San Antonio Express-News

How an offshore oil rig becomes an artificial reef

- By Eric Roston

Fifty miles southeast of Grand Isle, La., sits the Lena, which used to be an oil rig owned by Exxonmobil. After the site stopped producing oil, the company hauled away the above-water platform and in July finished the job by disconnect­ing the structure from the sea floor and toppling it over. Now it’s an artificial reef.

The problem

In the U.S., it’s the law: As an offshore oil well drips out its last barrels, producers must prepare to seal it and dismantle the rig and restore the ocean floor to its original condition. Left to stand, the rig may pose risks during hurricanes, prevent future oil exploratio­n, or in some places stand in the way of wind-power developmen­t.

There’s more to a rig than metal and concrete. Over the course of its life, the structure becomes home to coral, mussels, and many

other sorts of marine life. By the time a company’s lease is up — sometimes after a quarter century or longer — there can be an establishe­d ecosystem down there.

About 1,700 Gulf of Mexico rigs will eventually require decommissi­oning.

Collective­ly they’re called “idle iron.” Instead of being removed, 560 U.S. platforms in the Gulf have been left underwater and become permanent artificial reefs since the 1980s.

“There is no such thing as an average structure — they vary widely in their characteri­stics,” said Mike Mcdonough of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries.

The stakes

“Rigs to reefs” programs make the coral, shellfish, fish, and fishing boats happy. And they’re certainly cheaper for oil companies — reefing costs about half what a full decommissi­oning does. Companies give half that savings to states that take on liability for the artificial reef sites.

Exxonmobil first experiment­ed with an artificial reef in 1979. Louisiana and Texas are the states with the largest reefing programs, though Mississipp­i and California have programs, too. This arrangemen­t has earned Louisiana $100 million since 1986, according to an analysis of the program.

With the oil industry restructur­ing globally, these states “should start planning for a future where the income generated from future projects diminishes,” the study authors wrote.

Why it’s tricky

Decommissi­oning an offshore operation takes years of work.

There are three ways to turn a rig into a reef. It can be towed away to a designated reef area elsewhere in the Gulf. Sometimes it can be left in place, if it’s at least 85 feet below the surface. Or, in the case of the Lena, it can be “toppled in place.” Unmooring a rig’s structure and safely pushing it over can damage some of the existing reef life, officials say, but not enough to destroy the entire ecosystem.

Environmen­talists say turning rigs into reefs doesn’t fulfill the commitment companies make by taking on the lease in the first place. “If you could drain all the water out of the Gulf of Mexico now,” said Richard Charter, a senior fellow at the Ocean Foundation, “the amount of junk that would be laying around out there — nobody would believe it.”

 ?? Chris Ledford / Texas Parks and Wildlife Department ?? A diver explores former offshore oil equipment that has been decommissi­oned under Texas’ “rigs to reefs” program.
Chris Ledford / Texas Parks and Wildlife Department A diver explores former offshore oil equipment that has been decommissi­oned under Texas’ “rigs to reefs” program.

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