
ExxonMobil's Beryl Alpha, located in the North Sea.
An 'oil platform' is a large structure used to house workers and machinery needed to drill and then produce
oil and
natural gas wells in the ocean. Depending on the circumstances, the platform may be attached to the ocean floor, consist of an
artificial island, or be
floating.
Generally, oil platforms are located on the
continental shelf, though as technology improves, drilling and production in deeper waters becomes both feasible and profitable. A typical platform may have around thirty wellheads located on the platform and
directional drilling allows reservoirs to be accessed at both different depths and at remote positions up to 5
miles (8
kilometres) from the platform.
Many platforms also have remote wellheads attached by
umbilical connections, these may be single wells or a manifold centre for multiple wells.
History
The
Thames Sea Forts of World War II are considered the direct precedessors of modern offshore oil platforms, having been pre-constructed in a very short time, they were then floated to their location and placed on the shallow bottom of the
Thames estuary.
[1]
The first oil platform in the world is the
Oil Rocks (Neft Daşları), built near
Baku in Soviet Union. Building on the platform began in 1949, with Soviet Tankers transporting Oil from the first Well to Baku in 1951.
[2] The Oil Rocks lies 45–50 km (about 25
nautical miles) offshore on the
Caspian Sea. The most unique feature of the Oil Rocks is that it is actually a functional city with a population of about 5000. The Oil Rocks is a city on the sea, with over 200 km of streets built on piles of dirt and landfill. Most of the inhabitants work on shifts; a week on Oil Rocks followed by a week on the shore.
Types

Gulf offshore platform, detailed image.
Larger lake- and sea-based oil platforms and
oil rigs are some of the largest moveable man-made structures in the world. There are several distinct types of platforms and rigs:.
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Fixed Platforms'', built on
concrete and/or
steel legs anchored directly onto the seabed, supporting a deck with space for drilling rigs, production facilities and crew quarters. Such platforms are, by virtue of their immobility, designed for very long term use (for instance the
Hibernia platform). Various types of structure are used, steel jacket, concrete
caisson, floating steel and even floating concrete. Steel jackets are vertical sections made of tubular steel members, and are usually piled into the seabed. Concrete caisson structures, pioneered by the
Condeep concept, often have in-built oil storage in tanks below the sea surface and these tanks were often used as a flotation capability, allowing them to be built close to shore (
Norwegian fjords and
Scottish firths are popular because they are sheltered and deep enough) and then floated to their final position where they are sunk to the seabed. Fixed platforms are economically feasible for installation in water depths up to about 1,700 feet (520 m).

A fixed platform base under construction on a Louisiana river.
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Compliant Towers'', consist of narrow, flexible towers and a piled foundation supporting a conventional deck for drilling and production operations. Compliant towers are designed to sustain significant lateral deflections and forces, and are typically used in water depths ranging from 1,500 and 3,000 feet (450 and 900 m).
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Semi-submersible Platforms'' having legs of sufficient
buoyancy to cause the structure to float, but of weight sufficient to keep the structure upright. Semi-submersible rigs can be moved from place to place; and can be ballasted up or down by altering the amount of flooding in buoyancy tanks; they are generally anchored by cable anchors during drilling operations, though they can also be kept in place by the use of
dynamic positioning. Semi-submersible can be used in depths from 600 to 6,000 feet (180 to 1,800 m).
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Jack-up Platforms'', as the name suggests, are platforms that can be jacked up above the sea using legs which can be lowered like jacks. These platforms, used in relatively low depths, are designed to move from place to place, and then anchor themselves by deploying the jack-like legs.
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Drillships'', a maritime vessel that has been fitted with drilling apparatus. It is most often used for exploratory drilling of new oil or gas wells in deep water but can also be used for scientific drilling. It is often built on a modified tanker hull and outfitted with a
dynamic positioning system to maintain its position over the well.
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Floating production systems are large ships equipped with processing facilities and moored to a location for a long period. The main types of floating production systems are
FPSO (floating production, storage, and offloading system),
FSO (floating storage and offloading system), and FSU (floating storage unit). These ships do not actually drill for oil or gas.
