Will the ARCTIC CHALLENGER keep Shell from drilling in the Arctic this year?

[QUOTE=c.captain;78811]and what, pray tell, made you make this statement at this particular moment? This discussion was not about the NOBLE DISCOVERER but about the ARCTIC CHALLENGER! Did you even read it before posting? Seems to be a rather defensive thing to say suddenly like you just had to make sure the world knew that the USCG in Washington told the MSD in Dutch to not go there! Everybody who has ever run a vessel in or near Dutch Harbor knows in our own professional opinions that the DISCO did in fact ground. Just because the USCG official report says it didn’t doesn’t mean squat.

So what’s the deal? Please tell me that Captain Niedermeyer got shitcanned and frogmarched to the airport? Oh that would be so very sweet!

Actually, c, you are the one who said the Disco grounded: “I certainly think that’s where my money is going but I sense now that the government if being punitive to Shell. The tone in Salazar’s remarks certainly indicate that and that surprises me because after the DISCO grounding it appeared that the gummint was onboard with Shell and bending over backwards to keep the program moving forward. Oh well, there are actions happening behind the scenes that never see the light of day and who knows what those are here. Somebody seriously pissed somebody else off.”

MasterMike was obviously just reporting a fact to bring clarity to your distorted recollection of a previous non-event.

2012 continues to set new records for the smallest area of Arctic sea ice coverage since satellite coverage began in 1979. A new record minimum has been set every day since June 8th. The area of ice coverage has now dipped below 3 million square kilometers — coming quite close to the record minimum set in mid-September 2007.

http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/arctic.sea.ice.interactive.html

http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/NEWIMAGES/arctic.seaice.color.003.png

[QUOTE=jmad;78831]There still here…[/QUOTE]

REPLY Any scuttlebutt about when and if they are going to leave for the Arctic or return to Seattle?

[QUOTE=tugsailor;78847]REPLY Any scuttlebutt about when and if they are going to leave for the Arctic or return to Seattle?[/QUOTE]

Well I don’t think they’ll return to Seattle before October although they’ll risk getting their butts kicked crossing the Gulf of Alaska. As far as going north, I don’t know why they haven’t at least set up on anchors other than the logistics once they do becomes a royal pain so better to sit in DH waiting. If you can’t drill why go?

No question now that the ARCTIC CHALLENGER is what screwed them this season and I have got to wonder how Shell let this happen? Did they think that the BSEE and USCG would let them have a pass to have the barge there before starting? If the barge didn’t have it’s COI in hand by the beginning of April, you’d think Shell would have told their contractor (Superior ???) to put three shifts on it and finish the effing thing NOW or have pulled it away from them and taken it down to Vigor in Seattle to finish? There had to be a delivery date in the contract and once that date wasn’t met that Shell had the right to take the barge away or maybe Shell effed themselves with a weak contract that left them open to getting fucked but regardless, Shell had the money to make the dirt fly if needed and why the hell didn’t they start throwing cash at the problem? How did this happen?

Also there still is the unresolved issue of the DISCO’s exhaust emissions but I think that one would have gone away in the end. We haven’t heard anything about that discrepancy for awhile now.

[QUOTE=The Commodore;78843]Actually, c, you are the one who said the Disco grounded:

MasterMike was obviously just reporting a fact to bring clarity to your distorted recollection of a previous non-event.[/QUOTE]

Oh I think I am not the only mariner here who knows the truth of what happened. Just tell me how this photo does not show that the DISCO’s stern is aground and even if only the rudder is touching THE SHIP IS STILL AGROUND!

Just tell me a set of circumstances that would prove or even explain that the ship is not grounded in this photo? We know what the water depth at the point was and we know what the after draft of the ship was and if the two are equal then…

Why are you being an apologist for Noble? This was not a “non-event”, pretty much the entire national and much of the world media ran the story when it happened.

.

And for the long awaited report…Kulluk being towed off the dock August 20th. I would put money against that but we"ll see. Sounds like all the other tugs in area got that date as well with no times plans etc typical shell info. I do know the shell safety guy that is riding the
Noble disco north is aboard since August 15th so maybe that’s sign things might be
Moving towards leaving very slowly

[QUOTE=c.captain;78860] Just tell me how this photo does not prove that the DISCO’s stern is aground and even if only the rudder is touching THE SHIP IS STILL AGROUND![/QUOTE]

Well, unless the draft is about 60 feet it doesn’t show much of anything.

