Not applicable
Not applicable
The present invention relates generally to floating offshore production vessels for oil and gas, and in particular, to a deepwater spar vessel for ice flow conditions.
The arctic regions of the world are known to contain appreciable hydrocarbon reserves (petroleum and natural gas), and exploitation of these reserves is likely to occur in the near future. Some of these hydrocarbon reserves are in deep water, and currently there is not a proven floating system for the production of petroleum and natural gas from deep water in areas where ice flow conditions are common.
Icebergs and ice flow conditions existing in the arctic regions create a major hurdle to deepwater drilling operations. Ice flow from sheets of ice is caused by environmental forces, such as water currents and wind acting on the ice. A drilling platform may be severely damaged if left to take the full impact of the crushing force of ice flow conditions or left to suffer a collision with an iceberg.
Drilling platforms not suited for ice flow conditions must be removed to safer waters until the ice is sufficiently melted. Many work hours as well as production hours are lost during removal of a drilling platform as a result of severe ice flow conditions or an approaching iceberg.
Previous systems exist that melt or break ice flow as the ice flow approaches the drilling platform. Other systems suggested are structures that are physically capable of withstanding the crushing forces of ice flow. Still other systems use structures that merely redirect ice flow. These systems are typically costly and/or impractical. Further, these systems do not provide an efficient means for removal of the drilling platform in the face of an imminent iceberg collision.
Of the several generic types of offshore platforms for the exploitation of undersea hydrocarbon reserves, the spar-type platform is most promising for arctic conditions, since it has a smaller water plane area than other designs, and thus has a smaller hull section exposed to ice flows. Nevertheless, spar-type platforms can still suffer damage by ice flows, and destruction by icebergs, and are thus not suitable, in their present state of the art, for areas where these phenomena are prevalent.
A need therefore exists for a drilling platform system that can be quickly and efficiently moved temporarily to avoid an imminent iceberg collision, and that can still be quickly and easily restored to its original operation position after the possible danger has passed. It would also be advantageous to provide such a platform with the ability to withstand ice flow conditions.
Broadly, the present invention is a spar-type platform that comprises an elongate buoyant hull supporting a deck and extending vertically from the deck to a keel, the hull having an axial centerwell extending through its length and a reduced-diameter cylindrical neck section below a lower or “ice-flow” water line; a riser a support buoy disposed in the bottom of the centerwell at the keel of the hull; one or more risers extending through the centerwell, each of the risers having an upper portion extending from the deck to the top of the support buoy and a lower portion supported in the support buoy; and a disconnect system detachably connecting the riser support buoy to the hull and the upper portion of each riser to the lower portion thereof, whereby the hull and the upper portion of each riser are selectively detachable from the buoy and the lower portion of each riser for movement to avoid a collision with a floating object, such as an iceberg, and whereby the hull and the upper portion of each riser are re-connectable to the buoy and the lower portion of each riser after the danger of a collision has passed.
More specifically, the hull comprises an upper cylindrical section attached to the deck and connected to the reduced-diameter neck section by an upper tapered section. An upper or “ice-free” water line is defined around the upper cylindrical hull section, while the lower or “ice-flow” water line is defined around the upper tapered hull section. A plurality of adjustable or “soft” ballast tanks surround the centerwell, into which seawater can be selectively and adjustably introduced or evacuated with forced air to provide adjustable ballast for the hull. In normal (ice-free) conditions, the hull is ballasted down to the upper or “ice-free” water line, in which the reduced-diameter neck section is totally submerged. When ice flow conditions are encountered, the ballast is reduced so that the hull rises slightly to the lower or “ice-flow” water line, thereby bringing the reduced-diameter neck section closer to the surface so as to reduce the hull area exposed to ice flows.
Each riser in the riser assembly includes an upper riser portion that extends through the centerwell and that is detachably coupled, at the riser support buoy, to a lower riser portion that extends through the riser support buoy to the seabed. In a preferred embodiment, the disconnect system comprises a remotely operable riser coupler that releasably couples the upper portion of each riser to the lower portion thereof, a latch mechanism that is remotely-operable to releasably secure the buoy to the keel of the hull; and a buoy lowering mechanism, comprising a plurality of buoy chains or cables, each of which is detachably connected to the buoy and wound on a deck-mounted winch that is selectively operable to lower the buoy when the riser coupler(s) and the latch mechanism are released, and to raise the buoy back up into the keel when it is desired to re-connect the buoy to the hull.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, a plurality mooring lines enter the hull below the reduced-diameter neck section, and upon entering the hull are directed to a substantially vertical orientation by bending shoes mounted in the hull. The mooring lines extend upwardly through the hull to chain stoppers, located above the neck section, that take up the vertical forces on the mooring lines. At the top of the hull, the mooring lines pass over a series of sheaves that redirect the lines to tensioning windlasses.
In use, when it is desired to move the platform out of the path of an iceberg the riser coupler(s) and the latch mechanism are respectively actuated so as to disconnect the upper portions of each the riser from the lower portion thereof, and so as release the buoy from the keel. The winches are operated to lower the buoy out of the keel, and the buoy chains or cables are then detached from the buoy and recovered on the winches. This completes the separation of the hull from the buoy, the latter remaining fixed in place by the connection between the lower portion of each riser and the seabed. Finally, the mooring lines are cut just below the chain stoppers, allowing the hull and the deck of the platform to be moved (either by towing or by self-propulsion) out of harm's way. When the iceberg has passed, the hull and deck are moved over the buoy; the mooring lines are recovered and reattached to the hull, the buoy chains or cables are attached to the buoy; and, using the winches, the buoy is hauled upwardly into centerwell at the keel of the hull. Finally, the latching mechanism is actuated to secure the buoy to the hull, and the upper and lower portions of each riser are coupled together with a riser coupler.
