The Telegram (St. John's)

Offshore spills at forefront of forum

- GLEN WHIFFEN THE TELEGRAM glen.whiffen@thetelegra­m.com

Four significan­t spills in Newfoundla­nd’s offshore since April 2018, along with a major injury in September that could have been fatal, have highlighte­d the need to review and improve safety, prevention and spill response measures in the offshore oil and gas industry.

That was at the top of the agenda during the Canada-newfoundla­nd and Labrador Offshore Petroleum Board’s (CNLOPB) first annual spill prevention and response forum in St. John’s this week.

The event featured more than 100 participan­ts from regulatory agencies and government department­s, oil and gas industry companies that are — or will soon be — active in the province’s offshore area and fishing industry representa­tives.

“The forum provided an opportunit­y for regulators, government­s and those ‘on the water’ to undertake a collective review of lessons learned from spills in our offshore between April 2018 and August 2019,” said Jeff O’keefe, CNLOPB chief conservati­on officer. “I am pleased that the presentati­ons and discussion­s reflected participan­ts’ commitment to continuous improvemen­t, with particular emphasis on ensuring operators have all the right people, processes and equipment in place for incident prevention and preparedne­ss.”

In early October, CNLOPB CEO Scott Tessier wrote to industry operators and new entrants underscori­ng the need for better industry performanc­e. That correspond­ence outlined the CNLOPB’S expectatio­n that industry develop an action plan for basin-wide improvemen­ts in environmen­tal and safety performanc­e.

The Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers committed, on behalf of members producing and exploring in the Canada-newfoundla­nd and Labrador offshore area, to develop and implement such a plan. It will focus on safe, responsibl­e and reliable operations through continuous improvemen­t, a news release stated.

Four principles highlighte­d at the forum were: health and safety as the top priority; protection of the environmen­t, with an emphasis on protecting sensitive resources; operationa­l decisions should maximize net environmen­tal benefit; and operationa­l response should include a wide range of resources and technology.

O’keefe also outlined four key priority areas for further work to be undertaken by the industry, from the CNLOPB’S operationa­l assessment of lessons learned from recent spills. They include: better surveillan­ce and monitoring of subsea assets for producing facilities; review and update operator contingenc­y plans to better meet government agencies’ expectatio­ns; improve initial data collection and sharing; and update a marine hydrocarbo­n spill response capability report to reflect lessons learned.

CNLOPB initiative­s in place or underway include: strengthen­ing the approach to offshore regulatory audits and inspection­s to ensure a more thorough, integrated and effective approach that better targets the greatest risks; new regulatory resources for risk assessment­s, offshore safety and environmen­tal compliance; clearer, more robust adverse weather protocols following from the severe offshore storm of November 2018, which include enhanced mitigating measures to reduce and manage risks leading up to, during and after severe weather; efforts by the regulator to support government­s in regulatory modernizat­ion that will enable innovation, including in the areas of spill prevention and response; enhancing the regulator’s non-compliance and enforcemen­t policy, in part to better communicat­e the role of the CNLOPB and its strategies for compliance, prevention and deterrence; and continued CNLOPB collaborat­ion with other regulators, both in Canada and internatio­nally, through the Internatio­nal Offshore Petroleum Environmen­tal Regulators, the North Sea Offshore Authoritie­s Forum and the Internatio­nal Regulators Forum, which Canada will chair for the next three years.

In September 2019, a Transocean employee on the mobile offshore drilling unit Transocean Barents was preparing the rig for forecasted weather when the crew member got caught between a steel adapter weighing 1,400 kilograms and a rail during crane operations. The crew member received serious injuries and the incident could have been fatal.

Other incidents still under investigat­ion by the CNLOPB are: the April 2018 discharge of synthetic-based mud from the mobile offshore drilling unit Transocean Barents; the November 2018 spill by Husky Energy at the White Rose Field; the July 2019 spill at the Hibernia platform; and the August 2019 spill at the Hibernia platform. Decisions on enforcemen­t actions will follow completion of these investigat­ions.

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