Register      Login
The APPEA Journal The APPEA Journal Society
Journal of the Australian Petroleum Production & Exploration Association (APPEA)
RESEARCH ARTICLE (Non peer reviewed)

Decommissioning – the next Australian oil and gas boom?

Bernadette Cullinane A C and Susan Gourvenec B
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Deloitte Consulting Pty Ltd, Tower 2, Brookfield Place, 123 St Georges Terrace, Perth, WA 6000, Australia.

B Centre for Offshore Foundation Systems & Offshore Floating Facilities (OFFshore) Hub, University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia.

C Corresponding author. Email: bernadettecullinane@deloitte.com.au

The APPEA Journal 57(2) 421-425 https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ16203
Accepted: 27 March 2017   Published: 29 May 2017

Abstract

In the Oil and Gas Competitiveness Assessment recently published by National Energy Resources Australia (NERA), Australia ranked at the bottom of the group of 30 oil and gas producing nations in abandonment and decommissioning (NERA 2016).

With the recent focus on the massive investment in liquefied natural gas (LNG), it is easy to forget that the Australian oil and gas industry is nearly 100 years old and many assets are reaching the end of their producing life. Liabilities are estimated at more than US$21 billion over the next 50 years (Wood Mackenzie 2016a). With nearly 70% of producing assets located offshore, this problem is complex and costly.

The industry must develop strategies to address this looming challenge, however Australia has completed few large-scale decommissioning projects and currently lacks the required experience.

This paper explores how Australia must:

  • evaluate a range of approaches from complete removal to allowing assets to remain in situ;

  • develop multi- and interdisciplinary solutions based on the collaborative input of all stakeholders and ocean users to develop a framework suited to our geographic location and environment;

  • develop fit-for-purpose policies and regulations to support the most appropriate decommissioning framework for Australia, by learning from other countries, while recognising local uniqueness; and

  • build workforce capability and capacity to support efficient and economical decommissioning activities and stimulate economic growth, which is more challenging than in other regions given our remoteness and high cost structure.

The upcoming decommissioning wave represents a perfect ‘greenfield’ opportunity to apply innovative thinking, new technologies and collaborative approaches as well as an opportunity for Australia to demonstrate global leadership in this inevitable final stage of the lifecycle.

Keywords: industry competitiveness, LNG, offshore.

Bernadette Cullinane is Deloitte’s Australian National Oil and Gas Practice Leader and LNG Leader. Throughout her career Bernadette has helped companies improve their business, financial and operational performance. She has more than 25 years of experience across the oil and gas value chain and all stages of the capital project to operations lifecycle.

Susan Gourvenec is a Professor at the Centre for Offshore Foundation Systems and the Offshore Floating Facilities Research Hub at the University of Western Australia. Susan has 15 years of offshore engineering experience with particular interest in offshore geotechnics. She is a consultant offshore geotechnical engineer to industry and member of the ISO and API Committees for offshore geotechnics. Susan is currently leading an initiative to develop a multisector, multidisciplinary, multivariate approach to offshore oil and gas decommissioning.


References

APPEA (2016). APPEA Financial Survey 2015–2016. Available at https://www.appea.com.au/industry-in-depth/policy/tax-and-commercial/ [Verified 28 February 2017]

Australian Bureau of Standards (2017) 5206.0 Australian National Accounts, Table 37, Industry Gross Value Add Australian Bureau of Standards (2017), 6291 Australian Labour Statistics.

Chandler, J., White, D. J., Techera, E. J., Gourvenec, S., and Draper, S. (2016). Engineering and legal considerations for decommissioning of offshore oil and gas infrastructure in Australia. Ocean Engineering , .
Engineering and legal considerations for decommissioning of offshore oil and gas infrastructure in Australia.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

DecomWorld (2015). Offshore Decommissioning Report 2015, DecomWorld. Available at http://www.decomworld.com/gomreport/ [Verified 28 February 2017]

Foxwell, D. (2016). Decom market growing in size and complexity but providers ‘too fragmented’. Offshore Support Journal, 2 December. Available at http://www.osjonline.com/news/view,decom-market-growing-in-size-and-complexity-but-providers-too-fragmented_45672.htm [Verified 28 February 2017]

Gourvenec, S., and Techera, E. J. (2016). Rigs to reefs: is it better to leave disused oil platforms where they stand? The Conversation. Available at https://theconversation.com/rigs-to-reefs-is-it-better-to-leave-disused-oil-platforms-where-they-stand-63670 [Verified 28 February 2017]

Gourvenec, S., and White, D. J. (2017). In situ decommissioning of subsea infrastructure, Proc. Conference of Offshore and Maritime Engineering; Decommissioning of Offshore Geotechnical Structures, Hamburg, Germany. Keynote address.

