Western Mail

Oil firms to spend £16bn removing disused installati­ons

-

UK oil and gas firms are being forecast to spend some £16.6bn on decommissi­oning work over the next decade – with 1.2 million tonnes of disused oil and gas installati­ons from the North Sea expected to be removed for reuse and recycling.

Industry body Oil and Gas UK (OGUK) said work in this area would be “returning to its usual pace” after a decline last year.

In 2020 only 84 wells were decommissi­oned on the UK continenta­l shelf – compared to 150 in a typical year.

But in a new report, OGUK said: “This year, 150 wells are forecast to be decommissi­oned, which is a sign of market recovery.

“From 2022 to 2024 the forecast shows business returning to its usual pace. With annual expenditur­es just over £1.5bn, it is anticipate­d that almost 600 wells and around 45 topsides and jacket structures will be decommissi­oned. It is also anticipate­d that 69km of pipelines, almost 6,000 tonnes of subsea structures and just over 4,000 mattresses will all be removed.”

Work is expected to continue so that £16.57bn will be spent on decommissi­oning in the UK over the next decade, the report added.

About 95% of the material that is decommissi­oned from old oil and gas platforms and other structures is typically recycled, OGUK said.

But it added the focus was now switching to how items could be reused, so that parts – or sometimes even whole structures – could be used for new purposes.

Here it cited the example of the Brae Bravo Platform, operated by the Abu Dhabi National Energy Company (Taqa).

The 36,000-tonne platform, lying 170 miles north-east of Aberdeen, produced 500 million barrels of oil equivalent over its 33-year lifetime – with the structure then ending up being sent to Norway where 95% of it was either recycled or reused.

Joe Leask, OGUK’s decommissi­oning manager, said: “Decommissi­oning is more than a great challenge. It’s also a huge opportunit­y for UK companies to show their engineerin­g skills, powers of innovation and ability to compete on a global scale.

“OGUK’s 2021 Decommissi­oning Insight report shows that over the last five years the UK decommissi­oning industry has improved its efficiency and cut its costs by an estimated 23%.

“So, we have done better but I think we can still do a lot more. If operators work together to create larger projects where we get economies of scale, then we can safely drive costs down even more.

“This is going to be an exciting 10 years – there’s a huge amount of work to be done and with £16.6 bn to be spent, there will be many opportunit­ies for UK companies.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom