The Scotsman

Oil and gas decommissi­oning cost drops

- By HANNAH BURLEY

The estimated cost of decommissi­oning the oil and gas infrastruc­ture on the UK Continenta­l Shelf has decreased by £4 billion, according to a study published today.

The Decommissi­oning Cost Estimate Report released by the Oil and Gas Authority (OGA) shows the predicted decommissi­oning costs from 2017 onwards have fallen to £55.7bn (in 2016 prices), down from the original estimate of £59.7bn.

Industry experts said the report shows the progress the industry has made by working with the government to lower estimated costs by 7 per cent.

The OGA, industry and government set a shared objective to reduce the costs by at least 35 per cent, resulting in a target of £39bn in 2016 prices.

Gunther Newcombe, director of operations at the OGA, said: “The tripartite relationsh­ip between government, the OGA and industry is working well together.

“It’s very pleasing to see industry make real progress towards the de commission­ing cost reduction target set with them. However, costs still need to reduce further and industry must keep focused.

“The OGA is sharing some of the great examples we’re seeing of individual companies thinking differentl­y to save time and cost.”

The report cites “significan­t efficienci­es” in well plug and abandonmen­t costs and substantia­l reductions in platform running costs as such examples.

Experts said the practical experience that companies are gaining in decommissi­oning activities is also a key contributo­r.

 ??  ?? 0 Progress: decommissi­on costs have been reduced
0 Progress: decommissi­on costs have been reduced

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