This year’s HSE Technology Focus showcases environmental sustainability. Offshore hybrid renewable power generation, electrically driven well abandonment in urban and natural settings, and the use of remotely controlled, low-carbon-footprint underwater intervention/inspection drones demonstrate HSE- and sustainability-conscious planning and successful implementation in the field. Environmental, social, and governance guidelines, as well as regulatory and sustainability-related frameworks, provide guidance to achieve the social license to operate. Risk management and stakeholder engagement practices help predict nontechnical risks and keep the community informed.
In paper SPE 204901, which involves using renewable energy sources for offshore oil and gas platform power generation, one operator proposes harnessing wind energy in weak-wind areas by replacing gas-turbine generators with offshore wind turbines adapted to low-wind-speed regions, thereby lowering maintenance costs and carbon exposure.
In paper OTC 31394, a service company, acting as project management lead, and an operator collaborate to use fully electrified equipment to abandon wells in sensitive areas such as urban and natural settings where smell and noise are significant issues.
In paper OTC 32481, an operator advocates the use of underwater intervention/inspection drones for offshore projects and describes their advantages, including operational risk reduction, lower carbon footprint, lower costs, reduced intervention time, and improved quality and frequency of inspection data.
One of the recommended-reading papers, SPE 210788, describes how an operator advocates for mental health or “mental hygiene,” a “preventive measure for sustaining good emotional health” to mitigate workers’ distress in the oil and gas industry and an indication of the growing emphasis upon total wellness.
Many more examples of recent notable achievements in HSES can be found in the list of recommended additional reading and in the OnePetro online library. Knowledge sharing, on the local and global levels, encourages collaboration and solutions generation. See the SPE Health, Safety, Environment and Sustainability website for more information and to learn how you could be involved.
This Month’s Technical Papers
Approach Allows Safe, Environmentally Sound Well Abandonment in Urban Setting
Hybrid Power-Generation Concept Incorporates Offshore Wind
Underwater Drones Promote Sustainability of Offshore Natural Resources Exploitation
Recommended Additional Reading
SPE 210788 Shifting Paradigm of Mental Hygiene—A Novel Approach To Mitigate Workers’ Distress in the Oil and Gas Industry by Adeela Khalid, RPM, et al.
SPE 212791 An Improved Work Flow in Mass-Balance Approach for Estimating Regional Methane Emission Rate Using Satellite Measurements by Jeffrey Y. Bian, University of Alberta, et al.
SPE 210245 Insights From Benchmarking Methane Emissions of Oil and Natural Gas Production in the United States by Tom Curry, ERM, et al.
Linda A. Battalora, SPE, is a teaching professor in the Petroleum Engineering Department at the Colorado School of Mines. She holds the Ben L. Fryrear Chair for Innovation and Excellence and is a Payne Institute for Public Policy Faculty Fellow and a Shultz Humanitarian Engineering Fellow. Battalora holds BS and MS degrees in petroleum engineering and a PhD degree in environmental science and engineering from the Colorado School of Mines and a law degree from Loyola University New Orleans. She is the program chair of the Society of Petroleum Engineers Methane Emissions Management Technical Section and a member of the Business and Leadership Standing Committee; the Health, Safety, Environment, and Sustainability Advisory Committee; and the Production and Facilities Advisory Committee. Battalora is a past chairwoman of the Sustainable Development Technical Section and the SPE Diversity and Inclusion Standing Committee. She is an SPE Distinguished Member and was an SPE Distinguished Lecturer in 2019–20.