THESIS
2018
6 unnumbered pages, viii, 186 pages : illustrations ; 30 cm
Abstract
Offshore oil and gas platforms (OOGPs) usually have a lifetime of 30-40 years. The
operation and maintenance stage takes up the most percentage of the whole lifetime of OOGPs.
During the operations and maintenance, there are several safety issues. Emergent accidents and
exposure to high level of noise are two main issues. Traditional emergency responses include 2D
escape plan guidance and real drill exercises. 2D escape plan usually causes different
understanding, while real drill exercises require extra time and workforce. As for current noise
controls, only personal protective equipment has been commonly employed, which is the least
effective noise control. In addition, as increasing number of OOGPs will be retired and
decommissioned in the coming decade, disassembling offsho...[
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Offshore oil and gas platforms (OOGPs) usually have a lifetime of 30-40 years. The
operation and maintenance stage takes up the most percentage of the whole lifetime of OOGPs.
During the operations and maintenance, there are several safety issues. Emergent accidents and
exposure to high level of noise are two main issues. Traditional emergency responses include 2D
escape plan guidance and real drill exercises. 2D escape plan usually causes different
understanding, while real drill exercises require extra time and workforce. As for current noise
controls, only personal protective equipment has been commonly employed, which is the least
effective noise control. In addition, as increasing number of OOGPs will be retired and
decommissioned in the coming decade, disassembling offshore platforms is an unavoidable
activity. During OOGP decommissioning stage, there are also several safety issues such as
potential clashes when conducting heavy lift operations and lift vessel capsize. Besides, when
multiple lift vessels are working together to disassemble multiple offshore platforms, more than
one vessel working at the same platform, which can significantly increase lift clashes, is another
safety issues. Current approaches to addressing these safety issues at the decommissioning stage
are usually based on experience, and manually planned. Considering all these safety issues
mentioned above, automated, efficient, and accurate approaches to improving safety management
of OOGPs at both operation and decommissioning stages are desired. However, limited researches
have been conducted to tackle these safety issues. Therefore, this research aims to develop
automated, efficient, and accurate techniques and approaches for safer operations and
decommissioning of OOGPs.
Building information modeling (BIM) technology is widely used in the building and
infrastructure industries for the past decade considering the rich geometric and semantic
information BIM contains. Therefore, this research applies BIM technology to efficiently provide
required information of OOGPs when developing new approaches to addressing safety issues.
For the operation and maintenance stage of an offshore platform, to better respond to
emergent accidents, a BIM-based evacuation evaluation model is developed to efficiently simulate
and evaluate different emergency scenarios, and improve evacuation performance on offshore
platforms. As for the noise control, this research proposes a BIM-supported 4D acoustics
simulation approach. The proposed approach can automatically conduct noise simulation for
offshore platforms using the information extracted from BIM models. Maintenance schedules can
then be optimized based on simulated results. By minimizing the time of exposing to a high level
of noise, the noise impact on maintenance workers is well mitigated.
For the decommissioning stage, first, a semi-automated approach to generate 4D/5D BIM
models to evaluate different OOGP decommissioning option is developed. Second, automated
topsides disassembly planning approach based on BIM is developed. Clash-free lift paths can be
generated to avoid clashes during heavy lifts. Module layouts on vessels are optimized to minimize
the total heavy lift time and to guarantee the stability of lift vessels. Besides, a schedule clash
detection method is also developed to make sure that no more than one vessel is working at one
offshore platform simultaneously.
All developed BIM-based approaches are illustrated with related examples. Compared to
current practices, these proposed approaches improve the safety management performance of
offshore platforms.
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