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Tension-leg Platforms'', consist of floating rigs tethered to the seabed in a manner that eliminates most vertical movement of the structure. TLPS are used in water depths up to about 6,000 feet (2,000 m). The "conventional" TLP is a 4-column design which looks similar to a semisubmersible. Proprietary versions include the Seastar and MOSES mini TLPs; they are relatively low cost, used in water depths between 600 and 3,500 feet (200 and 1,100 m). Mini TLPs can also be used as utility, satellite or early production platforms for larger deepwater discoveries.
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Spar Platforms'', moored to the seabed like the TLP, but whereas the TLP has vertical tension tethers the Spar has more conventional mooring lines. Spars have been designed in three configurations: the "conventional" one-piece cylindrical hull, the "truss spar" where the midsection is composed of truss elements connecting the upper buoyant hull (called a hard tank) with the bottom soft tank containing permanent ballast, and the "cell spar" which is built from multiple vertical cylinders. The Spar may be more economical to build for small and medium sized rigs than the TLP, and has more inherent stability than a TLP since it has a large counterweight at the bottom and does not depend on the mooring to hold it upright. It also has the ability, by use of chain-jacks attached to the mooring lines, to move horizontally over the oil field. The first production spar was Kerr-McGee's Neptune, which is a floating production facility anchored in 1,930 feet (588 m) in the Gulf of Mexico, however spars (such as
Brent Spar) were previously used as FSOs. Dominion Oil's Devil's Tower is located in 5,610 feet (1,710 m) of water, in the Gulf of Mexico, and is the world's deepest spar. The first Truss spars were Kerr-McGee's Boomvang and Nansen. The first (and only) cell spar is Kerr-McGee's Red Hawk.
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Normally unmanned installations'', are small platforms, consisting of little more than a
well bay,
helipad and emergency shelter. They are designed for operate remotely under normal operations, only to be visited occasionally for routine maintenance or
well work.
Especially large examples
The
Petronius Platform is an oil and gas platform in the
Gulf of Mexico, which stands 2,000
feet above the ocean floor. This structure is partially supported by buoyancy. Depending on the criteria it may be the
world's tallest structure.
The
Hibernia platform is the world's largest oil and gas platform, located on the Jeanne D'Arc basin, in the
Atlantic Ocean off the coast of
Newfoundland. The ''Gravity Base Structure'' (GBS), which sits on the ocean floor, is 364 feet high and has storage capacity for 1.3 million barrels of crude oil in its 278.8 foot high caisson (Dorel Iosif). The platform acts as a small concrete island with serrated outer edges designed to withstand the impact of an
iceberg. The GBS contains production storage tanks and the remainder of the void space is filled with ballast with the entire structure weighing in at 1.2 million
tons. The platform stands 734 feet high, which is half the height of New York's Empire State Building (1473) and 108 feet taller than the Calgary Tower (626.6 feet).
Maintenance and supply
A typical oil production platform is self-sufficient in energy and water needs, housing electrical generation, water desalinators and all of the equipment necessary to process oil and gas such that it can be either delivered directly onshore by pipeline or to a
Floating Storage Unit and/or tanker loading facility. Elements in the oil/gas production process include
wellhead,
production manifold,
production separator,
glycol process to dry gas,
gas compressors,
water injection pumps,
oil/gas export metering and
main oil line pumps. All production facilities are designed to have minimal environmental impact.
Larger platforms are assisted by smaller ESVs (emergency support vessels) like the
British Iolair that are summoned when something has gone wrong, ''e.g.'' when a
search and rescue operation is required. During normal operations,
PSVs (platform supply vessels) keep the platforms provisioned and supplied, and
AHTS vessels can also supply them, as well as tow them to location and serve as standby rescue and firefighting vessels.
Crew
The size and composition of the crew of an offshore installation will vary greatly from platform to platform. Because of the cost intensive nature of operating an offshore platform, it is important to maximise productivity by ensuring work continues 24 hours a day. This means that there will essentially two complete crews onboard at a time, one for day shift and the other for night shift. Crews will also change out at regular intervals, nominally two weeks.
Essential personnel
★
OIM (offshore installation manager) is the ultimate authority during his/her shift and makes the essential decisions regarding the operation of the platform.
★ Operations Team Leader (OTL)
★ Offshore Operations Engineer (OOE) is the senior technical authority on the platform
★ PSTL or Operations coordinator for managing crew changes
★ Catering crew will include people tasked with performing essential functions such as cooking, laundry and cleaning the accommodation.