Now if that yellow line had been drawn along the point of land where it flattens out just below the “e” of slope the picture might show the ship was actually high and dry aft.

Let the CG say whatever they want, it doesn’t change the fact that this whole affair is so politically charged and oil company financed at all levels that even if the ship had grounded, rolled over, and burned it would have not been due to CG or company failures of oversight or planning. There is too much money going into too many pockets to let anything interfere with what the CG needs to look like they know what they are doing and the oil companies need to collect more cash. The State of Alaska wants the royalties so they aren’t about to get involved unless it is too embarrassing not to. If there is a big spill the State will claim they warned everyone but the CG and oil company execs wouldn’t listen, the CG will claim they had bad information, oil company will claim an Act of God or poor regulation.

It’s a racket, the game is rigged, no one really cares anyway and even when the worst happens everyone walks away fat. Hell, look at the industry created by Exxon Valdez … the slugs in that fill the positions in the local agencies created to spend that cash windfall are still getting fat. They need disasters or threats the same way the military needs threats and the lobbyists need parasitic politicians and KP needs alumni.

As far as a return to Seattle haven’t heard one thing about that from anyone. I’m almost positive
They will head north and do something even if it is going up there and turning around. As one shell employee puts it “this is embarrassing”. Now back to cribbage!

[QUOTE=Steamer;78865]Well, unless the draft is about 60 feet it doesn’t show much of anything.[/QUOTE]

I’m not sure that I follow…if you look at the chart at the spot where the ship was sitting in the photo the 5 fathom curve is just about 100yards from the beach and 5 fm is a fair estimation of the after draft of the ship. The distance from the beach to the stern sure appears to be just about 100yards.

This is the scenario that I put forth. Ship starts to drag when wind increases because the derrick is a big sail. Master cannot get main going because it is a long process to do so and very doubtful has had engine on standby with engineers present in after E/R (ship has two enginerooms with after one dedicated to old main engine but not generators). Master calls tug once it is discovered that the ship is dragging. Varying amount to time is lost till tug replies (15minutes has been mentioned). Ship drags astern throughout. Ship stops moving astern before tug arrives

So at this point one of three scenarios now takes place #1] that wind suddenly dies just in nick of time before stern comes to ground and anchor takes hold #2] wind doesn’t drop but anchor still fetches up in nick of time before stern grounds #3] stern grounds

Are scenarios #1 or #2 possible…of course but are they likely? If they did happen then the hull would not be left motionless…it would still be moving around since it was still floating. Nobody has said that is what they saw happen. Mariners with years of experience in Dutch state aground. Photos I’ve seen show a stern fixed in position and a hull motionless. It was in this state for some time (more than two hours is mentioned somewhere). Eventually the LORNA FOSS does come and make up forward and does pull ship ahead. How much strain was needed? Non Shell persons have stated it took some time and power till the ship started to move.

Remember that this entire episode was witnessed by I am sure many dozens of non Shell people in Dutch many of whom were mariners since after all that town exists to support a large fishing fleet. Every other person in that town either works on or has worked on vessels in the area. They know what they see and I am with them.

.

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Problems with Shell’s Arctic Drilling Give Administration a Chance to Hit Pause
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Frances Beinecke

Posted August 16, 2012 in Moving Beyond Oil, Reviving the World’s Oceans, Saving Wildlife and Wild Places

Tags:
alaska, arctic, arcticdrilling, arcticocean, beaufort, chukchi, offshoredrilling, oil, oilspills, shell, spillresponse, whales

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Royal Dutch Shell has started sending its oil drilling fleet into Alaska’s Arctic Ocean but left its spill response barge behind in Bellingham, Washington. The vessel is supposed to be positioned right between Shell’s two drilling sites in case of an oil spill. Yet the barge—a linchpin in Shell’s emergency response plan—still has too many problems to make the voyage north.

The Coast Guard won’t certify it because of wiring problems and fire hazards. It has experienced several small leaks while in port, alarming Shell’s own inspectors. And it has failed to meet the Coast Guards standard of weathering a 100-year storm in the Arctic. This set of circumstances hardly inspires confidence.

Shell asked the Coast Guard to weaken its standards to a 10-year storm event so the barge could pass muster. This follows on the company’s effort to backpedal from initial claims it could contain 90 to 95 percent of oil from a blowout. Now Shell is merely saying it will “encounter” or “confront” that much oil—rather than actually containing and cleaning up.

