The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Decommissi­oning has ‘fired the starting pistol’

Confidence for contracts in Dundee as city well placed to play major part in growth of market

- DEREK HEALEY dhealey@thecourier.co.uk

Industry leaders have hailed the launch of a major decommissi­oning project as “firing the starting pistol” on a new era for Dundee.

Augean North Sea Services (ANSS) will provide specialise­d industrial cleaning and waste management services to energy giant Shell for the Curlew floating production, storage and offloading vessel (FPSO).

The 236-metre vessel will be berthed in the Port of Dundee for around three months, and industry bosses have predicted its presence alone could attract significan­t interest from other firms.

The work will ensure the environmen­tal compliance of the FPSO before it is transporte­d to Turkey to be dismantled and recycled later this year. It is hoped the contract will be the first of many at Dundee’s multi-million-pound decommissi­oning centre.

Callum Falconer, chief executive of Dundeecom, said: “It’s really exciting for me to see the first major decommissi­oning project coming to Dundee and I think this is going to be the first of many.

“This is going to be a very visible project – you’re going to be able to see this vessel from a long way – and I think this will be a big statement for the region to say that decommissi­oning has now started.”

It is understood a number of projects are already being explored for further work at the Port of Dundee and industry figures are confident further decommissi­oning contracts would create a “material” number of jobs in the city.

David Webster, senior port manager for Forth Ports, said having a proven track record of securing the kind of work being carried out on the Curlew project had already seen the number of tenders from other North Sea operators “gathering pace”.

“I think it proves that Dundee can really start to play in the decommissi­oning market and going forward, we see this as firing the starting pistol for decommissi­oning in Dundee,” he said.

Rob Jansen, Shell’s head of the decommissi­oning, praised the profession­alism of the team in Dundee, adding: “There’s a lot of insulation that we’re decommissi­oning at the moment and a lot of that sub-sea infrastruc­ture needs to be taken out as well.”

 ?? Picture: Kim Cessford. ?? The offshore platform Curlew arrives in Dundee for decommissi­oning.
Picture: Kim Cessford. The offshore platform Curlew arrives in Dundee for decommissi­oning.

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