★ Crane operators to operate the cranes for lifting cargo around the platform and between boats.
★ Scaffolders to rig up scaffolding for when it is required for workers to work at height.
★ Coxwains for maintaining the lifeboats and manning them if necessary.
★ Control room operators
★ Production techs for running the production plant
Incidental personnel
★ Drill crew will be onboard if the installation is performing drilling operations. A drill crew will normally comprise:
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Toolpusher
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Roughnecks
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Roustabouts
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Company man
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Mud engineer
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Derrickhand
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Geologist
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Well services crew will be onboard for
well work. The crew will normally comprise:
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★ Well services supervisor
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★ Wireline or coiled tubing operators
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★ Pump operator
Drawbacks
Risks

A typical offshore Oil/Gas platform.
The nature of their operation — extraction of volatile substances sometimes under extreme pressure in a hostile environment — has risk and frequent accidents and tragedies occur. In July
1988, 167 people died when
Occidental Petroleum's
Alpha offshore production platform, on the Piper field in the
North Sea, exploded after a gas leak. The accident greatly accelerated the practice of housing living accommodation on self-contained separate rigs, away from those used for extraction.
However, this was, in itself, a hazardous environment. In March
1980, the '
flotel' (floating hotel) platform
Alexander Kielland capsized in a storm in the
North Sea with the loss of 123 lives.
Given the number of grievances and conspiracy theories that involve the oil business, and the importance of gas/oil platforms to the economy, they are in the United States seen as potential terrorist targets. Agencies and military units responsible for maritime counterterror in the US (
Coast Guard,
Navy SEALs, etc.) often train for platform raids.
Ecological effects
In British waters, the cost of removing all platform rig structures entirely was estimated in 1995 at $345 billion, and the cost of removing all structures including pipelines — a so-called "clean sea" approach — at $621 billion.
Crewed platforms also generate domestic waste associated with day-to-day living; throwing this waste directly into the sea is usually the most convenient and cost-effective form of disposal for the crew. Garbage bags thrown overboard can pose a threat to local wildlife as well as divers that work in the area. Enormous amounts of waste can accumulate on the sea floor surrounding long-lived platforms.
Further effects are the leaching of
heavy metals that accumulate in buoyancy tanks into water; and risks associated with their disposal. There has been concern expressed at the practice of partially demolishing offshore rigs to the point that ships can traverse across their site; there have been instances of
fishery vessels snagging nets on the remaining structures. Proposals for the disposal at sea of the
Brent Spar, a 449 ft tall storage buoy (another true function of that which is termed an oil rig), was for a time in
1996 an environmental ''
cause célèbre'' in the UK after
Greenpeace occupied the floating structure. The event led to a reconsideration of disposal policy in the UK and Europe.
In the United States, Marine Biologist
Milton Love has proposed that oil platforms off the California coast be retained as
artificial reefs, instead of being dismantled (at great cost), because he has found them to be havens for many of the species of fish which are otherwise declining in the region, in the course of 11 years of research. Love is funded mainly by government agencies, but also in small part by the
California Artificial Reef Enhancement Program.
NOAA has said it is considering this course of action, but wants money to study the effects of the rigs in detail.
In the
Gulf of Mexico, more than 200 platforms have been similarly converted.
Tallest oil platforms
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Petronius Platform, 610 metres
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Baldpate Platform, 579.1 metres
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Bullwinkle Platform, 529.1 metres
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Troll A platform, 472 metres
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Gullfaks C, 380 metres
See also
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Brent oilfield
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Condeep
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Drilling rig
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Floating oil production system
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Floating Production Storage and Offloading (FPSO)
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Irish Sea
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List of buildings
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North Sea oil
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Petroleum
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SAR201
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Texas Towers
References
1. [1]
2. [2]
External links
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Oil Rig Disposal (pdf) — Post note issued by the UK Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology.
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Overview of Conventional Platforms Pictoral treatment on the installation of platforms which extend from the seabed to the ocean surface
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Exploring the Future of Offshore Oil and Gas Development in BC: Lessons from the Atlantic
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Offshore Oil Drilling News Offshore Oil Drilling News
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Oil Rig Disasters Listing of Oil Rig Accidents
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Oil Rig Photos Collection of pictures of Drilling Rigs and Production Platforms