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On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation Dave Fratantoni, Andre Gellers, and Neha Sharma Horizon Marine, Inc. Massachusetts, USA
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On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

Aug 03, 2015

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Page 1: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

Dave Fratantoni, Andre Gellers, and Neha Sharma

Horizon Marine, Inc.Massachusetts, USA

Page 2: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

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• Brazil’s Equatorial Margin has both extraordinary development opportunities and significant operational challenges.

• Strong and variable ocean currents are a primary concern.

• Exchange between blue-water and coastal regimes is poorly understood.

• A regional ocean observing and prediction system can provide improved situational awareness to mitigate the impact of strong currents on offshore operations, enhance safety, and protect the environment.

Conclusions

Page 3: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

Outline

• Geographic Context and Operational Challenges

• Oceanographic Environment

• Strategies for Mitigation

Page 4: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

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Geographic Context

BEM potential may be similar to West Africa

Zaedyus find in French Guiana is encouraging

Coastline is extensive, sensitive

Page 5: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

5 basins

Page 6: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

TotalQuieroz GalvaoBPBHP Billiton

Quieroz Galvao

BGBPOGPBHP Billiton

ExxonMobilChevronBPOGPBHP Billiton

OGPEcopetrolExxonMobilPetrobras

5 basins

Page 7: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

5 basins3 regions

Page 8: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

5 basins3 regions2 regimes

Page 9: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation
Page 10: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

• Tides and tidal currents• River outflow

Intense, persistent, and vertically-complex boundary current

Sensitive habitats

Page 11: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

• Tides and tidal currents• River outflow

Intense, persistent, and vertically-complex boundary current

Sensitive habitats

Page 12: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

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Operational ChallengesENSCO 8503TullowFrench Guiana

• Remote location

• Extensive coastline with sensitive ecosystems

• Strong and variable ocean currents

• Poorly understood connections between offshore and coastal regimes

Holding station with 90% thrust

Page 13: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

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Oceanographic Environment

Page 14: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

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SeaWiFS Ocean Color

Satellite observations are descriptive – but not always quantitative.

Page 15: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

12 years of surface drifter trajectories (n=450)

Color = Current Speed

Page 16: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

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• Direct measure of surface velocity, exchange processes

• Analog for anything drifting at the ocean surface

• Excellent for model validation

• Easy to deploy from a variety of platforms

• Inexpensive robust statistics

Why surface drifters?

Page 17: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

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Histogram of all drifter-derived current measurements in each BEM region

Page 18: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

Average measured current speed as a function of WATER DEPTH

Gray dots are all measurements

Page 19: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

Average measured current speed as a function of WATER DEPTH

Gray dots are all measurements1000 m

Page 20: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

1/3-deg Gridded log(NDATA)

Number of hourly velocity estimates from drifter position record

Page 21: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

1/3-deg Gridded Current Velocity

Page 22: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

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Numerical Ocean Model

VELOCITY (kts)

Page 23: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

Models are ALWAYS wrong

Page 24: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

Models are ALWAYS wrong

Page 25: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

Models are ALWAYS wrong

Models can be useful if constrained and validated by observations

We must know HOW the model is wrong, and WHEN it can be trusted

Page 26: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

Strategies for Mitigation

To mitigate the impact of strong ocean currents and operate successfully in the equatorial margin we require enhanced situational awareness, specifically:

• Accurate measurement of currents TODAY

• Accurate forecast of currents TOMORROW

Page 27: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

Observations ForecastModel

A regional observation and prediction system

Page 28: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

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• In-situ measurements of ocean currents• Inexpensive• Sustainable• Spatially diverse

• Family of appropriate numerical models• Global and regional blue-water ocean models• Coastal models with accurate tidal and river forcing• Local oil spill models for incident response

A regional observation and prediction system

Page 29: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

• Seismic Survey• Engineering Design• Installation• Diving• ROV Operations• Pipelaying• Incident Response

A regional observation and prediction system

Page 30: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

Observation System Status: 18 Sep 2014

Page 31: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

Observation System Status: 18 Sep 2014

Page 32: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

• Surface drifters have been deployed in the BEM about every two weeks since July 2014

• Surveys utilizing expendables (CTD, SV, CP) expected to begin in early 2015

• Regional 1/32o model run daily – working on drifter data assimilation

• Interpretive reports generated weekly

Observing System Summary

Page 33: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

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• Brazil’s Equatorial Margin has both extraordinary development opportunities and significant operational challenges.

• Strong and variable ocean currents are a primary concern.

• Exchange between blue-water and coastal regimes is poorly understood.

• A regional ocean observing and prediction system can provide improved situational awareness to mitigate the impact of strong currents on offshore operations, enhance safety, and protect the environment.

• A prototype observing and prediction system is operational TODAY

Conclusions

Page 34: On the Oceanography of Brazil’s Equatorial Margin: Hazardous Offshore Currents and Strategies for Mitigation

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Thank you

Dr. David M. FratantoniHorizon Marine, Inc.Massachusetts, [email protected]

Mr. Andre GellersHorizon Marine do BrasilRio de Janeiro, [email protected]