U.S. District Judge Martin Feldman in New Orleans today ordered offshore energy regulators to act within 30 days on six pending permit applications filed by companies that have contracts with Ensco Offshore Co., the Louisiana drilling company leading the legal challenge to the government’s offshore drilling bans. Bloomberg
Archive for May, 2011
Judge orders action on six drilling applications
Posted in drilling, offshore, Regulation, tagged Ensco, Judge Feldman, offshore drilling, permits, Regulation on May 10, 2011| Leave a Comment »
Interesting UK Safety Items
Posted in accidents, Norway, Offshore Energy - General, Regulation, UK, tagged accidents, gas leaks, HSE, Norway, safety, UK on May 10, 2011| Leave a Comment »
The HSE has told Shell to submit a revised safety case for the Brent Charlie platform after gas was detected on its topsides following leaks on 12 January this year and 27 September 2010, Upstream can reveal.
Shell, which took the decision itself to close the platform after the January incident, has been battling for some time to resolve technically complex issues related to the venting of gas from inside one the platform’s huge concrete legs — Column 1 (C1) — and dispersing it effectively away from the platform.
The operator now expects the ageing Brent field to remain shut down for several more months.
UK: Climate Committee Prefers Onshore Wind Turbines
Posted in Offshore Energy - General, Offshore Wind, Wind Energy, tagged Committee on Climate Change, George Hagerman, UK, wind turbines on May 10, 2011| Leave a Comment »
In a report into the future of energy, the influential Committee on Climate Change calls on the Government to scale back plans to build thousands of turbines off the coast of Britain.
Instead, the report calls for hundreds more wind turbines to be built onshore at a lower cost over the next eight years.Daily Mail UK
On the other hand, offshore locations have stronger, more consistent winds, and minimal aesthetic and noise impacts. Is the public going to accept massive onshore wind development?
I continue to be intrigued by the concept of offshore energy units which integrate natural gas and wind projects to ensure consistent power supply. (See slide below from a presentation by George Hagerman, Virginia Tech Advanced Research Institute)

British Columbia – no plans for offshore drilling
Posted in Offshore Energy - General, tagged British Columbia, Canada, offshore drilling on May 10, 2011| Leave a Comment »
The federal and provincial governments both say they have no plans for offshore oil and gas exploration on B.C.’s coast any time soon. CBS News
Remember the Mariel Boatlift?
Posted in cuba, tagged cuba, offshore drilling on May 9, 2011| Leave a Comment »

Mariel Boatlift
Mariel — the town 30 miles west of Havana that was a departure point for more than 100,000 Cubans who left the island in the 1980 Mariel boatlift — is being remade into a servicing hub for the Cuban oil industry of the future. NPR
Missing accident reports
Posted in accidents, tagged accidents, offshore oil, safety, well control on May 9, 2011| Leave a Comment »
- Liftboat Russell Peterson collapses (fatality) – US (offshore Delaware) – May 2008
- Gas leak and evacuation at offshore platform – Azerbaijan -August 2008
- Aban Pearl sinking – Venezuela – May 2010
- Jack Ryan crane failure (fatality) – Nigeria – August, 2010
- Bayou Denis blowout – US (Louisiana State waters) – August 2010
- West Polaris BOP testing incident, conductor casing collapse – Brazil(?) – August 2010(?)
- Jackup collapse during typhoon – China – September 2010
- Fire on Mariner platform – US – September 2010
The following accidents are are too recent (6 were just last month) to expect reports. BOE will publish links to the reports as soon as they become available.
- Apache gas leak and evacuation – US – January 2011
- Cherne II production platform fire – Brazil – January 2011
- Gryphon Alpha mooring failure – UK – February 2011
- Fatality (fall) on Apache platform – US – February 2011
- Jupiter flotel sinking – Mexico – April 2011
- Al Shaheen accommodations platform fire – Qatar – April 2011
- Fatality (fall) on Hillcorp platform – US – April 2011
- Diving fatality – UK – April 2011
- Visund gas leak, evacuation – Norway – April 2011
On Mothers’ Day
Posted in Uncategorized, tagged Mothers Day, Oilfield wives on May 8, 2011| Leave a Comment »
I thought I would draw attention to this Facebook page. 
This is a place for the wives and gf’s and mothers of oilfield workers here in Clarke County. I believe that our oilfield workers should have the same esteem as our military men and women. The way our world is now, these oilfield workers are sacrificing a lot to contribute their part of the oilfield.
I agree with those sentiments!
Best wishes to my mother and wife, and to all other mothers on this special day.
All too predictable…
Posted in accidents, well control incidents, tagged Deepwater Horizon, drilling, macondo, offshore drilling, offshore oil, oil spill, safety, well control on May 7, 2011| Leave a Comment »
…. and gleeful.
“Is there likely to be litigation over new drilling permits? You bet there is,” said David Petit, a senior attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council.
“We’ll definitely litigate it,” Kieran Suckling, executive director of the Center for Biological Diversity, said of the federal approval of Shell’s plan. “It’s patently illegal.”
Environmental Suits Threaten Gulf Drilling- Wall Street Journal
Big Year for OTC
Posted in conferences, tagged offshore, offshore drilling, OTC, safety on May 6, 2011| Leave a Comment »
Attendance at the 2011 Offshore Technology Conference (OTC) reached a 29-year high of 78,150, up 8% from last year, as offshore energy industry experts from around the world came together at the world’s largest event for offshore resources development. OTC was held 2-5 May at Reliant Park in Houston.
PSA adds substantial value at a relatively low cost
Posted in Norway, Regulation, tagged North Sea, Norway, offshore, Regulation, safety on May 6, 2011| Leave a Comment »
Surprisingly, the post-Macondo discussion about regulatory approaches has been largely devoid of value and cost-benefit assessments. While PSA has been praised for Norway’s outstanding offshore safety record, little attention has been paid to their relatively low regulatory costs.
According to data in the 2010 Annual Report, PSA has 161 employees, and had total operating expenses of NOK 202,762,689 ($US 38.1 million) for 2010. These modest cost and staffing numbers are particularly impressive when the magnitude and complexity of Norwegian offshore operations are considered. In March 2011, Norwegian oil production averaged 2.017 million barrels per day (no. 2 offshore oil producer slightly behind Brazil) and gas production averaged 11.6 billion cubic feet per day (world offshore leader). PSA is also responsible for onshore processing facilities.
PSA’s costs are relatively modest for the same reason that their regulatory program is successful. They hold companies responsible for managing their operations and conducting inspections. They don’t approve every detail of every operation, but focus on ensuring that the company management systems are effectively implemented. They identify risks and insist that industry address them. As Magne Ognedal said in his interview with BOE:
Our regulatory philosophy is indeed firmly based on the legislated expectation that those who conduct petroleum activities are responsible for complying with the requirements of our acts and regulations. Furthermore, our regulations require that they employ a management system that systematically probes and ensures such compliance at any time. The approach to achieving this should be risk-based. So, ensuring compliance with rules and regulations is the operator’s job – not ours.

