs by pulling and piggybacking, and supplied water in basins and buckets for spud-in. In fact, they finished the first oil well of the ‘battle’ in only five days and four hours, a record at the time,” according to CNPC.

“To suppress a blowout from the second well they were drilling, Wang, with an injured leg, mixed mud with his body in a waist-deep mud pond. His energy to work day and night and capacity to fulfil even the most challenging task gained him the reputation of Iron Man.”

Wang, originally a poor peasant from Gansu province, ended up being elected to the Communist Party’s Central Committee in 1969. It is hard to separate the myth-making from the reality, but there is no doubting the immense achievement that the Daqing oil fields represented. They were the first fields developed entirely with Chinese expertise, rather than with help from the Soviet Union. The battle for Daqing, which is how it was described at the time, liberated China from its “longstanding slavish dependence” on foreign oil, according to Premier Zhou Enlai (“Oil in China: from self-reliance to internationalisation” 2010).

Daqing is central to the history of modern China. No place played a more important role in the second half of the 20th century, except Shenzhen, the special economic zone next to Hong Kong, associated with Reform and Opening and the economic policies of Deng Xiaoping.

SELF-RELIANCE

The first successful Daqing well was drilled in 1959, when China had barely any domestic oil production and relied almost entirely on imports. By 1973, production from Daqing had grown so much that China became a net oil exporter, a status it would retain for the next 20 years. Daqing became a symbol of energy independence. “Because of the discovery and construction of the Daqing oil field, our country’s economic construction, the oil needs of defence and civilian applications, which had depended on foreign imports in the past, are now basically self-reliant,” Premier Zhou proudly told the National People’s Congress in 1963.

Daqing also became a metaphor for modernisation. Zhou, Deng, and even Jiang Qing, the wife of Chairman Mao Zedong, all visited Daqing and employed it as a model for the development of the economy.

In 1963, Mao himself pronounced that the rest of China’s industry should “learn from Daqing” and thereby launched an industrial and political philosophy that became known as “Daqing-ism,” a blend of technocracy, heroism and ideology.

But Daqing was more than just a symbol. The field was the single most important contributor to the state budget from the 1960s through the early 1980s and a vital source of foreign exchange earnings as China began the long, slow modernisation of its economy. Daqing’s petroleum engineers and managers became known as the “petroleum faction” — an elite and one of the most influential and respected groups in the party and the state.

AGEING SUPER-GIANT

Everything about Daqing is on a superlative scale. It is one of the largest oil fields in the world. In 1976, production hit 1 million barrels per day, and it was sustained at that level for another 27 years before being slowed by 20 percent in 2004. By 1985, China was the world’s sixth-largest petroleum producer after the Soviet Union, the United States, Saudi Arabia, Mexico and the United Kingdom. Daqing alone accounted for about half of its total output.

In 2009, China National Petroleum Corporation announced cumulative production had reached 2 billion tonnes (around 14.6 billion barrels). That ranks Daqing in a tiny elite group of “super-giant” fields along with Saudi Arabia’s Ghawar, Mexico’s Cantarell, Russia’s Samotlor and the East Texas Field in the United States. But Daqing is getting old. Field pressure, the reservoir’s natural energy, has dropped, making the oil harder to produce. So CNPC has resorted to a variety of methods to maintain production rates and try to scrape more oil from the reservoir.

“Nearly every sort of enhanced recovery method has been tried at Daqing,” according to Stephen Rassenfoss at the Journal of Petroleum Technology. The reservoir has been injected with water, carbon dioxide, surfactants and polymers to drive more of the remaining oil towards the wells (“Daqing: an old field at the centre of new EOR testing” June 2014).

The discovery of oil at Daqing brought China self-sufficiency for more than a quarter of a century and made it a net exporter from 1973 to 1993. But China’s production has levelled off at best, while its oil demand has boomed. China has overtaken the United States and Japan to become the biggest oil importer in the world. Once more the country is threatened by its dependence on foreign oil.

