NORM inventory forecast for Australian offshore oil and gas decommissioned assets and radioactive waste disposal pathways

2020 ◽  
Vol 60 (1) ◽  
pp. 19
Author(s):  
Scott McKay ◽  
Stuart A. Higgins ◽  
Peter Baker

This research establishes a decommissioning timeline for the existing oil and gas facilities across all of the Australian offshore oil and gas production basins. Minimal data exist in the public domain to estimate these decommissioning timelines and, more importantly, the significant waste volumes generated; including potentially hazardous wastes such as naturally occurring radioactive material (NORM). At this time there is no approved onshore radioactive waste disposal pathway in Australia to accommodate this material. Applying an estimation methodology, based on Norwegian decommissioning data with regional activity factors, allows a NORM waste forecast to be established for the decommissioning of Australian oil and gas offshore infrastructure. The total NORM disposal burden is estimated to be in the range of 223–1674 tonnes for decommissioning activity to 2060, with over 68% of this material generated between 2018 and 2025. Due to the sparsity of public domain data this forecast is deemed to be uncertain and excludes the NORM contamination anticipated to be present in subsea export pipelines, trunklines and well production tubing. Current regulations governing the categorisation and disposal of radioactive wastes across Australia are complex and regionally dependent. This regional variation makes the implementation of a national radioactive waste disposal facility more difficult, and encourages the export of radioactive wastes overseas for final disposal. Exporting of radioactive wastes potentially presents a higher risk compared with in-country disposal and is likely not an effective long-term proposition. A comprehensive NORM data collection and quantification assessment programme, spanning all onshore and offshore oil and gas infrastructure, needs to implemented to drive and verify a NORM waste management strategy for the wave of facility decommissioning projects that are fast approaching.

2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 147-161
Author(s):  
Lucia Maria de Araujo Lima Gaudencio ◽  
Rui de Oliveira ◽  
Wilson Fadlo Curi

Production units located in the Brazilian marine environment are responsible for the production of 95.7% of oil and 78.8% of natural gas of Brazil causing economic, environmental, and social impacts motivating us to construct a system of indicators as a tool aimed to improve the sustainable management practice of these production units. To date, one of the tools most used by the oil industry is the sustainability report, oriented by guidelines from international organizations. However, these reports have a corporate character being unable to help the sustainability management of production units’ activities. The indicators were selected based on a systemic approach, using current knowledge on sustainability indicators, together with the survey of aspects relevant to the operation and management of offshore oil and gas production units. This paper describes the proposed indicators and presents the hierarchical structure of the system, built on the economic, environmental, social, and operational dimensions. The application of the proposed system of indicators, based on multicriterial and multiple decision-making analyses, validates a complex decision process, providing improved sustainable management of offshore production units by identifying points for which the necessary measures and actions can be implemented. Keywords: offshore oil and gas production; sustainability indicators; multicriteria and multiple decision-making analyses.


2019 ◽  
pp. 99-126
Author(s):  
Shashi Shekhar Prasad Singh ◽  
Jatin R. Agarwal ◽  
Nag Mani

1981 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. V. Kelsey ◽  
R. P. Schuman ◽  
J. M. Welch ◽  
D. E. Owen ◽  
J. E. Flinn

ABSTRACTDemonstration tests were performed on iron-enriched basalt (IEB), a dissolution and immobilization medium for TMI radioactive wastes. Zeolite of the type used for cesium and strontium decontamination of TMI containment water was mixed with 20 wt% additives and melted at 1500°C to form IEB. Cesium volatility from the IEB melts was low. Leaching tests in 90°C deionized water showed leach rates of 6 μg/cm2 d for both cesium and strontium. IEB melts were used to dissolve Type 304 SS pellets and UO2 pellets clad with zircaloy in order to simulate immobilization of TMI core debris. Bubbling air through the melts greatly enhanced the dissolution of these components.


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