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Environmental Sustainability |
Indicators, trends and commentary
Atmospheric conditions
2004 data shows total emissions of CO2 to be
22,902,430 tonnes, which is a reduction of 536,000
tonnes from 2003. NOx and SO2 show a slight but not
significant increase. Methane emissions increased by
9% whilst non methane VOCs decreased by
approximately 20%. These figures paint a relatively
static picture of emissions.
All operators have been verifying emissions in order to
participate in the EU Emissions Trading Scheme. The
consolidated industry data do not reflect all the changes
to historical data made during this verifi cation process
and, at this stage, must be treated as indicative only.
UKOOA and its advisers are currently assessing the
best way of ensuring that the industry data accurately
summarise individual operator data.
Figure 24: UKCS Atmospheric Emissions of a
variety of gases 2000-2004

Figure 25: UKCS Atmospheric Emissions of Carbon Dioxide 2000-2004

Flaring and venting
The quantity of gas flared during 2004 (both onshore
and offshore) rose by 71,400 tonnes to 1,594,640
tonnes hydrocarbons. However, the associated CO2
emissions have been more than compensated by
reductions elsewhere. Data analysis to further
understand this is underway.
Figure 26: UKCS Flaring and Venting Levels, 2000-2004

Energy usage
A substantial number of installations on the UKCS are in, or are approaching, late field life with production in
decline. During this period, as reservoir pressures fall, production may need sustaining through an increase in:
- Water/gas injection for aquifer support
- Gas compression
- Dependency on other lift techniques e.g. gas lift / submersible pumps
All these techniques require considerable energy input,
so energy consumption relative to net production can be
expected to increase later in field life for a given
facility/installation. This trend may be compounded by
the need to respond to and comply with other
environmental legislation e.g. mitigation of oil-inproduced-water risks may require energy-intensive
solutions, such as produced water re-injection.
Reinforced by the advent of C02 emissions trading
schemes, which place a financial value directly onto fuel
use, significant industry effort is now being applied to
gain a better understanding of energy efficiency drivers.
UKOOA is in the early stages of developing a measure
to monitor energy efficiency. The PSI study has provided
some insight. One approach could be energy intensity,
the amount of energy consumed per unit of production.
Marine hydrocarbon discharges and spills
During 2004 the 70 installations discharging oil-inproduced-water reported a total of 258 million tonnes of
water containing 5227 tonnes of oil being discharged to
sea. The average concentration of oil-in-producedwater for all installations was 20.3 parts per million,
ppm, significantly below the current OSPAR
requirement of 40 ppm and the industry voluntary target
of 30 ppm. This shows a levelling off over the last few
years, which could be an indication that current
treatment technology is reaching its limits.
Figure 27: UKCS Average Oil Content of
Discharged Produced Water, 2000-2004

Although there is no evidence to suggest that the oil
content of produced water has a significant impact on
the marine environment and recent survey data show
that amounts of hydrocarbon in seabed sediments are
declining rapidly, OSPAR is pursuing an initiative to
discharge 15% less oil-in-produced-water than in 2000.
The industry is working collaboratively to achieve this
national target through a combination of engineering
projects and a trading mechanism.
Figure 28: UKCS Total Discharge of Hydrocarbons,
all sources 2000-2004

Oil reaching the sea as a result of spillage remains
relatively constant year-on-year. During 2004 a total of
66 tonnes of oil were reported spilled as a result of 399
incidents. 95% of the spillages were less than 1 tonne
and the largest was 16 tonnes. UKOOA intends to work
with the DTI to examine the root causes of spillages to
identify ways to reduce the number of incidents.
Marine chemical discharges
Since 1999, overall chemical usage is down by 8% to
333,940 tonnes and discharge is down by 15% to
109,260 tonnes. As in previous years, the discharge of
chemicals presenting risk to the marine environment has
been reduced significantly. For example, the discharge
of the highest risk category has been reduced by 99%
since 1999.
Figure 29: UKCS Chemicals Discharged, by type,
2000-2004

