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Posted By Owen Tudor
Hi I am currently working on an onshore construction site that has an offshore pumping platform to pump sea water to the site, the platform is not manned but will need to be visited shortly for maintenance operations. The transfer to the platform is by boat and there will not be an overnight stay.
I assume that this platform will come under the Offshore Installations and Pipeline Works Regulations but what special training will be required for the workforce visiting, induction, certification, offshore survival?
The platform is approximately half a mile of the North East coast of England.
Thanks in advance for any help
Owen
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Posted By John Allen
Owen,
I don’t think your installation will count as an Offshore Installation under the Offshore Regulations, the reason being that it is not handling hydrocarbons or extracting minerals by means of a bore hole.
Precautions need to be taken however and your risk assessment for access to the platform will need to look at issues like, safety of the means of access, wind, tide and wave conditions and means of rescuing a person who falls in the water. What will happen for instance if people are landed on the installation and then cannot get off again due to a change in the weather? Is there a shelter with emergency food and water supplies?
You should look for general guidance on civil engineering projects on or over water.
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Posted By Owen Tudor
John thanks
I wasn't sure whether reg 3 applied (c)for the conveyance of things by means of a pipe but reading further reg3(1) describes activities related to the exploitation of oil and gas resources, so I think you're probably right.
Apparently there are already some things in place but I doubt whether they cover all points adequately so I'll keep digging. Thanks for the help.
Owen
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Posted By Chris Packham
Owen
I would add to the shelter, etc., a two-way radio to allow communications. True the individual workers may have their own with them but this may only have limited battery life and communication can be important in organising rescue, dealing with any (medical?)emergency and for morale.
Chris
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Posted By A Campbell
If you have contracted the boat to transport etc... you could check that it is capable (and at an added cost)to act as a standby mode and assist in rescue etc, also would have to have comms to shore based facilities/emergency services etc .. acting as intermediate communicator?
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Posted By Dave Merchant
Your situation is similar to wind farm access, in that it's "off shore" in a practical sense, but not "offshore" in a legal one.
The BWEA has extensive safety guidance notes for offshore access which you might find useful, covering things like what emergency provisions should be carried, etc.
http://www.bwea.com/safety/
In terms of training, typically people accessing an inshore platform from a boat are expected to either have basic offshore survival or be accompanied by two people who have (so any one casualty can be lost o/b and there's still a trained person to handle it). Immersion suits are generally not required for inshore waters when the water temp is over 20C and there's a standby vessel, but of course lifejackets are essential. Depending on how the platform is accessed, they may need harnesses and WAH/rescue training too.
It's possible (but not guaranteed) that you'll have a cell signal out there, given the distance from shore - but you can't rely on it. The boat will have comms, so can always be used to relay messages.
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Posted By Colin Reeves
Mmmm. put together "The platform is approximately half a mile of the North East coast of England" and "when the water temp is over 20C" - the mind boggles!!
Colin
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Posted By John Allen
Dave,
thanks for the link to the BWEA. I've just started working on a project to build a barge which may be used in offshore windfarm construction. The link to the trade association site is very useful.
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Posted By Owen Tudor
Many thanks for your input everyone, Dave the link to the BWEA was very useful, thanks again
Owen
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