Decommissioning and abandonment
Decommissioning and abandonment
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REFLOAT PIPELINE AND TOW TO SHORE
Use of divers to attach buoyancy to line In deeper water, pull back onto barge and relaunch Bottom tow or CDT to shore Converted recovery vessel Pipe-lift davits
Hold-back winch
Sea level
Flotation bags
Seabed Abandoned pipeline Unburied pipeline
Stingers fore and aft
Cut and install end cap
Offshore tow tug
Flotation bags
Tow head
Seabed
An alternative would be to attach buoys to long sections of the pipeline – perhaps up to 4 km (2½ miles) and then tow it to shore, where it can be cut up. In shallower water, divers could undertake this. An alternative would be to pull it up onto a specially-designed barge, where buoyancy could be added. A pair of stingers would be required to be fitted to the specially-designed laybarge for support. It is likely that a flat- bottomed anchor barge could be adapted. Once ashore, the steel and concrete could be recovered.
BUNDLERECOVERY
BUNDLE RECOVERY
Bundle recovery by off-bottom towing Use ballast to raise bundle off the seabed Fill bundle with air Use ballast chains to stabilise Tow to an onshore facility Advantage No offshore cutting of pipeline Disadvantages Depends on structural integrity of bundle Extensive preparatory work
This method is intended to recover continuous lengths of bundles that are lying on the seabed with minimal rock dump protection.
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