Work on an offshore oil or gas rig presents
many hazards. Getting out
there can be dangerous, too, because of
sea and weather conditions. Helicopter
transport has a good safety record, but
even the United Kingdom Offshore Oil
and Gas Industry Association Ltd, which
claims to be the world leader in offshore
helicopter safety, has experienced two
fatal crashes, with 18 deaths, in the past
decade. Worldwide in 1995-2005 (the
latest period for which worldwide comparisons
are possible), there were 63 fatal
accidents around the world during offshore
helicopter transport, which annually
moves millions of passengers back and
forth. More than 56 million were flown
from 1997 to end of 2006 in the UK Continental
Shelf region alone. These statistics
come from the association’s “UK Offshore
Public Transport Helicopter Safety
Record 1977-2006,” which calculated this
region had an occupant fatal accident rate
of 1.39 per 100,000 flying hours when
considering the helicopter types now in
use and a non-fatal reportable accident
rate of 1.55 per 100,000 flying hours.
Helicopter transfer is expensive, their airspace is becoming crowded, and deepwater rigs are working farther and farther from shore in some parts of the world, said Larry Denton, who works on crew transfer as the business development manager, Ship Systems for Lockheed Martin’s Maritime Security and Ship Systems line of business, which is based in Baltimore.
The alternative to helicopters is moving workers by ship, which presents hazards of its own when workers are lifted and lowered by crane in baskets between a rig and a ship’s deck. Lifting and hoisting operations of all types—not just crew transfers—are one of the leading causes of deaths and serious incidents in global exploration and production activities, according to the International Association of Oil & Gas Producers (OGP), whose Safety Committee’s Task Force on Lifting and Hoisting developed a Recommended Practice document to focus the industry on safe lifting. (The document lists three essential principles for lifting personnel: Avoid it “unless the risk has been demonstrated as being as low as is reasonably practicable,” lift according to a specific personnel lift plan for that lift, and properly secure lifted personnel with lanyards “unless written procedures and risk assessment require otherwise.”)
High Lifts and High Seas
The vertical lifts range from 40 feet to
more than 100, said Denton. “Generally,
you’re talking about transferring people in
significant sea states, so you’ve got a vessel
that’s moving around quite a bit in the
water,” he said. “There’s limited safety for
the person as they’re in the basket and
being lifted to the rig.
“You start to get a pendulum effect, where if the crane isn’t directly above the basket, the basket starts to move quite significantly as it’s raised to the crane. Some of the most significant injuries occur during that lifting process, where people either fall into the water or, due to the pendulum effect, they hit the rig. On the other hand, you have people hurting their backs and necks when you’re setting that down on the rig, because obviously, in significant weather, it’s not always a nice landing.
“The ship’s performance capabilities are a huge component of the safety because the ship’s ability to remain in close proximity to the rig during the transfer and to limit the motions of the ship during the transfer are huge,” he said.
A new ship design and a new type of transfer interface are Lockheed Martin’s contributions to a comprehensive transfer system launched recently with VIKING Life-Saving Equipment Norge AS. VIKING’s portion is Selstair, a collapsible staircase with non-slip aluminum steps and landings, handrails, and a safety net around the staircase. This embarkation system will work in any weather and offers significant cost advantages over helicopter transport, the companies say.
The patented SLICE® vessel design has four submerged pods. This decreases the vessel’s surface area, lessening the impact of water movement on it and giving SLICE “phenomenal seakeeping ability” while under way and while stationary to transfer, Denton said. As for the third component, Lily Birmingham, a Lockheed Martin engineer on the project, described the CEway crew transfer system as a unique interface riding on rails. It allows rotational freedom and will slide on the boat to accommodate some of the travel motion, she said.
The market for this solution is growing as drilling moves farther offshore in West Africa, Southeast Asia, and the North Sea. “There are many areas of the world where you’re talking significant sea states, high winds, and pretty good distances from shore that would feed right into this type of transfer system,” said Denton.
About the author
Jerry Laws
Jerry Laws is Editor of Occupational Health & Safety magazine and Workplace Ergonomics News, a newsletter. Both are owned by 1105 Media Inc.