Referring first to
Contained within the upper hull portion 24 and secured to the underside of the deck 12 is an enclosed internal compartment 33 having a top portion defined by vertical upper side walls 34 attached between the deck 12 and the outer edges of a horizontal, inwardly-extending shelf 36, and a narrower bottom portion defined by vertical lower side walls 37 attached between the inner edges of the shelf 36 and a bottom wall 38. A plurality of mooring lines 40 (which may be cables or chains), securing the platform 10 to the sea bed, enter the lower portion 26 of the hull 14 below the neck portion 28, each of the mooring lines 40 passing through a hawser pipe 42 that extends to the exterior of the hull 14 with a water-tight fit. Each hawser pipe 42 engages one of a plurality of bending shoes 46 secured to the inner wall of the hull 14 near the lower end of the neck portion 28, thereby directing the mooring lines 40 into a substantially vertical orientation. Each hawser pipe 42 has an upper end that is secured in the bottom wall 38 of the internal compartment. Each of the mooring lines 40, after emerging from its corresponding hawser pipe 42, then passes through a corresponding one of a plurality of chain stoppers 48, secured to the upper surface of the bottom wall 38 of the compartment 33, which take up the vertical load of the mooring lines 40 and inhibit slippage in the mooring lines 40.
From the chain stoppers 48, each of the mooring lines 40 passes over a vertical sheave 50 attached to an inner edge of the shelf 36, and then over a horizontal sheave 52 (
The centerwell 22 includes a horizontal bulkhead 56 that divides the centerwell into an upper centerwell portion 22a between the bottom wall 38 of the compartment 33 and the horizontal bulkhead 56, and a lower centerwell portion 22b between the horizontal bulkhead 56 and the top wall of a detachable riser support buoy 58 (described more fully below) installed in the bottom of the centerwell 22 at the keel 20 of the hull 14. The upper centerwell portion 22a defines an enclosure that provides some of the buoyancy lost due to the loss of hard tank capacity resulting from the smaller cross-sectional area of the neck portion 28 of the hull 14.
Extending through the centerwell 22 is a riser assembly comprising one or more risers, each of which comprises an upper riser portion 60a and a lower riser portion 60b. Each of the upper riser portions 60a is connected at its top end to production equipment (not shown) on the deck 12, while the bottom end of each upper riser portion 60a is connected to the top end of a corresponding lower riser portion 60b by a remotely-operable releasable riser coupler 62, of a type that is well-known and conventionally used in sub-sea petroleum and natural gas production systems. The couplers 62 may advantageously include self-sealing valves (not shown) to prevent or inhibit loss of fluid when the upper riser portions 60a are decoupled from the lower riser portions 60b, as described below. The section of each upper riser portion 60a that extends through the upper centerwell portion 22a may advantageously be enclosed in a protective upper riser sleeve 64.
The lower riser portions 60b are mounted in, and extend through, the detachable riser support buoy 58 that is seated below and coaxial with the centerwell 22 of the hull 14 at the keel 20. Preferably, each of the lower riser portions 60b passes through a lower riser sleeve 66 that extends axially through the riser support buoy 58. Each of the lower riser sleeves 66 terminates in a bend limiter 68 extending downwardly from the bottom of the support buoy 58. Each of the lower riser portions 60b then extends from one of the bend limiters 68 to a wellhead (not shown) in the seabed, as is well-known in the art.
The riser support buoy 58 is secured to the hull 14 by a remotely-operated latching mechanism comprising a plurality of latches 70 (
As shown in
As described above, the platform 10 of the present invention is operable in at least two ways to minimize the risk of damage due to flow ice and icebergs. First, as shown in
When impact with an iceberg appears imminent, the hull 14 may be separated from the riser support buoy and moved out of harm's way by the process described below and illustrated in
As shown in
As shown in
If the hull and deck of the platform 10 are to be moved, the mooring lines 40 must then be severed, preferably at or just below the chain stoppers 48, and preferably after being slacked down a bit. The hull and deck may then be moved away, either by towing or by an onboard propulsion system (not shown). After the iceberg has passed or is otherwise deemed harmless, the hull and deck of the platform may be moved back over the buoy 58 for re-connection thereto by performing the above-described steps in reverse order after the mooring lines 40 have been re-connected. This reconnection may be performed, for example, by recovering the mooring lines 40 from the seafloor by attaching a retrieval line (not shown) to each of the mooring lines 40 using an ROV (not shown). Once the mooring lines are recovered to the surface, additional lengths of mooring line would be added, and the lines 40 would then be pulled through the hawser pipes 42 and secured by the chain stoppers 48.
Although the present invention has been described herein in the context of several exemplary embodiments, it will be understood that a number of variations and modifications may suggest themselves to those skilled in the pertinent arts. Such variations and modifications should be considered within the spirit and scope of the present invention, as defined in the claims that follow.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3921558 | Redshaw | Nov 1975 | A |
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6092483 | Allen et al. | Jul 2000 | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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WO 2006042178 | Apr 2006 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080029013 A1 | Feb 2008 | US |