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Showing posts with label Pipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pipe. Show all posts

Friday, August 19, 2011

Shell Stops North Sea Pipe Leak

- Shell Stops North Sea Pipe Leak

Friday, August 19, 2011
Dow Jones Newswires
LONDON
by Alexis Flynn

Shell has stopped a leak from an underwater pipe at its Gannet Alpha platform that had been spilling crude oil into the North Sea for more than a week, the Anglo-Dutch major said Friday.

"Today, Shell divers closed the relief valve from which oil had been seeping at a rate of less than one barrel a day," said Shell. "Now there will be a phase of monitoring the flowline [the pipe] to check that it remains sealed," it added.

Shell has been battling a leak at the 18-year-old installation since last Wednesday. It estimates some 218 tons of crude oil have already spilled into the sea since then, though this isn't expected to reach land. Shell and U.K. environmental authorities say they expect the oil to be naturally dispersed through wave action.

"Closing the valve is a key step," said Glen Cayley, technical director of Shell's exploration and production activities in Europe. "It was a careful and complex operation conducted by skilled divers, with support from our technical teams onshore. But we will be watching the line closely over the next 24 hours and beyond."

However, some 660 tons of residual oil remain in the depressurized pipe, which has been secured on the seabed with concrete mats. The next phase of the operation will be to remove this remaining oil from the pipe.

Copyright (c) 2011 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Shell: Gannet Alpha Pipe Leaked in Two Places, From Same Source

- Shell: Gannet Alpha Pipe Leaked in Two Places, From Same Source

Tuesday, August 16, 2011
Dow Jones Newswires
LONDON
by Alexis Flynn

Two leaks have occurred on an undersea pipeline at Shell's Gannet Alpha platform in recent days, the Anglo-Dutch major confirmed Tuesday, but said it believed both come from the same initial source.

"The leak source remains the same. The initial release path was stopped on Thursday, however the oil found a second pathway to the sea," Shell said in a statement.

"We believe now that the flow is coming from a relief valve adjacent to the original leak and from the same source," said Shell. "Once we've confirmed this we will then develop a series of mitigation options to stop this leak. There is no new leak."

Shell said Monday it estimates 216 metric tons, or 1,300 barrels, of oil has already spilled into the sea. This would make the spill the U.K.'s largest since 2000.

Earlier Tuesday, a senior Shell executive was cited by local media as saying a second leak is continuing to spill crude into the North Sea after the main leak discovered last Wednesday was effectively stemmed.

Shell said the second leak took longer to find because of its awkward position "amid complex subsea infrastructure."

Copyright (c) 2011 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Iran's Mahshahar in Talks to Build Oil Pipe Plant in Iraq

Iran's Mahshahar in Talks to Build Oil Pipe Plant in Iraq

Wednesday, May 04, 2011
Asia Pulse Pte Ltd

Iran's Mahshahar, a specialist oil pipe manufacturer, is in talks with Iraq's Basra Investment Commission to build a factory and warehouses in Basra to provide the Iraqi State Oil Company with custom-made oil pipes.

Head of the commission, Haidar Ali Fadhil, told NINA that the Iranian firm had discussed building the factory and the warehouses under international standards.

He expressed the commission's readiness to provide land for the project and accelerate the license procedures.

Fadhil said that both sides have agreed to hold an expanded meeting with the entrusted Iraqi companies; Southern Oil Company, Southern Gas Company, Oil Pipelines Company, and Southern Refineries Company in order to cooperate and coordinate and provide them with the needed pipes.

(C) 2011 Asia Pulse Pte Ltd.

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Thursday, March 31, 2011

BP Spill Study Says BOP Needs Further Work

BP Spill Study Says BOP Needs Further Work

Thursday, March 31, 2011
Parks Paton Hoepfl & Brown
by  G. Allen Brooks



Last week, the results were released from the forensic study of the blowout preventer (BOP) used on BP Ltd.’s (BP-NYSE) Macondo well in the Gulf of Mexico that blew out last year causing an explosion, fire and eventual sinking of the Deepwater Horizon semi-submersible drilling rig and this nation’s greatest offshore environmental accident.

Den Norske Veritas (DNV), the Norwegian engineering and risk-management firm hired by the U.S. Department of the Interior to assess the BOP and determine its role in last year’s Deepwater Horizon disaster, after examining and testing the unit recovered from the ocean floor, prepared a 200-page report with a 351-page appendix.

The inspectors’ conclusion was that the shear ram valves in the BOP were unable to fully sever the drillpipe as the unit is designed to do because the pipe inside buckled from the well’s initial blow-out and was out of alignment that prevented complete closure.

DNV found that the shear rams had closed to within 1.4 inches.  This gap, albeit small, provided sufficient room for an estimated 4.9 million barrels of oil to escape.

While the report details the failure, the conclusions confirm the early belief of many drilling engineers consulted about the disaster.

The inability of the shear rams to cut the pipe because of it being off center highlight potential problems for companies drilling over-pressured wells.

The buckling of the pipe was due to the high pressure fluids roaring up the drilling pipe and annulus lifting the pipe until it hit an obstacle.  At that point, the momentum of the pipe and pressures and heat of the flows resulted in its bending.

Exhibit 10.  Why BP’s Macondo Well Spilled Oil
Why BP’s Macondo Well Spilled Oil
Source:  The Wall Street Journal

The report quickly generated further criticism of the offshore oil and gas industry and its safety procedures in drilling deepwater wells that tend to exhibit high formation pressures.

All facets of the oil and oilfield service industry involved in drilling these wells is working on ways to improve the performance of the drilling and safety equipment, especially the BOP.

