The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Mega-rig helps to reawaken ‘sleeping giant’

Offshore: Kishorn Port welcomes major contract

- BY ALLISTER THOMAS

Bosses at a revamped Highland port have hailed the “culminatio­n of 10 years’ work” as they yesterday welcomed the arrival of the world’s largest semi-submersibl­e drilling rig.

Diamond Offshore’s Ocean GreatWhite rig has arrived at Kishorn Port, marking the dry dock’s first major contract since being refurbishe­d.

Kishorn Port Ltd (KPL) was formed in 2008 to redevelop the Wester Ross facility, which once employed more than 3,000 people during the heyday of the North Sea oil boom.

Bosses have now hailed the arrival of the mega-rig as a step towards further opportunit­ies in the oil and gas, decommissi­oning and renewables sectors for Kishorn.

The 60,800-tonne rig will be anchored at the adjacent loch as it undergoes service work in preparatio­n for a North Sea drilling campaign.

It is understood Ocean GreatWhite has been selected for Siccar Point Energy’s upcoming Lyon exploratio­n well west of Shetland, a prospect thought to hold around three trillion cubic feet of gas.

The rig requires deepwater for anchoring and is expected to remain at Loch Kishorn for up to eight weeks.

The contract has led to a dozen people being employed at the yard, plus 100 in the local supply chain, according to KPL.

Director Simon Russell said: “This is the culminatio­n of 10 years of work. We often refer to Kishorn as the sleeping giant and it’s starting to reawaken.

“KPL has been working on a programme to regenerate the port for about 10 years and we have been looking to move into the renewable, decommissi­oning and oil and gas markets.

“It’s great that we have landed our first contract and this is a step to the future, expanding in those sectors and offering people further employment.”

The dry dock was once a major employer in the Highlands as an integral part of the oil and gas industry.

Operators Howard Doris succumbed to insolvency in 1988, with the facility lying largely dormant until 1992 when it was used to support constructi­on of the Skye Bridge.

KPL, a joint-venture of Ferguson Transport and quarry firm Leiths, secured permission for the redevelopm­ent in 2013 and has promoted its capacity for oil and gas and renewables projects.

 ??  ?? SERVICE WORK: Kishorn Port Ltd director Simon Russell in front of the Ocean GreatWhite drilling rig
SERVICE WORK: Kishorn Port Ltd director Simon Russell in front of the Ocean GreatWhite drilling rig

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