The discharge of production chemicals rose steadily to
2003 when 43,600 tonnes were discharged. In 2004
this trend has been reversed with 41,490 tonnes
discharged. This resulted from a decline in production, a
marginal reduction in produced water discharge and
better chemical management.
The downward trend in drilling discharges continues
with a significant reduction during 2004 to 66,930
tonnes. This reflects a combination of reduced drilling
activity, changes in drilling practices and the reuse/
recycling of drilling chemicals.
Pipeline chemical discharges have increased to 830
tonnes as new infrastructure is added and, for the fi rst
time, the data record the discharge of chemicals
associated with decommissioning activities at 3 tonnes.
Marine acoustic discharges, noise
The issue of marine noise has been addressed in the
past both through UKOOA sponsored work and through
OGP activities. The conclusion of this work was that the
acoustic energy emitted during exploration and
production operations does not signifi cantly affect
marine mammals, fish or fisheries. However, recognising
that the NGO community believe that the evidence base
for these conclusions is insufficient, UKOOA is to
participate in a major OGP study on noise in the marine
environment.
In trying to develop a measure which can be used as an
indicator of offshore oil and gas acoustic energy, we
have focused on the volume seismic surveys (although
this does not include infrastructure noise). All such
surveys, which involve acoustic energy, now require an
environmental impact assessment. The plot shows that
the number of these surveys has been considerably
reduced in recent years.
Figure 30: UKCS Seismic Surveys 1970-2004

Waste disposal
The quantity of general and special wastes returned to 2000-2004
shore continues the downward trend from a peak in
2002, with 74,710 tonnes requiring disposal. Despite
the downturn in drilling activity the quantity of cuttings
returned to shore remains relatively constant at 52,370
tonnes for 2004. This is partly due to an increase in the
use of organic phase drilling fluids which cannot be 100
discharged to sea and are returned to shore for recycling.
Changes to waste legislation and the subsequent
increase in disposal costs, particularly for landfi ll, are
beginning to affect disposal options. The quantity of
waste sent to landfill continues to fall with 63,780
tonnes being disposed of in 2004. Waste recycled
remains relatively constant; with efforts to increase this e.g. by treating cuttings to remove oil based fluids so
they could be used for other purposes like making
concrete, falling outside the legislation and having to be
disposed of in landfill. Waste to energy is increasing
and incineration remains low at 205 tonnes for 2004.
Work is in hand to improve the reporting of waste
disposal, particularly to better define the 'other'
categories in the type of waste and the disposal routes.
Figure 31: UKCS Waste Disposal, by Type 2000-2004

Figure 32: UKCS Waste Disposal, by Route

Decommissioning
At the conclusion of exploration drilling, if nothing has
been found, the well is decommissioned (using agreed
UKOOA standards) to a clean seabed. The site is both
inspected by cameras and, under an arrangement
between UKOOA and the fishing federations, SFF and
NFFO, over-trawled by fishermen. If there are
hydrocarbons found then, sometimes, the option is
taken of suspending the well for future use in any
subsequent development.
In 1999 a review of the seabed showed 360 suspended
wellheads in open water, which pose a potential hazard
to fishermen trawling in the area. These are rigorously
tracked, recorded on DEAL and regularly communicated
to all fishing vessels via a range of different media. The
industry has also committed itself to a programme of
decommissioning those wellheads that are now unlikely
to be used in any development, to reduce the stock to
below 100 by end 2006. This figure shows progress.
Figure 33: UKCS Number of Open-water
Suspended Wells, 1998-2006

Removal is regulated by the DTI, in conjunction with
other government agencies and departments, in
accordance with international agreements. The UK is a
member of OSPAR and the IMO. The OSPAR 98/3
decision makes a clean seabed presumption but allows
derogation from this for cases which can demonstrate
practical reasons why this cannot be achieved. During
2004/5 two large structures, N.W. Hutton (steel) and
Frigg MCP01 (concrete) have undergone both informal
and statutory consultations of decommissioning
programmes which include such derogations. In this
same period there have also been other such
consultations, for the Brent anchor blocks and flare and
the five small platforms in Indefatigable, all of which proposed a clean seabed.
Industry continues to extend the economic life of much
of the UKCS infrastructure through success in
attracting incremental and new field developments. The
figure below shows the projected timing for the
decommissioning of facilities over the next few decades,
based on existing plans. Total decommissioning costs
are in the range £15-19 billion based on DTI estimates.
The first platform to be decommissioned in the UKCS
was in the southern North Sea basin in 1978. Since
then a further 30 structures have been decommissioned
(2 subsea, 19 platforms and 9 others), all to a clean
seabed.
Figure 34: UKCS Structures Decommissioning
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