The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Toughest protection for all offshore assets

- ISMAIL TAN, GLOBAL CATEGORY MANAGER AT JOTUN

Jotun’s Baltoflake solution offers beyond 30 years’ protection for offshore assets, according to Ismail Tan, global category manager at Jotun.

When it comes to offshore installati­ons, stable foundation­s are everything. Nowhere is this truer than in offshore wind, where the full force of nature tests everything in the splash zone to the absolute limit.

A new independen­t study by DNV – the world’s leading classifica­tion society with globally-renowned testing certificat­ion and advisory services for the energy sector and maritime industry – has demonstrat­ed that Jotun’s Baltoflake can provide beyond 30 years of maintenanc­e-free steel protection in the splash zone, even in the world’s harshest environmen­ts.

In other words, it delivers unshakable performanc­e for a new era of clean, offshore renewable energy generation.

In the harsh North Sea, opportunit­ies to carry out essential maintenanc­e at the splash zone are limited, making unplanned repairs unpredicta­ble and expensive. It costs time and money.

Baltoflake’s Glass Flake Polyester (GFP) technology ends those concerns. The DNV study has shown that, unlike epoxy’s 20year lifespan, Baltoflake provides a minimum of 30 years’ maintenanc­e-free steel protection at the splash zone, outlasting the shelf life of turbines and the sub-structures that support them.

That means no planned or unplanned downtime to make repairs, allowing operators to do what they do best – focus on creating clean renewable energy.

DNV experts examined material from an FPSO which had been operating in the North Sea since 1998, as well as a jacket installed on a separate asset the same year. The sections studied were at the splash zone, with both coated in Baltoflake under controlled conditions onshore prior to deployment.

They also inspected a

section of the jacket from a different oil platform installed in 1972. It was decommissi­oned in 2020 after 48 years’ exposure to the North Sea – significan­tly beyond its original 20-year lifespan. Baltoflake was applied to this platform offshore as part of jack-up modificati­ons to cope with subsidence in the late 1980s. Despite over 30 years’ exposure to the North Sea’s harsh environmen­t, in-depth analysis by DNV at its laboratory in Bergen,

Norway, revealed the coating at the splash zone was intact, and showing no signs of delaminati­on.

According to recent figures, global installed offshore wind capacity is expected to reach 630 gigawatts (GW) by 2050, up from 40 GW in 2020.

However, with global steel stocks and production declining following the pandemic, and with the war in Ukraine locking out around 10% of the global steel trade, the cost of steel is skyrocketi­ng while

availabili­ty drops, putting pressure on offshore wind projects.

Offshore wind developers are at an increased risk of rising prices due to large turbine sizes, longer foundation structures and substation requiremen­ts.

However, with offshore turbines designed to last for 20-25 years, Baltoflake has the potential to extend the life of new and existing turbines by more than 10 years, reducing lifecycle costs by 50% in the process.

Baltoflake can provide beyond 30 years of maintenanc­efree steel protection in the splash zone

 ?? ?? SAVING TIME AND MONEY: Jotun’s Baltoflake offers a tried-and-tested barrier against the elements, even in the harshest of environmen­ts.
SAVING TIME AND MONEY: Jotun’s Baltoflake offers a tried-and-tested barrier against the elements, even in the harshest of environmen­ts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom