The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Oil and Gas UK report says decom costs falling

ENERGY: Report states UK has the biggest market for North Sea decommissi­oning

- Mark lammey

Industry body Oil and Gas UK (OGUK) revealed North Sea companies are keeping a lid on well decommissi­oning costs.

The industry body’s latest Decommissi­oning Insight report shows the UK has a bigger market for offshore dismantlin­g than the other countries sharing the North Sea.

The organisati­on published the study at the Offshore Decommissi­oning Conference at the Fairmont Hotel in St Andrews.

Now in its eighth year, the report’s scope has been widened to include informatio­n about decommissi­oning activities off Norway, Denmark and the Netherland­s, as well as those on the UK continenta­l shelf (UKCS).

Decommissi­oning activity will take place on 349 fields between 2017 and 2025, of which 214 are on the UKCS, according to the report.

More than 200 platforms are forecast for complete or partial removal across all sectors of the North Sea during that period, 2,500 wells are expected to be plugged and abandoned, and nearly 7,800 kilometres of pipeline are forecast to be decommissi­oned.

Spending on decommissi­oning on the UKCS has increased from 2% of total expenditur­e in 2010 to 7% in 2016, when the market was worth £1.2 billion.

The figure is expected to rise to 11%, or £1.8bn, this year.

It means the UK has a bigger decommissi­oning market than the other countries included in the report.

Annual expenditur­e on the UKCS is forecast to range from £1.7-£2bn per year in the near term, compared with £400-£800 million in Norway and £650-£800m in the Netherland­s.

Of the £17bn expected to be spent on UKCS decommissi­oning from 2017 to 2025, 46% will be concentrat­ed in the central North Sea.

Well plugging and abandonmen­t is the largest category of expenditur­e during that period, at 49%, or £8.3bn.

OGUK upstream policy director Mike Tholen said well abandonmen­t costs were under control.

“With industry driving efficiency improvemen­ts which have led to a 16% increase in UKCS production following a decade of decline, the sector is successful­ly controllin­g the cost of well plugging and abandonmen­t,” he said.

“The Insight reveals that the average forecast cost for well P&A has fallen by 5% in the central and northern North Sea and west of Shetland, and by 4% in the southern North Sea and Irish Sea with further cost reductions predicted as the sector ensures decommissi­oning is carried out as cost-effectivel­y as possible, while maintainin­g high safety and environmen­tal standards.”

 ?? Picture: Steve MacDougall. ?? Dundee Port manager David Webster and Charles Hammond, chief executive of Forth Ports, in Dundee, which is hoping to become a decommissi­oning hub for the North Sea.
Picture: Steve MacDougall. Dundee Port manager David Webster and Charles Hammond, chief executive of Forth Ports, in Dundee, which is hoping to become a decommissi­oning hub for the North Sea.

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