Leckie, S., White, D.J., Draper, S., and Cheng, L. (2016). Unlocking the benefits of long term pipeline embedment processes: Image analysis-based processing of historic survey data. ASCE Journal of Pipeline Systems Engineering Practice , .
Unlocking the benefits of long term pipeline embedment processes: Image analysis-based processing of historic survey data.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Mok, L. (2015). Regulators reveal plans to spark first wave of decom in Asia. DecomWorld, 14 December. Available at http://analysis.decomworld.com/regulation-and-policy/regulators-reveal-plans-spark-first-wave-decom-asia [Verified 28 February 2017]

Mueller, R. J. (2015). Evidence for the biotic origin of seabed pockmarks on the Austral-ian continental shelf. Marine and Petroleum Geology 64, 276–293.
Evidence for the biotic origin of seabed pockmarks on the Austral-ian continental shelf.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

NERA (2016). Oil & Gas Industry Competitiveness Assessment, Report on the Framework, Baseline Score, Insights and Opportunities, September 2016. National Energy Resources Australia, Australian Government Growth Centre Available at http://www.nera.org.au/Chapter?Action=View&Chapter_id=9 [Verfied 28 February 2017]

NUS (2013). Centre for International Law, National University of Singapore, Prospects for large scale artificial reefs in South East Asian tropical seas. Available at http://cil.nus.edu.sg/programmes-and-activities/past-events/rigs-to-reefs-workshop/ [Verified 28 February 2017]

Pradella, N., Fowler, A. M., Booth, D. J., and Macreadie, P. I. (2014). Fish assemblages associated with oil industry structures on the continental shelf of north-western Australia. Journal of Fish Biology 84, 247–255.
Fish assemblages associated with oil industry structures on the continental shelf of north-western Australia.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Royal Academy of Engineering (2013). Decommissioning in the North Sea. Available at http://www.raeng.org.uk/publications/reports/decommissioning-in-the-north-sea [Verified 28 February 2017]

Techera, E., and Chandler, J. (2015). Offshore installations, decommissioning and artificial reefs: Do current legal frameworks best serve the marine environment? Marine Policy. 59, 53–60.WAMSI (2015) The blueprint for marine science 2050. Western Australian Marine Science Institution. Available at http://www.marinescienceblueprint.org.au [Verfied 28 February 2017]

Wilby, B. (2016). Coming Decommissioning Boom to be Driven by UK, Douglas Westwood, 1 February. Available at http://www.douglas-westwood.com/dw-monday-coming-decommissioning-boom-to-be-driven-by-uk/ [Verified 28 February 2017]

Wilkinson, R. (2015). Chevron group plans decommissioning of Thevenard Island facilities, Oil and Gas Journal, 16 April. Available at http://www.ogj.com/articles/2015/04/chevron-group-plans-decommissioning-of-thevenard-island-facilities.html [Verfied 28 February 2017]

Wood Mackenzie (2016a). Upstream Data Tool. Available at http://www.woodmac.com/web/woodmac/data [Verified 28 February 2017]

Wood Mackenzie (2016b). Available at https://www.woodmac.com/reports/upstream-oil-and-gas-decommissioning-asia-pacific-600-fields-on-the-front-line-43747368 [Verified 28 February 2017]

Wood Mackenzie (2017). Upstream Data Tool. Available at http://www.woodmac.com/web/woodmac/data [Verified 28 February 2017]

Wright, R. (2015). PTTEP Case Study in the Decommissioning of the Jabiru and Challis Oilfields in the Timor Sea, Australia. APPEA HSE Conference.