An Assessment of Environmental Impact on Offshore Decommissioning of Oil and Gas Pipelines

Author:

Shams Shahriar1ORCID,Prasad D. M. Reddy2ORCID,Imteaz Monzur Alam3ORCID,Khan Md. Munir Hayet4ORCID,Ahsan Amimul35ORCID,Karim Md. Rezaul5

Affiliation:

1. Civil Engineering Programme Area, Faculty of Engineering, Universiti Teknologi Brunei, Jalan Tungku Link, Mukim Gadong A, Bandar Seri Begawan 1410, BE, Brunei

2. Petroleum and Chemical, Engineering Programme Area, Faculty of Engineering, Universiti Teknologi Brunei, Jalan Tungku Link, Mukim Gadong A, Bandar Seri Begawan 1410, BE, Brunei

3. Department of Civil and Construction Engineering, Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, VIC 3122, Australia

4. Faculty of Engineering and Quantity Surveying (FEQS), INTI International University, Persiaran Perdana BBN, Nilai 71800, Negeri Sembilan, Malaysia

5. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Islamic University of Technology (IUT), Board Bazar, Gazipur 1704, Bangladesh

Abstract

There has been a steady growth in the length of pipelines over the past 45 years, with over 6000 operating platforms extracting oil. Several facilities would reach their operational life, which can no longer be economically viable for their production and will eventually undergo the decommissioning procedure. Almost 3000 petroleum industries will likely be decommissioned worldwide in the next 17 years. By 2030, the total cost of decommissioning globally amounted to about USD 104.5 billion. The choice to decommission the offshore oil and gas sector is considered complicated and crucial as it must evaluate numerous variables such as cost, health and safety, and environmental consequences. This review paper aims to assess the decommissioning activity, specifically on pipelines in the oil and gas industry. The purpose of this study is to understand and evaluate significant environmental impacts associated with decommissioning of oil pipelines and to propose mitigation measures to address the challenges of decommissioning. Waste disposal, a threat to biodiversity and air pollution, is a major environmental concern in decommissioning oil and gas pipelines. Among the decommissioning measures, leave in-situ has the lowest environmental impact while repurposing and recycling, with the application of environmental impact qualitatively and quantitatively by integrating 3D information models, mathematical models embedded in hydrodynamic models look promising for decommissioning.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Environmental Science,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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