Abstract

An increasing number of pipelines and associated protective materials in the North Sea are reaching the end of their operational life and require decommissioning. Identifying the optimal decommissioning option from an environmental perspective requires an understanding of ecological interactions; currently there is little knowledge as to species associations with pipelines and associated protective materials. This study utilises industry ROV footage from the North Sea to quantify these interactions. A total of 58 taxa were identified, including 41 benthic taxa and 17 fish taxa. Taxa were grouped into seven groups for analysis including four groups for benthic epifauna: grazers, suspension/filter feeders, decapods, and colonial/encrusting taxa. Fish were organised into three groups: pollock, other fish, and other gadoids. Using zero-inflated generalised linear mixed models, we show that abundances of benthic epifauna and fish vary between types of protective structure (e.g., concrete mattresses, rock dump), depth, levels of fishing effort and proximity to oil and gas platforms. Six taxa groups exhibited higher abundances on concrete mattresses than bare pipelines with benthic epifaunal decapods showing the highest difference at 3.04 (1.83, 4.84, 95% CrI) times higher on mattresses compared to bare pipelines. Six groups were higher in abundance within the 500 m fisheries exclusion zone around platforms, compared to outside of the zone, with other gadoids showing the highest difference at 1.83 times (1.09, 2.89, 95% CrI) times higher inside zones. Five groups decreased in abundance with an increase in fishing effort, with the biggest effect observed on grazers which decreased in abundance by 28% (14 – 40, 95% CrI) per 50 h of fishing. We show that pipelines and protective materials are operating as artificial reefs, and our results suggest that removal of infrastructure could result in the loss of habitat and species.

Highlights

  • Offshore oil and gas production is declining with basins maturing and operations becoming less economically viable

  • Pipeline protections can include quarried rock deposited on top of the pipeline, or concrete blocks linked together with polypropylene rope laid on top of pipelines (Oil and Gas UK, 2013)

  • This study provides the first basin scale assessment of benthic and fish interactions with pipelines and pipeline protections and provides an evidence base which can be used to support decommissioning practices and policies

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Offshore oil and gas production is declining with basins maturing and operations becoming less economically viable. Subsea pipelines are an essential feature of offshore oil and gas operations and are present in all major hydrocarbon basins (Guo et al, 2005). Species Interactions With Pipeline Protections laid) or partially/completely buried (BEIS, 2018). Pipeline protections can include quarried rock deposited on top of the pipeline (referred to as “rock dump”), or concrete blocks linked together with polypropylene rope laid on top of pipelines (referred to as “concrete mattresses”) (Oil and Gas UK, 2013). In the North Sea (NS), over 200 fields are forecast for decommissioning before 2028, including 6,234 km of subsea pipelines (Oil and Gas UK, 2019) and approximately 16,033 concrete mattresses, at a predicted cost of ∼€1.3 billion (Oil and Gas UK, 2019)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.