“It’s burning pretty good and there’s no estimate on when the fire will be put out.” Mike O’Berry, US Coast Guard
The Coast Guard is hoping to locate the missing in an escape capsule or life raft. link
All BP personnel are reported to be safe.
Posted in accidents, well control incidents, tagged accidents, blowouts, Deepwater Horizon, drilling, offshore oil, safety, well control on April 21, 2010| Leave a Comment »
“It’s burning pretty good and there’s no estimate on when the fire will be put out.” Mike O’Berry, US Coast Guard
The Coast Guard is hoping to locate the missing in an escape capsule or life raft. link
All BP personnel are reported to be safe.
Posted in accidents, tagged accidents, Deepwater Horizon, drilling, offshore, offshore oil, safety on April 21, 2010| 1 Comment »
The Coast Guard is reporting an explosion last night on the Deepwater Horizon, a Transocean drillship working for BP in the Gulf of Mexico. The Horizon was working in Mississippi Canyon Block 253 about 52 miles off the coast of Venice.
Details are sketchy, but 126 people are reported to have been evacuated. Local news is reporting 8 critical injuries and some missing personnel.
Posted in accidents, Offshore Energy - General, Regulation, well control incidents, tagged Australia, blowouts, Magne Ognedal, Montara, offshore oil, Regulation, safety on April 20, 2010| Leave a Comment »
My experience is that you unfortunately often need a major accident or even a disaster to engender political support for streamlining regulatory regimes. Moreover, history shows that major accidents apparently must happen in your own jurisdiction to have such an effect on political support. Magne Ognedal
Magne’s astute comment repeatedly came to mind while I was reading the Montara testimony. Our political systems are good at reacting, but are not so good at making tough decisions when the spotlight is elsewhere. Crises provide the political capital needed to make major changes, but seldom yield the best solutions.
Will the Montara blowout provide the impetus needed for other countries to review and improve their offshore regulatory regimes? These Montara issues should be of concern to all of us:
I’ll stop at ten (now eleven :)).
Many of these issues will be discussed at the International Regulators’ Offshore Safety Conference in Vancouver (18-20 October). I hope you plan to attend!
Posted in accidents, well control incidents, tagged accidents, Australia, blowouts, drilling, Montara, offshore oil, safety, well control on April 16, 2010| Leave a Comment »
Like mowing a 40 acre field with a 1/4 inch lawn mower. ~ Ed Tennyson, 1989
Reading today’s transcript reminded me of my colleague Ed Tennyson’s famous comment about the response to the Valdez spill in Prince William Sound, Alaska. Ed’s comment, which appeared on the front page of the Wall Street Journal, was typically colorful and fitting. A media darling, Ed was given a time-out for that one, but rebounded nicely.
I’m not suggesting that the Montara spill and response were a mismatch of Valdez proportions. The Montara responders seemed to be competent and made reasonable decisions. However, the testimony does suggest the need for some improvements in the response regime. A few observations:
Howe (Commission): I have been absolutely struck by the technology and the accuracy of the transcript and the promptness with which it comes up
Amen to that; great job by the recorders!
Posted in accidents, well control incidents, tagged accidents, Australia, blowouts, drilling, Montara, offshore oil, safety, well control on April 15, 2010| Leave a Comment »
Q. Mr. Berger (Commission): Do you recall my putting to both Mr Marozzi and Mr Whitfield a commentary on Mr Marozzi’s evidence to the effect that it was not a good day for the Northern Territory?
A. Mr. Trier (NT DoR) Yes.
Q. Having sat through Mr Marozzi’s evidence and the other evidence that you have heard in the Inquiry, you would agree with that assessment, wouldn’t you?
A. Yes, I agree
Q. That would be fairly sobering evidence, I take it, for you to hear, given your role within the department?
A. I am not trying to be smart. That’s an understatement.
Comment: Mr. Trier and Mr. Whitfield, senior managers with the Northern Territory Department of Resources, demonstrated the approach that managers should take when their organization is partially or fully accountable for a major accident – be contrite, promise changes, and seek external guidance. The Montara blowout was a pollution spectacular that reflects poorly on all of us. While assigning blame, we should make sure that our own houses are in order and that we are doing everything we can to prevent a recurrence – anywhere in the world.
Q. Berger: You also heard evidence that Mr Marozzi considered PTT one of the less risky, or safest, operators that he was dealing with; do you remember that evidence?
A. Trier: Yes, I do.
Comment: I wonder what the other NT operators think about that statement? How would you like to be like to be ranked below PTTEP?
Other comments:
Posted in accidents, well control incidents, tagged accidents, blowouts, drilling, Montara, offshore oil, safety, well control on April 14, 2010| 2 Comments »
Sometimes I feel a little foolish spending hours each day reading Montara transcripts and commenting to my small blog audience. Then I get a call or an email message from people who are closely following this investigation and understand its significance – regulatory experts like Odd Finnestad in Norway, experienced engineers like Tom Maunder in Alaska, serious reporters like Anthea Pitt with Upstream and Kevin Spear with the Orlando Sentinel, and representatives from all sectors of the offshore industry. That’s when I realize the effort is worthwhile. Even more gratifying was Mr. Berger’s acknowledgment (beginning on page 109 of today’s transcript) of my Day 18 blog entry. I appreciate the Commission’s outstanding efforts on behalf of offshore safety, and their interest in the opinions expressed on BOE.
Q. Mr. Berger (Commission): So you say it is not your job to read the daily drilling report to determine whether things like barriers have been installed offline in a batch drilling operation?
A. Mr. Marozzi (Northern Territory Department of Resources): I’m not saying that.
Q. That’s someone else’s job, is it?
A. I’m not saying that. It is my job, but I can only do it to a level that our resources allow.
Q. These daily drilling reports are hardly War and Peace, are they? They’re typically two or three pages; that’s right, isn’t it?
A. That’s true, yes.
Comment: I couldn’t resist this entirely fitting “Not My Job” mention. If an important task is not your job, you need to either make it your job, or see to it that the operations cease until someone has been identified to do the job and do it well.
THE COMMISSIONER: All I’ve heard is that Mr Marozzi and his unit don’t have the resources to respond properly. I doubt very much if the department doesn’t have sufficient resources, should it so choose, to allocate sufficient resources to this task. It’s a matter of choice on their behalf, I would have thought, but that’s something that can be established at some stage over the next day or do.
Comment: The Commissioner has clearly been in the government long enough to know it’s all about priorities, and perhaps senses that the NT DoR’s were a bit misplaced.
Other comments:
Posted in accidents, well control incidents, tagged accidents, Australia, blowouts, drilling, Montara, offshore oil, safety, Timor Sea, well control on April 13, 2010| Leave a Comment »
Q. Berger (Commission): Even if you do have a drilling background, Mr Marozzi, I suggest that how drilling activities are undertaken is often as important, if not more so, than what is going to be undertaken?
A. Marozzi (Northern Territory Department of Resources): Not really. To the operator, yes, but not really to the regulator. It doesn’t really matter how it is done, to the regulator, in a lot of cases.
To this outside observer, it was not a good day for the Northern Territory Department of Resources. While it is premature to speculate on the Commission’s conclusions and the followup actions by the Australian government, today’s testimony has not helped the NT cause. The witness’s attitude seems to be that if it’s good enough for the operator, it’s good enough for the regulator; and it’s not a good time to be giving that impression. While, operator responsibility should be a fundamental tenet of any regulatory regime, the regulator needs to verify the effectiveness of the management and operational systems. This can be accomplished through some combination of audits, inspections, program and plan reviews, performance measures, and other means. However, the regulator cannot be passive in any type of regime – performance-based, prescriptive, or hybrid.
Posted in accidents, well control incidents, tagged accidents, Australia, blowouts, drilling, Montara, offshore oil, safety, well control on April 12, 2010| Leave a Comment »
Q. Commissioner: Over the course of this Inquiry, I’ve been keen to engage Alert Well Control myself, unsuccessfully up until this point of time. Does that surprise you?
A. Mr. Jacob (PTTEP COO): Yes. I’m surprised.
It is good to see that the Commissioner is pressing the issue of testimony by ALERT, PTEEP’s well control contractor. My guess is that there has been a glitch in communications between the Commission and ALERT, and that the company will cooperate. If not, I would assume that the Commissioner can compel them to testify.