SHALE FORMATIONS

Out of necessity, CNPC has become a world leader in enhanced oil recovery at Daqing. But the shale revolution has opened up yet another intriguing possibility. Perhaps China could produce oil direct from the thick shales that are the source of much of the petroleum found in Daqing’s conventional oil and gas fields and thereby extend the life of the field for many more decades.

Shale oil and gas tends to be found in much of the same locations as conventional oil and gas fields. In fact, shale formations are normally the source of the petroleum trapped in conventional fields. Bakken in North Dakota and the Eagle Ford and Permian shales in Texas were the source of the oil and gas extracted from conventional fields in both states for decades before the shale boom.

But horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing have enabled producers to target the source directly rather than having to hunt for accumulations of oil and gas, which have been expelled from the source rocks and then become trapped in a more permeable reservoir rock. China has at least six large onshore sedimentary basins that are highly prospective for oil and gas, including the Songliao Basin that is home to Daqing. Most attention has been focussed on gas, but these basins also contain large quantities of oil. (“World Shale Gas and Shale Oil Resource Assessment” Chapter XX, 2013).  

The U.S. Geological Survey describes the area around Daqing as “a nearly featureless landscape having less than 50 metres of relief and numerous lakes, swamps and rivers.” It is very hot in summer and bitterly cold in winter (“Qingshankou-Putaohua/Shaertu … Total Petroleum Systems in the Songliao Basin” 2003).

The Daqing oil fields cover an area of just 10,000 square kilometres or so located in the centre of the basin, stretching 138 km north-south and 73 km east-west. But the source of much of the oil in the Daqing is the enormous Qingshankou shale formation, which extends across a much bigger area of 87,000 square km. The most promising part of the Qingshankou shale is 200 to 400 metres thick and buried up to 2,500 metres below the surface.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) estimates that Qingshankou could contain around 229 billion barrels of oil, of which 11.5 billion might be technically recoverable, as well as 155 trillion cubic feet of gas, of which 16 trillion cubic feet might be technically recoverable.

THE PRIZE

If the EIA’s estimates are even roughly correct, fracking could double the amount of oil recoverable from Songliao. Qingshankou could produce as much in future as Daqing has produced over the last 50 years. The potential has not gone unnoticed. In 2010, Hess Corporation and CNPC conducted a joint study of the shale/tight oil potential at the Daqing oil field. Hess and CNPC are still working on unconventional exploration, but now in the Santanghu Basin in northwest China.

There is a lot of uncertainty about whether the Qingshankou could be fractured successfully. The major oil and gas producing shales in North America that are currently in production, such as the Bakken and Eagle Ford, were all deposited on the floor of ancient seas. But Qingshankou was deposited on the floor of an ancient lake.  

“The Songliao Basin lacks a suitable commercial North American shale analog as it is structurally complex and of lacustrine sedimentary origin,” according the EIA.

The silt deposited in ancient lakes is much more fine-grained than marine sediments, more like clay, and harder to fracture. It is not clear whether oil could be produced using the same techniques. But the potential prize is enormous. In October 2013, CNPC and Shell agreed to set up a joint Shale Oil Research Centre to be based in the United States and China. The research programme will focus on theoretical aspects of shale geology for three years before shifting to engineering research and development.

In the announcement, CNPC focused on the potential for research on shale oil, rather than gas, including continental (ie lacustrine) shales in China, suggesting that CNPC is alive to the potential for onshore shale oil production. The need to find and develop more oil reserves is again urgent for China, and hunting for more oil around the Daqing oil fields is one of its most promising options.

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Siem to Sell Two OSCVs to Daya Materials

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Siem Offshore has entered into an agreement with Daya Materials Bhd. (“Daya”) for the sale of the two 2013-built Offshore Subsea Construction Vessels (“OSCVs”) ”Siem Daya 1” and ”Siem Daya 2” at a total price of USD 282 million.