Shell is under tremendous scrutiny as it launches its first foray into Arctic waters—the harshest environment for offshore drilling. The company must put its best foot forward in order to win public trust and secure future drilling rights.

Instead, it is trying to lower the bar. If Shell is already asking for loopholes and exemptions in the nation’s drilling safeguards now, imagine what it might do when attention has moved on and its rigs are operating in the world’s last wild ocean.

U.S.-Canada Fourth Joint Mission To Map the Continental Shelf in the Arctic Ocean

NRDC does not agree with the Obama Administration’s decision to grant Shell preliminary approval to drill in the Arctic, but we appreciate the administration’s commitment to ensuring any offshore drilling in the region meets the strongest possible safeguards.

To live up to that commitment, the administration must send Shell back to the drawing board.

Now is the time. The Arctic drilling season only goes until September or October, and the company is already behind schedule due to heavy ice coverage in the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas. The persistent problems with the spill response plan are further slowing operations down, as are additional mishaps—like the drill ship that become unmoored and nearly ran aground in the Aleutian Islands on its way to the Chukchi.

These problems and delays present an opportunity—and make it imperative—for the White House to tell Shell not to proceed with drilling this season. The company must get its house in order instead. It must develop a stronger spill response plan, prepare to capture more oil on site, and improve its ability to withstand harsh Arctic conditions.

The truth is that drilling in the Arctic Ocean harms and puts at risk one of the most pristine places left on Earth. Its stunning coastlines provide a home for Alaska’s Inupiaq people, and its chill waters nurture polar bears, ice seals, bowhead and beluga whales, and walrus. Its sweeping vistas offer a glimpse into a wild beauty that has almost been driven from the planet. We must not sacrifice one of our remaining untamed places in reckless pursuit of oil, especially when we have other options. The new clean car standards the administration is about to finalize, for instance, will cut America’s need to import oil by one-third.

Two years ago, Americans watched in horror as the systems we were promised would avert catastrophe by preventing or containing a blowout failed one by one. Little has changed since then. We must not let Shell plunge into a wild and irreplaceable region using faulty emergency vessels and inadequate emergency response plans. It’s time for the administration to step in and demand better.

Arctic Sea Ice Heads for Record Low as Melt Beats Forecasts
By Alex Morales - Aug 17, 2012 8:02 AM ET

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                           The [Arctic Ocean](http://topics.bloomberg.com/arctic-ocean/)’s ice cover is shrinking at a record pace this year after higher-than-average temperatures hastened the annual break-up of the sea ice. 

The area of ocean covered by ice shrank to 4.93 million square kilometers (1.9 million square miles) on average for the five days through Aug. 15, according to the latest data from the U.S. National Snow and Ice Data Center in Boulder, Colorado. With as many as five weeks of the annual melt season left, it’s already the fourth-lowest annual minimum ever measured.
Enlarge image
Photograph by Michael S. Nolan/ Getty Images