There still remain unanswered questions about what actually caused the well to blow out and there will be more information and hypotheses presented down the road, but the DNV report was the last major report on the equipment involved in the accident.

The belief of most observers is that the Deepwater Horizon disaster was the result of a confluence of questionable decisions and actions by all parties involved that resulted in the creation of an unbalanced pressure differential between the downhole formation and the equipment designed to hold back that pressure.

Criticism of the DNV report came immediately from political opponents of offshore drilling including Rep. Edward Markey (D., Mass.) who said, “This report calls into question whether oil-industry claims about the effectiveness of blowout preventers are just a bunch of hot air.”  The man responsible for overseeing U.S. offshore drilling rules until he retired in 2009, Elmer Danenberger III, was quoted by The Wall Street Journal as saying, “They have to rethink the whole design,” meaning the BOP.

The DNV report concluded that the BOP failure was due to a design flaw and not the operation, abuse or maintenance of the BOP by the companies involved in drilling the Macondo well.

The BOP in question was manufactured by Cameron International (CAM-NYSE), the leading provider to the drilling industry of such units for over 90 years.  The BOP has been the industry’s last and best defense against well pressures, which often came as a result of encountering pockets of higher-pressured natural gas at shallower depths while drilling a well.  In fact, the BOP that became the signature product for Cameron was developed in response to several high-pressure well workover accidents in 1922.

The co-founder and majority owner of then Cameron Iron Works, James Abercrombie, was also a successful contract driller with a history of putting out well fires and blow-outs, long before Red Adair made the occupation of fire-fighting glamorous.

In late 1921, Mr. Abercrombie secured a contract to work over a troublesome well in the Hull field in Liberty County, northeast of Houston.  This was a field with many small pockets of high pressured gas.  In the course of working over wells in this field, Mr. Abercrombie’s company had lost its newest and best rig and had encountered three blowouts.

While each of the blowouts resulted in lost equipment, fortunately no one was hurt.

The episode, however, focused Mr. Abercrombie on ways to design equipment that could be used to prevent wells from blowing out.

Originally, he had used an elementary blowout preventer called a “boll weevil.”  It was essentially a piece of heavy-gauge pipe surrounded by a thick lead casing.  There was stopcock on top of the arrangement.  If it was suspected that a well might blowout, the unit was slipped over the well’s casing and the stopcock closed.  The unit proved impractical as a well containment device but mainly it was used to try to give the drilling workers time to get away from the rig before the well blew.

There was another preventer on the market designed to improve on the “boll weevil” and Mr. Abercrombie purchased one of them to use on his next well workover in the Hull field.  Unfortunately it, too, failed to prevent another blowout.  Mr. Abercrombie came up with the idea of a ram-type preventer with the faces of the rams closing in on the drillpipe in order to close off the pressure in the well.  With a sketch of the concept, Mr. Abercrombie went to his co-founder and partner, Henry Cameron, the next morning and sketched out his concept in the sawdust and dirt of the machine shop’s floor.  With a casting produced by Howard Hughes’ nearby shop, Mr. Cameron machined the design.

A patent application was filed on April 14, 1922, but patent number 1,569,247 was not issued until January 12, 1926.

As the unit was tested it was discovered that it leaked when pressure increased.  Mr. Cameron designed a fix whereby the increasing pressure would force open a notch in the corner of the ram face and force it to close tighter.  Patent number 1,498,610 was issued as a modification to the original BOP design but before the original patent was even granted.

By adding steel and cast iron parts to the BOP and being able to guarantee the unit would work to shut off 2,000 pounds of flowing pressure, the orders started coming in, not only from domestic companies in Texas, Louisiana and California, but also for use in foreign locations such as Mexico and Venezuela.  The Cameron Iron Works company was on its way to a glorious history that continues today.  [Much of this history about Cameron comes from the book, Mr. Jim, by Patrick J. Nicholson.]

We have high confidence that the engineers in the drilling business will figure out how to improve the performance and safety of the drilling process, just as they have for the past 150+ years.  Well control episodes have occurred throughout the history of the petroleum industry.  The Deepwater Horizon was the latest and most devastating, both due to the loss of 11 lives and the environmental damage to the Gulf of Mexico from the oil spill.

The evidence from the investigations of the disaster continues to show the Macondo well blowout was an accident.  All aspects of our daily lives, including the energy, involve risks.  We need to better understand the risks and their potential ramifications.  Importantly, we need to keep a perspective on risk and our risk tolerance.  We don’t stop driving after a car accident.  We don’t stop flying after a plane accident.  We shouldn’t stop drilling after a drilling accident.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Shell Gets Irish License to Complete Offshore Gas Pipe -Reuters

Shell Gets Irish License to Complete Offshore Gas Pipe -Reuters

Friday, March 25, 2011
Dow Jones Newswires

Ireland on Friday granted Shell a license to complete the controversial Corrib pipeline project, which the company says could provide up to 60% of Irish demand for natural gas, Reuters reported.

The pipeline will link Ireland's northwest coast to the Corrib field offshore, which is estimated to contain 1 trillion cubic feet of gas.

The Department of the Environment, Heritage and Local Government said in a statement that it had granted a pipeline foreshore license, the last government permission needed for work to begin on the project, which has been beset by protests and delays since its discovery in 1996.

But a legal action to overturn the pipeline's planning permission being heard in the country's High Court could still cause delays.

The action is being brought by residents who fear onshore processing would bring the pipeline too close to their homes and pollute the water supply. Protests against the pipeline in the past have led to several arrests and a hunger strike.

Shell said in a statement Friday that it welcomed the government's decision. It said it has developed five wells at the field, built the offshore pipeline and is close to completing the onshore terminal.