Life Extension of Pierce Field Production Facilities, North Sea, UK (Russian)

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Murray Forsyth ◽  
Bruno Pennings
Author(s):  
Per Otto Selnes ◽  
Gerhard Ersdal

A large number of the Norwegian gas and oil production facilities have exceeded their initial design life but the respective fields are still producing substantial levels of hydrocarbons. In order to ensure technical and operational integrity of these ageing facilities, the Norwegian oil industry Association (OLF) has initiated a project to establish the necessary standards and guidelines for assessing and ensuring safe life extensions. This paper presents this project and the headlines of these standards and guidelines.


Author(s):  
Erik Ho¨rnlund ◽  
O̸ystein Sævik ◽  
Rolf H. Hinderaker ◽  
Gerhard Ersdal

A considerable part of the structures in the Norwegian part of the North Sea have passed or are close to their design lifetime. Degradation of materials will play an important role in the ageing of these structures and the evaluation of their safety. Hence, Petroleum Safety Authority Norway has initiated several research projects to investigate into the ageing of materials, and how to ensure robust materials also for life extension. The present paper gives a summary of these research projects.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Earl Lee Toups ◽  
Russell James Morrison ◽  
Russell John Harper

Abstract The maturation of North Sea platform jackets coupled with high fatigue stresses, fabrication defects, extensive usage, and low-redundancy design eventually result in fatigue cracking. The high sea states in the North Sea further exacerbate the problem. If not closely monitored, fatigue cracks can propagate into and around the circumference of a brace relatively quickly—ultimately leading to brace severance. When confronted with a loss of structural integrity, operators have two options: conduct expensive subsea repairs or decommission the asset. Realising a market gap, DCN Diving has explored alternate repair strategies, leading to the development of the DCN-patent pending µ-Habitat welding system. The µ-Habitat makes it possible to respond quicker, execute subsea repairs faster and guarantee quality at a fraction of the cost of bespoke or modular habitats. Through size reduction, it is possible to reduce the fabrication, production, and handling costs of µ-Habitat. Furthermore, the smaller footprint reduces installation time while simplifying sealing and de-watering offshore, saving time and money. Using a combination of product development facilitators and process improvement methodologies, such as AGILE, SCRUM, and design thinking, reduces the preparation time, making the system incredibly responsive yet flexible. Additionally, using an experienced and dedicated project team in combination with standardised products further minimises the response time to execute a repair. A dry environment, pre-heating, in-process cleaning/grinding, and unrestricted access are fundamental to ensuring high-quality welds. In addition, prototyping, extensive function testing, and mock-ups validate the habitat design before commissioning via factory acceptance testing and mobilisation to guarantee the failsafe performance of the µ-Habitat offshore. The µ-Habitat can play a crucial role in the overall life extension strategy for any offshore structure, ultimately minimising cost, risk and production downtime associated with future subsea repairs.


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