“Unless the melting really, really slows down, there’s a very real chance of a record,” Walt Meier, a research scientist at the NSIDC, said in a telephone interview. “In the last week or so it’s dropped precipitously. There’s definitely a chance it’ll dip below 4 million square kilometers.”
The shrinkage is the most visible sign of global warming according to Meier, and raises the prospect that the Arctic Ocean may become largely ice free in the summer. That opens up new shipping routes and is sparking a race for resources that’s led to Cairn Energy Plc (CNE) and Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDSA) exploring waters off Greenland for oil and gas.
New Frontline“There’s a whole new frontline from a strategic standpoint,” said Cleo Paskal, a geopolitical analyst at Chatham House, a policy adviser in London. “Countries that have been kept apart by a wall of ice are now facing each other for the first time and countries like China are slipping up through the middle.”
China has an icebreaker, Arctic research stations, and is positioning to develop infrastructure in Greenland and tap the island’s mineral wealth, Paskal said in a phone interview.
Cairn drilled eight wells in two years through the end of 2011 in an unsuccessful attempt to find recoverable oil and gas reserves off Greenland. Shell, Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM), Chevron Corp. and Statoil ASA (STL) also hold licenses to drill off the Greenland coast.
The sea ice melts every summer before freezing again in September. The NSIDC uses a five-day average ice extent to iron out day-to-day anomalies. When more dark ocean is exposed, it absorbs more of the sun’s heat unlike the reflective ice, increasing the warming effect in a so-called feedback loop.
The increasing melt may be a harbinger of greater changes such as the release of methane compounds from frozen soils that could exacerbate warming, and a thaw of the Greenland ice sheet, which would contribute to rising sea levels, NASA’s top climate scientist, James Hansen, said in an e-mail interview.
Tipping Points“Our greatest concern is that loss of Arctic sea ice creates a grave threat of passing two other tipping points – the potential instability of the Greenland ice sheet and methane hydrates,” Hansen said. “These latter two tipping points would have consequences that are practically irreversible on time scales of relevance to humanity.”
The United Nations estimates the Greenland ice sheet contains enough water to raise global sea levels by about seven meters (23 feet), though melting would take thousands of years.
Measurements from three satellites showed surface melt across 97 percent of Greenland’s ice sheet on July 12, the largest area in more than 30 years of observations, according to NASA. Like the sea ice, Greenland’s ice cap has an annual cycle of surface thawing and then re-freezing. Also last month, Greenland’s Petermann Glacier shed an iceberg about twice the size of Manhattan.
Arctic TemperaturesThe lowest sea ice extent in a satellite record that goes back to 1979 was 4.17 million square kilometers, registered in September 2007. That compares with an average annual minimum area of 6.29 million square kilometers from 1979 to 2010. This year’s melt has been fueled by Arctic temperatures 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) to 3 degrees Celsius warmer than in a typical year from June through mid-August, said Meier.
While the area of ocean covered by the sea ice is easier to gauge, researchers also take an interest in the thickness of the ice. Older ice that hasn’t melted from one year to the next tends to be more than three meters thick, while single-year ice is thinner and easier to melt.
“Now that we’re getting into the guts of how quickly the sea ice will go, it’s important to know the thickness,” said Pen Hadow, who in 2003 became the first person to trek solo and unassisted to the North Pole. “It’s become much more of a volume issue: area times thickness.”
Ice ThicknessHadow in February plans to begin a 120-day traverse of the Arctic Ocean from Russia to Canada during which he’ll measure the thickness of the ice and make observations about ice ridges that form where ice floes crash together. The data he gathers will be used by scientists at the Centre for Polar Observation and Modelling in London who are also analyzing ice thickness data from the European Space Agency’s CryoSat-2 satellite.
“In some areas of the Arctic sea-ice, up to 40 percent of the volume is held in narrow vertical ridges where ice floes have crashed together,” Hadow said in a telephone interview. “Knowing how many ridges there are and knowing their height is increasingly interesting as we ever refine our models.”
Those models need updating. According to Meier, the computer models used in 2007 by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change indicated the possibility of ice-free summers in the Arctic Ocean by 2100. Now, that may occur as early as 2030, a date earlier than predicted even by newer computer models, he said.
“It’s the most drastic change in the earth’s surface due to climate change,” said Meier. “It used to get to around 7 million square kilometers into the early 1990s. Now we’ve had just one year above 5 million in the last six years. That’s 30 percent below where we used to be.”
To contact the reporters on this story: Alex Morales in London at amorales2@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Reed Landberg at landberg@bloomberg.net

http://nsidc.org/arcticseaicenews/

[QUOTE=c.captain;78858

Also there still is the unresolved issue of the DISCO’s exhaust emissions but I think that one would have gone away in the end. We haven’t heard anything about that discrepancy for awhile now.[/QUOTE]

I have a hard time beliveing the exhaust emmision story as well. Tier II marine engines are legal until 2016. A call to Caterpillar, Cummins, Wartsila, or any number of manufactors, and they would be happy to sell them EPA Tier II engines. They are not hard to get just a few months wait and open your check book. I read some where they changed the generatos on the disco, but never read anything about them touching the old main engine. I cannot really find squat about specs on the disco. Does anyone know what type of engine’s they installed.

When Cat or Cummins gets a EPA cert on engines they get the whole engine family certified, or that particular series, they don’t certify each individual engine. The cost for that would be outrageous. After the engine is installed a certified technican just needs to verify the numbers on the injectors, turbo, pistons, (which should be in the build sheet that came with the engine) hook his computer to the ECM verify the fuel settings, injector timing, and a few other things, after it is capable of a test run. Fill out a few pieces of paper work for the class society ABS, DNV, or who ever, and in a few days they should be good to go. I can’t fathom what they did to take months to get this EPA paper work. Tier II engines are just to common now days, if you need them and have check book as big as shells, I just can’t see this being an issue.