Daya has been given 150 days to arrange for financing of the two vessels and delivery of the vessels is schedule to take place latest by mid-April 2015. Both vessels are on long-term charters to Daya and the charter agreements will continue until deliveries are concluded.

The sale of the two vessels will represent a gain of approximately USD 64 million, which will be recorded at the delivery of the vessels.

The sales proceeds will be used to repay mortgage debt, currently at USD 151 million, and for working capital.

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IMCA Welcomes New Technical Adviser

IMCA or International Maritime Contractors Association is an international association involved in providing offshore, marine and other underwater engineering solutions. There are currently 970 members across the globe and has four technical divisions catering vessel operation, offshore diving, hydro-graphic survey and remove vehicles.

Royal Navy diving expert Chis Baldwin will be joining as a Technical Adviser together with the other eight existing advisers along with the IMCA’s Technical Director Jane Bugler according to the secretariat of the association.

Chris was in the Royal Navy for 29 years. He was recently a Diving Regulator and Superintendent of Diving in the United Kingdom MoD’s Defence Safety and Environment Authority. He possesses skills and experiences in the field of commercial diving, safety auditing, competency training, ROV operation, ship and offshore installation security making him a very suitable candidate for the position.

“He is working mainly in the Marine and Remote Systems and ROV Divisions; acting as Secretary for the Remote Systems & ROV Division Management Committee; and manages the CMID (Common Marine Inspection Document) scheme.” The IMCA CEO Chris Charman delightedly welcome Baldwin. “He leads on maritime security business and, after completing the basic DPO course, also assists in the DP area. He completed an MSc in Project Management in 2004 and holds vocational qualifications in Occupational Health and Safety, Accident Investigation and is a qualified OHSAS 18001 Lead Auditor. He is ideal for the post – a round peg in the proverbial round hole, and has already made himself an invaluable team member.”

Baldwin is enthusiastic to meet the people working in the business and explore the industry’s dynamic environment. He wants to gain a deeper knowledge about the common issues and provide the best support and assistance he can offer to the members of the IMCA including the industry’s manpower.

New diving statistics produced by IMCA

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The International Marine Contractors Association (IMCA) has produced two important sets of statistics – ‘Safety and Environment Statistics for IMCA Members (1 January -31 December 2013)’ and ‘World-wide Diving Personnel Statistics for IMCA Members (2012)’.

“Safety and environment statistics are a useful insight into the performance of a company and industry sector in the areas of health, safety and environment,” explains IMCA’s Technical Director, Jane Bugler. “And our diving statistic aim to give a global snapshot of how many people are active in the industry on three specific dates in the year.”

“The purpose of our safety and environment statistics, produced on an annual basis and covering fatalities, injuries and environmental indicators supplied by contractor members, is to record the safety and environment performance each year, and to enable IMCA members to benchmark their performances. This year a record number of companies took part in the survey which is based on over 1300 million man-hours of work overall.

“Encouragingly we have seen lost time injury frequency rates (LTIFR) drop to the lowest figure since we began collecting data. However, there is still room for improvement in our constant quest for the ‘holy grail’ of zero incidents.

Getting down to details

“The main injury/incident figures continue to ‘flatline’ or improve only slowly,” she explains. “I am glad to report that there were fewer fatalities (9) in 2013 than in 2012 (14). Lost time incidents (LTIs) remain broadly constant.

“The highest number of LTI’s was caused by being struck by moving/falling objects (23%), falls on the same level (including slips and trips) accounted for 20% of LTIs; ‘struck against’ for 13%; falls from height 10%; muscle stress and repetitive movement accounted for 5%; entrapment for 4%, contact/exposure to heat/cold 2%; and both contact/exposure with hazardous substance and contact with electricity accounted for 1% of LTIs. Unfortunately there has been an increase in the number of LTIs reported without an immediate cause, which accounted for 21% of incidents, we will be urging our members to give more detail in future years. All facts and figures we receive are anonymised”

The statistics for 2013 were provided by a record number of 245 companies and organisations, representing around 67% of the contractor membership. 59 contractors took part for the first time, but 35 contractors that took part in the 2012 exercise did not do so this year; the number of very large contractors (more than 30 000 employees based on man-hours) taking part continues to increase, from one last year, to four this year.

