Litcius/Paper detail

Assessing the impacts of scale residues from offshore oil and gas decommissioning on marine organisms

Tom Cresswell, Sue Brown, Henri Wong, Simon C. Apte

2021The APPEA Journal10 citationsDOI

Abstract

Successful decommissioning of offshore oil and gas infrastructure requires an effective and safe approach to assessing and managing chemical and radiological residues. Scale frequently accumulates on the interior surfaces of pipes and other structures and may persist long after extraction operations have ceased. Scale materials can contain a range of metal contaminants (including mercury), as well as naturally occurring radioactive materials. In newer or more accessible infrastructure, the scale is routinely removed, and becomes a waste product. The persistent nature of scale contaminants can result in a radiological dose to the organisms living on, or near an intact pipeline. Eventually, infrastructure corrosion following in situ decommissioning (abandonment) could lead to metal and radionuclide contaminants being accessible to the surrounding seafloor environment, where bioaccumulation and subsequent ecotoxicological effects from the chemical and radiological properties of the scale could occur. The paper describes a tiered approach to assess the ecological impacts of pipeline scale in order to assist operators with their plans for decommissioning offshore infrastructure, especially when considering ‘leave in place’ options.

Topics & Concepts

Nuclear decommissioningEnvironmental scienceSubmarine pipelineScale (ratio)Radiological weaponWaste managementEngineeringChemistryRadiochemistryGeotechnical engineeringQuantum mechanicsPhysicsMarine and Offshore Engineering StudiesMicroplastics and Plastic PollutionOffshore Engineering and Technologies