Emerging in 2021 are new and improved offshore oil and gas operations. During a time of growing offshore energy demand, the global oil and gas industry is using an array of technology and data to meet production targets, improve operational efficiency, and boost worker safety. The mountains of data have spoken, and the offshore oil and gas industry is listening.
The global demand for the offshore oil and gas industry is steady. Interests are turning to the glowing benefits of deep-water offshore drilling's efficiency. Technology is assisting in various ways: digital data, automation, robotics, and hazardous gas detection, among others.
Cognite CEO John Markus Lervik said that the key to Aker BP and Cognite's robotics initiative is that it combines industry-leading hardware and software. "By ingesting data collected by robots into Cognite Data Fusion, Aker BP engineers will be able to see it in context with data from across the company's operations and make data-driven decisions that improve efficiency and safety."
Efficiency and safety are steering progress in the global offshore oil and gas industry's mission to modernize. The number of reported work hours grew by 4% in 2017. The tasks workers face are changing as digital and machine learning technology increases. That change is resulting in fewer fatalities industrywide. There were 33 in 2017, a sharp drop from 50 the year before, according to the International Associations of the Oil and Gas Industry.
"The increase in technology and automation have undoubtedly improved efficiency in operations and have had a positive effect on employee safety," said Richard Taylor, an oil and gas safety instructor at West Texas Safety in Odessa, Texas. "Automation isolates employees from mechanical hazards that they used to be exposed to, thereby eliminating the hazards."
There's no doubt of the benefits new technology has for offshore oil and gas efficiency and safety, and more operations are seizing the opportunities these technologies hold. Workplaces can strengthen technological plans for safety and asset management planning. Offshore oil and gas leadership can further enhance efficiency and safety by continuously building leadership skills and stewarding positive change. For example, safety awareness and consistent work practices should include proactive hazard identification. Workplaces and workers should remain vigilant on risk mitigation, especially with work tasks that evolve or change. Utilize ongoing safety training and resources, including the Oil and Gas Industry Signage Requirements guide by Duralabel.