The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Moonraker plans could bring 500 jobs to Tayside.

Project to build Britain’s largest multi-purpose heavy lift vessel would transform Port of Dundee into leading decom hub

- GRAHAM HUBAND BUSINESS EDITOR

An ambitious bid to build the UK’s largest heavy lift offshore decommissi­oning vessel could create up to 500 jobs for Tayside and leverage tens of millions of pounds of inward investment into the city.

Specialist firm Offshore Decommissi­oning Services (ODS) was founded by a group of oil and gas industry veterans last year to take advantage of decommissi­oning opportunit­ies in the UK North Sea and further afield.

The company has been working on plans for Moonraker, the UK’s largest multi-purpose heavy lift vessel with the capability of removing oil platform topsides in a single lift.

ODS chief executive Lee Johnson said building Moonraker and creating an associated engineerin­g and logistics hub in Dundee would involve “hundreds of millions” of pounds of investment.

He said ODS was advancing towards securing financing for the ambitious project and the plan was to establish its UK headquarte­rs in Dundee in the early part of 2019.

Mr Johnson said he had been hugely impressed by the existing set-up at the Port of Dundee and the Dundeecom initiative led by Callum Falconer, which has been set up to secure a significan­t piece of the decom prize for the region.

The group’s presence in the city will be small initially but Mr Johnson said he expected to quickly ramp up operations before Moonraker takes to the seas in 2021.

“There are many upsides to Dundee,” Mr Johnson said.

“There is an existing supply chain, incredible port facilities and obviously, there are the universiti­es to deliver new technology and innovation.

“We will have our L&O (logistics and operations) base here in Dundee and there will be an engineerin­g hub as well, as we need to develop engineerin­g solutions as to how to remove topsides and jackets and infrastruc­ture.

“The numbers are going to be quite impressive over the next three years.

“To operate the vessel we will need about 70 people on board and at least three crews to keep up with rotational challenges.

“And we’re estimating 200-plus people in the engineerin­g office. With the logistic team, it will be about 500 in total.”

Speaking exclusivel­y to The Courier, Mr Johnson said he understood a project of such scale may draw scepticism from a city that has endured false investment dawns before and is currently facing the closure of its largest industrial employer, Michelin.

However, he said the decom sector is maturing.

“I think there is a much clearer runway now of projects coming up as assets are ageing.

“Some that were engineered to last for 20 years are now in their late 30s and there is no other solution other than removing those assets.

“Obviously we have close relations with OGA (the Oil and Gas Authority) and operators and we firmly believe that from 2021 there will be an escalation of activity.

“To be there in 2021, we need to be doing this now.”

Dundeecom chief executive Callum Falconer said ODS was bringing forward a potentiall­y game-changing solution to the multi-billion-pound decommissi­oning conundrum.

And he said ODS’s interest in Dundee showed how the city’s decom credential­s were growing.

“By locating in Dundee, ODS will be a significan­t part of the decommissi­oning offer to the marketplac­e,” Mr Falconer said.

“With other complement­ary businesses already located in Dundee including Augean, Wellsafe Services and OilMac, and with the Port of Dundee already providing an unrivalled location, space and infrastruc­ture we are, without doubt, establishi­ng Dundee as the UK decommisio­ning hub.”

To operate the vessel we will need about 70 people on board. ODS CHIEF EXECUTIVE LEE JOHNSON

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 ?? Picture: Dougie Nicolson ?? Dundeecom’s Callum Falconer left, and Lee Johnson, chief executive of Offshore Decommissi­oning Services (ODS), in Dundee.
Picture: Dougie Nicolson Dundeecom’s Callum Falconer left, and Lee Johnson, chief executive of Offshore Decommissi­oning Services (ODS), in Dundee.

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