This is a good article on emissions for offroad, marine, and it even lists drilling rigs, DP, semi underway,and moored.

www.dieselnet.com/standards/us/marine.php

I have a EPA book on my ship that list the entire engine family, has a list of all emission legal parts that can be replaced, and the part numbers of each part. Every time we go through class inspection they want to see this book. When we change a injector, turbo, or what ever, we list the old part, the number of the new injector, turbo or what ever and the date it was changed. As long as all the numbers match, and you have your paperwork to back it up. A quick thimbs up and we are good to go. This only takes a couple hours, not months. sorry!

[QUOTE=ChiefRob;78904]I have a hard time beliveing the exhaust emmision story as well. Tier II marine engines are legal until 2016. A call to Caterpillar, Cummins, Wartsila, or any number of manufactors, and they would be happy to sell them EPA Tier II engines. They are not hard to get just a few months wait and open your check book. I read some where they changed the generatos on the disco, but never read anything about them touching the old main engine. I cannot really find squat about specs on the disco. Does anyone know what type of engine’s they installed?[/QUOTE]

In all honestly I know little about the engine story. What I heard was that the generators were replaced in 2010 when the ship was in the shipyard in the Philippines (it’s been in shipyards at least 24 or the past 36months!) on Shell’s nickel just to meet the EPA permit requirements. I believe the engines are CATs but don’t remember the series. As far as just meeting Tier II, I think the standards in Shell’s Air Quality Permit for drilling in the Arctic is a higher one than EPA Tier II.

In any event, I went online to find out what I can on this but there is nothing fresh on it so I don’t know if the EPA was going to issue the waiver requested by Shell or not? The protestors haven’t been squawking either. The ARCTIC CHALLENGER has eclipsed all the other issues now.

[QUOTE=c.captain;78910]In all honestly I know little about the engine story. What I heard was that the generators were replaced in 2010 when the ship was in the shipyard in the Philippines (it’s been in shipyards at least 24 or the past 36months!) on Shell’s nickel just to meet the EPA permit requirements. I believe the engines are CATs but don’t remember the series. As far as just meeting Tier II, I think the standards in Shell’s Air Quality Permit for drilling in the Arctic is a higher one than EPA Tier II.

In any event, I went online to find out what I can on this but there is nothing fresh on it so I don’t know if the EPA was going to issue the waiver requested by Shell or not? The protestors haven’t been squawking either. The ARCTIC CHALLENGER has eclipsed all the other issues now.[/QUOTE]

HMMN I guess this is a good question then, without actually knowing the details of what they installed. Either way if the EPA is making them comply with Tier III, that technology is out and has been out for several years. The Tier IV standard, might be a different story, because then they have to have exhaust scrubbers, that I could see being a problem. The Tier IV rule does not go into effect for years, that would be a tough one to meet at present time. I just read an article not long ago that Cumins was still trying to get it’s Tier IV exhaust scrubber to pass EPA. I know they are worried about the enviroment but already making them meet Tier IV seems a bit excessive.

Not anything really new in this piece by the Petroleum News but it does mention the air quality issue a bit more:

[B][U]Shell continues to delay drilling, waiting for containment barge[/U][/B]

Week of August 19, 2012

Although Shell has sent three of the vessels from its Arctic drilling fleet north to the Chukchi Sea, in preparation for its planned outer continental shelf exploratory drilling, the company’s drilling program remains on hold, waiting for the completion of retrofit work on the company’s containment barge, the Arctic Challenger, and U.S. Coast Guard certification of the vessel.

The company has installed its new Arctic oil containment system in the barge as part its oil spill contingency arrangements. And before the vessel can depart Seattle, where the system retrofit is being done, all work on the vessel must be completed and the Coast Guard must certify the vessel as safe for its intended use.

“Progress related to the final construction of the Arctic Challenger containment barge remains steady,” Shell spokesman Curtis Smith told Petroleum News in an Aug. 15 email. “We continue to work closely with the U.S. Coast Guard to outline a schedule for final inspections and an on-water deployment that would lead to certification. There’s no set timeline for the completion of this important process.”

Site preparation

The vessels that have already headed north will prepare Shell’s planned drilling sites in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas for the arrival of the Noble Discoverer and Kulluk drilling vessels, both of which remain at Dutch Harbor in the Aleutian Islands for now. Site preparation includes the positioning of the anchors for the rigs, Smith said.

Shell had planned to drill up to three wells in the Chukchi Sea and up to two wells in the Beaufort Sea this year. But because of the delayed start to the drilling season the company has scaled back its expectations to one well in each sea. However, the company has said that it may also drill some top holes for other wells, to achieve a head start on next year’s drilling.

