Démantèlement des plates formes en mer du Nord

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Re: Démantèlement des plates formes en mer du Nord

Message par energy_isere » 10 juin 2023, 23:35

Démantèlement de la plate forme Schooner, en mer du Nord. 1200 tonnes à lever.
DNO decommissions production platform at Schooner field in UK North Sea


By NS Energy Staff Writer 05 Jun 2023

Schooner, the last major offshore operation under the company’s multi-year North Sea decommissioning programme, was decommissioned by the Netherlands-based Heerema Marine Contractors, using the Thialf semi-submersible crane vessel

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DNO selected Heerema Marine Contractors for decommissioning. (Credit: DNO ASA)

DNO, a Norway-based oil and gas operator focused on the Middle East and the North Sea, has announced the removal of wellhead platform production facilities from the Schooner field, offshore UK.

Schooner is the last major offshore operation under the company’s multi-year North Sea decommissioning programme.

The decommissioning was carried out by the Netherlands-based Heerema Marine Contractors, using the Thialf semi-submersible crane vessel.

DNO said that the platform deck, which weighs 1,200 tonnes, has already been lifted aboard the vessel, and the jacket was removed after the piles had been cut three meters below the seabed.

The deck and jacket have been transported to the Hoondert Yard in the Netherlands, for dismantlement and recycling, said the oil and gas operator.

DNO chief operating officer Chris Spencer said: “We have conducted these operations in a safe, cost-efficient and environmentally responsible manner, coordinating five tier-one contractors and displaying our capabilities as a full life-cycle offshore operator.”
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https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/news/d ... north-sea/

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Re: Démantèlement des plates formes en mer du Nord

Message par energy_isere » 11 août 2023, 12:26

2 milliards de dollars dans le démantèlement pétrolier en mer du Nord pour l'industrie UK :
UK Offshore Oil Sector Spent $2B+ on Decom in 2022

by Andreas Exarheas|Rigzone Staff|Thursday, August 10, 2023

The UK’s offshore oil and gas industry spent GBP 1.6 billion ($2.03 billion) on decommissioning in 2022.

That’s according to a new report on UKCS decommissioning from the North Sea Transition Authority (NSTA) released this week, which highlighted that this is the sector’s highest annual total to date.

The report noted that there is “significant opportunity” ahead for the sector, “with GBP 21 billion ($26 billion) of spending on decommissioning forecast for the next decade alone”.
https://www.rigzone.com/news/uk_offshor ... 7-article/

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Re: Démantèlement des plates formes en mer du Nord

Message par energy_isere » 28 oct. 2023, 11:45

Aker Solutions avait sorti lea plateforme pétroliére de Gyda (mer du Nord) d'un poids de 18 000 tonnes il ya plusieurs mois, maintenant c'est le recyclage du métal :
Aker Solutions to sort, recycle 18,000t topside

le 25/10/2023 - Europetrole

In the largest-ever demolition of its kind, Aker Solutions has toppled the decommissioned Gyda field’s topside. Now, mountains of recovered steel and other precious resources are about to join the circular economy as low-carbon equivalents.

If decommissioned the right way, offshore energy infrastructure like the Gyda topsides offer an enormous resource of valuable materials — including steel prized by builders. Recycling and reusing metals offers a lower-emissions alternative to metal derived directly from ore and shipped.

In fact, emissions-tracking tools suggest recycled steel is 70-percent less carbon-intensive than the ore-derived variety. Recycled aluminum is 92-percent less CO2-intensive. Recovered copper … 65 percent cleaner, according to data from Stena Recycling.

Citing info from EcoInvent, Aker Solutions own environmental expert, Marcin Pazdro, says returning 18,000 tons of steel to the circular economy would cut carbon emissions by 26,000t to 30,000t, depending on the steel production process used as benchmark.

Before recycling, a giant steel structure has to be decommissioned, hauled to shore and demolished. Aker Solutions has been decommissioning and recovering offshore oil-and-gas infrastructure for over 25 years.

Toppling the Gyda topsides to recover 18,000 tons of steel and other valuable metals was the latest in a series of controlled demolitions for offshore energy clients. It just happened to be the largest operation of its kind, where precision demolitions and pull force took down a topside.

“The operation was well-planned and executed — a big milestone and team achievement,” said head of Aker Solutions Decommissioning, Thomas Nygård.

“Projects like these are important for us, they're important to our clients and they let us return value to the circular economy,” Nygård says.

About 10,000 platforms now in operation worldwide will one day have to be decommissioned. Many of these structures are in the North Sea, from which Aker Solutions has secured a pipeline of orders for structural teardowns.

Circular economics

With the energy transition underway and materials costs rising, the worldwide decommissioning and recycling of offshore infrastructure takes on new importance. The demolition of Gyda — which will be 98-percent recycled — will provide valuable building materials for new energy projects.

“However you look at it, the recycled steel and other materials recovered from Gyda would represent a sizeable contribution to Aker Solutions or our customers’ own material needs going forward,” Pazdro says.

As part of its decommissioning offering, Aker Solutions prepares a Second Life Report detailing the recoverable raw materials made available from the recovered material in platform jackets, topsides and other retired energy infrastructure. For operators, the Report reveals a treasure trove of reusable resources: aluminum for bridges; steel for girders; reusable generators, pumps, fire-suppressors and more.

Decommissioning

With its jacket (substructure) and topside (superstructure), Gyda once weighed in at around 29,000t. Aker Solutions built the jacket at Verdal and then recycled its 11,000tons. The topside was the largest ever toppled using explosives and pulling power — a cost-effective technique requiring engineering inputs, experience and secure space.

Once felled, large cutting machines and a giant, stationary shears make the dismantling operation efficient and safe. The chopped-up steel structures and cuttings are then sorted and shipped for remelting and possible use as additives.

The Gyda topside

The Repsol-operated Gyda oilfield in the southern North Sea was onstream between 1990 and its shut-down in the fall of 2021. The following summer, its topside was transported to Aker Solutions’ Stord yard in western Norway by the world’s largest construction vessel, Allseas’ Pioneering Spirit. Since then, Aker Solutions has safely dismantled and recycled Gyda’s drilling and flare towers, along with associated waste.
https://www.euro-petrole.com/aker-solut ... -n-i-26213

Gyda est en mer du Nord dans les eaux de la Norvége.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyda_Oil_Field

Vidéo de 3 mn sur la sortie du topside, puis du jacket, et transport à terre, le tout par le Pioneering Spririt : https://allseas.com/videos/pioneering-s ... m-removal/

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et

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https://allseas.com/news/decommissioned ... in-norway/

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