Highlights of an interesting day:
Other quotes of interest:
Jacob: When the safety case regime came into play in 2005, it was a fairly significant change from the previous one, in
that it then identified facility operators, being a rig contractor, a diving support vessel, a lay barge operator, et cetera, as having legal responsibility for the safety of the workforce at that site and a safe site. It was not the traditional way that things had worked in the past. Previously, it had been the titleholder who had had ultimate responsibility across everything.
Q. Howe: You see, sir, the evidence you are giving gets close to an assertion that you kept yourself in a state of
steadfast ignorance as to what was being offered to this Inquiry concerning the possible causes of the blowout. Do
you agree with that?
A. Jacob: I can see how you can come to that, yes.
Q. Howe: I want to suggest to you an alternative way of approaching the evidence, namely, that PTT, at a corporate
level, seems to have accepted a level of responsibility only when it became apparent that it could not do
otherwise?
A. Jacob: I wouldn’t agree with that.
Q. Howe: Will you accept, sir, that the nature of the evidence canvassed in the course of this Inquiry indicates
deficiencies right up the line to and including the CEO of PTT?
A. Jacob: Yes, based on the line of questioning you have been following, yes.
Posted in accidents, well control incidents, tagged accidents, Australia, blowouts, drilling, Montara, offshore oil, safety, well control on April 9, 2010| Leave a Comment »
Q. Howe (Commission): I want to suggest to you, sir, that you have rather reversed the direction of responsibility, in giving that answer, because PTT should have placed itself in a position properly to assist this Commission rather than taking a passive role, sending you along to listen to the evidence so that you could find out what had happened; do you agree with that?
A. Jacob (PTTEP): Yes, that would not be an appropriate response, and I don’t believe it was the intent of the company to do that.
Comment: PTTEP has seemingly been as passive in their investigation as they were in their well planning. Why has there been no modeling of well fluid movement prior and subsequent to the removal of the 9 5/8″ cap?
Jacob: I was advised that, on an initial assessment, there was a high risk of a fatality should the capping option be followed through; that the Alert personnel were willing to carry it out. I called a management meeting, and that was presented to us by the well construction manager, Craig Duncan, and at that point the company’s decision was that the capping operation was not an acceptable solution at that time, that they were to continue looking at it as to ways to improve the safety ability of it.
Comment: Given the status of batch tieback operations at the time of the blowout, a surface capping operation would have been extremely dangerous and perhaps infeasible. Not only was the well left with no barriers, it was also left in a state that virtually precluded surface capping. Only the 20″ casing was accessible and there was no cement in the 20″ x 13 3/8″ annulus. Even if they were able to slip BOPE or some other type of specialty valving over the 20″ and seal it hydraulically (or by some other means), the 20″ casing would not have had sufficient integrity to shut-in or kill the well. To kill the well, they would have probably had to tie-back the 13 3/8 with the well flowing and connect BOPE. If feasible, that would be very risky.
That said, PTTEP’s submission and testimony advise that ALERT, a well control specialist company, had a plan for a surface capping operation. According to Mr. Jacob, ALERT was willing to proceed with that plan. ALERT is an emergency well control responder, and their plan should have been fully vetted with the regulators. I cannot understand why the Commission has no plans for ALERT to testify at these hearings. How do you assess the blowout response without questioning ALERT?
Other comments:
Posted in drilling, Interviews, Offshore Energy - General, well control incidents, tagged blowouts, Colin Leach, drilling, well control on April 8, 2010| Leave a Comment »
Given the complicated situations that can occur, I think that the key is in understanding what can happen on a particular well, given the well geometry and rig specifics, such that communications with the crew are simple and focused. The key is playing the “what if” games before a real incident occurs. ~ Colin Leach
In light of BOE’s interest in drilling safety, we thought we would ask a few questions to Colin Leach, a well control expert and a partner in Argonauta Energy Services. Colin has over 26 years of upstream experience with an emphasis on deepwater drilling, and is internationally recognized for the depth and breadth of his understanding of drilling systems. Read Colin’s insightful comments here.