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Lessons learned and observations from my experience in the Geophysical survey industry
23

Observations

Jun 27, 2015

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Lyallnz

Observations and lessons learnt in the geophysical survey industry
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Page 1: Observations

Lessons learned and observations from my

experience in the Geophysical survey industry

Page 2: Observations

When it all goes wrongA tugboat on fire in Kokas harbour, West Papua, Indonesia.One person very badly burnt – medevaced to jakarta fate unknown (possible fatality), one person less serious burns.Petrol was mistakenly used to refuel a hot/live kerosene stove in the galley.

The tug and barge were supplying water to a seismic crew operated by one of the largest seismic contractors in the world – no audit, no checks, no crew management present – crew ERP was not used in order to hide the incident from the client.

Page 3: Observations

Cable boat collision with an island at nightRoot causes:Inadequate - Line management, training, management of change

Page 4: Observations

Fast crew boat collision with a barge at 22 knotsCrew change for a seismic streamer vessel in the Persian Gulf.

29 injuries, 3 of them were LTI’s – cause not yet known

Page 5: Observations

Chaseboat for streamer operations in India, its course was erratic and appeared to be having difficulty steering, skipper said it was because he had a full load of fuel.When I inspected the steering gear the key locking the rudder head to the pintle had broken, pieces of welding rod and hacksaw blade had been hammered in to try and lock it.

Always check, always validate, always confirm.

Page 6: Observations

A young party manager with only land experience purchased this dugout to be used as a line handling vessel to pass LCT berthing lines to the dolphin in the background.

Land crew management + multiple large vessels on OBC = Disaster waiting to happen if not closely supervised by the client

Page 7: Observations

2000 psi high pressure airlines corroded, damaged, bent and crimped – extremely dangerous.

Page 8: Observations

Two very different standards of dive teams Divers are needed on OBC crews to remove ropes and cables from vessel propulsion systems

Page 9: Observations

Different standards of support vessels used in the industry

Page 10: Observations

Hearts and minds Forming good relationships with local people is important

Clockwise from bottom left – BP ladies with the King of Arguni Island, Rescue of a local boat that had been adrift overnight, chocolate for the kids at Goras, afternoon tea at the queen of Arguni’s house.

Page 11: Observations

Need a airport? Build one, and build a jetty to service the airport.Local jetty unsafe to transfer personnel? Easy, buy some timber and repair

it.

Page 12: Observations

Before job start up Check and audit all the boats, conduct towing drills, everyone must have

sea survival training, conduct oil spill and medevac drills

Page 13: Observations

9 large vessels and 250 people afloat, keeping them all safe takes some doing but we did it.

Page 14: Observations

Scouting a site for a helipad

Page 15: Observations

In water maintenance and fishing gear removal

Page 16: Observations

Check out local food suppliers and transport services. Don’t disturb human remains, get permission to install tide gauges and other instruments

Page 17: Observations

A piston corer activating at a depth of 1196 metres – geo technical survey for a pipeline offshore West Australia

Page 18: Observations

Anchor handling for OBC recording vessel stern anchor

Page 19: Observations

Helicopter rotor blade made contact with superstructure. The ship then had to go into port for helicopter removal by crane.

Page 20: Observations

Inline refueling – if the towing hawser is longer than the fuel hose, then the hose will break

Badly tangled seismic cables caused by failure of tow point on a deflector vane – planned maintenance and inspections would have prevented this

Page 21: Observations

ROV planting a recording node on a GOM seismic survey, this one will have to be picked up and re-planted as it has slid down slope.

Page 22: Observations

Remnants of war – Japanese fuel tanker with bullet holes, jap truck and bomb being used as a church bell, all in the Tomage area W Papua.

Page 23: Observations

When the job is finished make sure the contractor cleans up sites used on shore – the contractor was going to leave the mess seen in pic below left

Give the good guys a safety award.