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

Late life management of onshore and offshore pipelines

Brian Humphreys A and Wacek Lipski A
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Wood Group Kenny.

The APPEA Journal 55(2) 414-414 https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ14049
Published: 2015

Abstract

The Australian oil and gas boom of the 1960s and 1970s lead to production commencing in the Gippsland, Surat, Cooper and Carnarvon basins and so many pipeline assets around Australia are approaching operating lives of 40–50 years and the end of their design lives. With unconventional field development and the Australian gas markets opening up to international customers through LNG, there will be an increasing requirement to extend the life of pipelines while maintaining safety and integrity.

The management of pipeline assets late in their design life is a challenge for operators both onshore and offshore, with pipelines requiring higher levels of inspection and maintenance, while revenues can be fixed or regulated for downstream assets or potentially declining for upstream assets.

To operate pipelines beyond their specified design life, there are requirements that must be fulfilled—for offshore, a design re-qualification in accordance with DNV-OS-F101 and for onshore, a remaining life review in accordance with AS2885.3. In addition, for onshore pipelines, AS2885.3 requires the remaining life review process to be undertaken every 10 years, rather than just at the end of the design life.

This extended abstract discusses the requirements of the DNV-OS-F101 and AS2885.3 and the approaches required to meet these requirements. It also discusses key lessons that have been learned and makes recommendations to pipeline operators preparing for end-of-design-life reviews and executing them as cost effectively as possible.

Brian Humphreys graduated from Monash University in Melbourne with honours in mechanical engineering. He has 19 years’ experience in the oil and gas industry, focusing primarily on pipelines. Brian has worked for operating companies in Australia (APA, Origin), engineering consultancy firms in Australia and England (WGK, Halliburton), pipeline service providers in Jakarta and Singapore (Corrpro, TDW) and managed his own consultancy firm in Australia for seven years. Brian is a principal engineer with Wood Group Kenny in Melbourne.

Wacek Lipski has more than 15 years’ experience in the oil and gas industry, focusing primarily on offshore and subsea projects. Wacek has worked both in engineering consultancy and in construction firms across regions including the North Sea, Asia and Oceania. He has experience with concept definition to detailed design and construction and operations support with a strong focus on pipelines. Wacek is operations manager for Wood Group Kenny in Melbourne.


References

Bills, K., and Agostini, D., 2009—Offshore Petroleum Safety Regulation Varanus Island Incident Investigation. Perth: Government of Western Australia.