The 2013 dataset is based upon 1301 million man-hours of work overall (1008 million man-hours offshore) – again a record. Onshore data was provided by 191 of the 245 companies (78%); and environmental data was provided by 47% of members. IMCA uses one million, rather than 200 000 man-hours, as a basis for the calculation of lost time injury frequency rate (LTIFR) and total recordable injury frequency rate (TRIR). 

The offshore LTIFR for 2013 has improved to 0.35 from 0.57 in 2012, and the overall LTIFR has improved from 0.51 in 2012 to 0.37 this year – both figures are the lowest since IMCA began collecting data.“The safety statistics recorded by IMCA members are consistent with those of other main global industry associations the International Association of oil & Gas Producers (OGP) and the International Association of Drilling Contractors (IADC),” explains Jane Bugler.

Environmental data

This is the second year that IMCA has collected information from contractor members on their environmental performance. The information sought has been broadly based on IMCA SEL 010 –Guidelines for the use of environmental performance indicators, so covers: number of spills and amount spilt; bunkers used (by volume or by weight); electricity consumed onshore; and non-hazardous and hazardous waste generated.

“As this is only the second year in which we have collected environmental data it is difficult to identify any trends,” explains Jane Bugler. “We have now established a firm foundation for future years and will then be able to plot specific trends.”

Diving statistics

With the exception of a two-year gap in the mid-nineties, diving and ROV personnel statistics for the North Sea area (Denmark, the Netherlands, Norway and the UK) were collected and published annually between 1982 and 2008.

Although it was appreciated the figures only present a ‘snapshot’ as they relate, in the case of diving, to three dates in the year (1 May, 1 July and 1 September), they were nevertheless highly indicative when looking at trends and other factors. In 2009 IMCA extended the statistics to cover the entire world. This therefore is the fourth year in which this world-wide approach has been taken and it has become possible to observe changes.

Over the three year period 2009 to 2011 (inclusive) the total reported average number of people at work (supervisors/superintendents, saturation divers, air divers, life support technicians, tenders, and all other offshore diving support personnel) was 3539. In 2012 the total reported average number of people at work in the global diving industry was 2736 (peaking at 2781). This figure represents just under a 23% reduction between the 2012 figure and the average of the three previous years.

“This apparent sudden decrease may well not be a true representation of the situation offshore,” explains Jane Bugler. “It may simply be a consequence of the relatively low number of returns from contractor members of the IMCA Diving Division in 2012. We received information from just 34 diving contractor members for 2012 which in itself represents a 17% reduction in the number of members providing information compared to the average returns for 2009-2011. Nevertheless we believe that the major players in the offshore diving industry contributed to the 2012 data gathering exercise..

“If we take the data collected at face value, it would appear that, with the exception of the South American region, between 2011 and 2012 the numbers of personnel involved in offshore diving operations for IMCA members has fallen across the board The trend for increasing numbers of saturation divers working world-wide has gone into reverse and shows a sharp overall decline in 2012. Air diving numbers are slightly up on 2011.

“Regionally we see that in our Asia-Pacific region overall diving activity continues to decline and is now approximately a third of what it was in May 2009. In our Europe & Africa region diving activity has dropped back but not too markedly; diving activity in Central & North America has seen the steepest decline of any region in 2012 – the data indicates it is about 30% of the level reported in September 2009. Overall offshore diving activity in the Middle East & India has dropped back to 2010 levels, but the number of saturation divers in this region has increased by nearly 35%; and lastly when looking at South America we see that overall diving activity has risen tremendously (from a mean of just 19 offshore diving personnel in 2011 to a mean of 295 in 2012 – but the figures may be skewed by the inclusion, for the first time, of data from a major contractor member working in Brazil).”

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