Before it can start drilling in the Chukchi Sea Shell also needs a compliance order from the Environmental Protection Agency, following a request for some changes to the air quality permit for the Noble Discoverer drillship. Shell has also requested changes to the air permit for the Kulluk, the floating drilling platform earmarked for use in the Beaufort Sea — the company can use the Kulluk meantime, pending an EPA ruling on the Kulluk permit changes.

This year the Chukchi Sea has experienced exceptionally heavy early summer ice and Shell has said that the ice would have prevented the start of Chukchi Sea drilling in July as originally planned, regardless of the situation with the containment barge.

Salazar comments

During an Aug. 13 press conference Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar, who had just returned from a visit to the North Slope, said that the waters in the area of Shell’s planned Chukchi Sea drilling are now clear of ice. At this point it is the need to complete work on the containment barge, and not sea ice, that is delaying the drilling, Salazar said.

“It’s not the ice conditions that have held up the effort in terms of moving forward,” Salazar said. “It’s the necessity for Shell to be able to demonstrate that they have met the regulatory requirements we have put into place, and those regulatory requirements must be met. If they are not met there will not be a Shell exploration effort that will occur this year.”

Salazar said that Interior still needs to make decisions on Shell’s applications for drilling permits and that at this point Shell has not presented any alternative plan, such as the drilling of top holes.

“If they present an alternative we’ll take a look at it, but right now the plan as I have understood it is that they are still moving forward to get their containment vessel certified and their plans are still to move forward with the drilling of an exploration well or two up in the Chukchi and in the Beaufort Sea,” Salazar said, adding that Interior would ensure that any requested change to Shell’s plans meets the appropriate regulations and that the environment of the Arctic is protected.

Little risk of spill

“The exploration that takes place, if it does take place, will take place under the most cautious, highest guarded activity ever in the history of any kind of ocean energy development,” Salazar said. “So I’m not very concerned frankly that we are going to have any kind of an oil spill by these closely guarded exploration activities.”

The larger questions that need to be addressed over a longer period of time, before any outer continental shelf development takes place, include issues such as the local infrastructure and Coast Guard capabilities, Salazar said.

And, with environmental conditions in the Arctic in a state of flux under the effects of climate change, science will be critical to future decision making, he said.

Meantime, the current situation with Shell is dynamic.

“We don’t know yet what will be happening this summer, what will be happening in the next 10 or 20 days,” Salazar said. “We don’t have an alternative from them. … I will hold their feet to the fire in terms of making sure that we are doing everything we can do abide by the standards and regulations we have set and to make sure that the environment in the Arctic seas is protected.

So by the reading of this, the DISCO still is not in compliance with its permit. Maybe they’ve been working on that all these weeks now out there in Broad Bay? Who the hell knows?

An interesting article about the barge itself:

[B][U]Shell’s oil spill-containment barge for Arctic operations was once for the birds[/U][/B]

Alex DeMarban

Aug 15, 2012

Royal Dutch Shell’s quest to open the U.S. Arctic Ocean to oil drilling, an undertaking that’s involved years of preparation and cost more than $4.5 billion, hinges on an old icebreaking barge that sat idle so long it literally went to the birds.

The Arctic Challenger, the troubled centerpiece of Shell’s oil-spill response plan, features a remarkable past – once glorious and, well, not so glorious.

At one point, hundreds of Caspian terns, gulls, cormorants, pelicans, ravens, crows and even an owl turned the 300-foot barge into a giant’s bird nest, coating the deck with bird dung and other gunk. That was in California’s Long Beach Harbor in 2007, where the downtrodden vessel became a bit of a media celebrity as wildlife regulators raced to save the protected terns and their chicks.

That avian invasion was an ignoble downturn to a celebrated career that began in 1976, when the Arctic Challenger hammered through sea ice off the shores of Alaska and paved the way for the development of the nation’s largest oil field.

Today, after months of renovation, the 300-foot barge has been transformed as shipbuilders prepare it for a return trip to the Arctic Ocean – part of Shell’s contingency if its oil drilling operations result in a spill at or near the wellhead. But the Arctic Challenger’s renovation is well behind schedule, throwing into question the company’s plans to begin drilling during an already short summer season in the Arctic.

Shell, Europe’s largest oil company, has started moving key ships to the Arctic in preparation. But under current federal rules, it can’t drill until the Arctic Challenger is on site and ready to respond. Ultimately, Shell’s plans call for the Challenger to wait at the ready off the coast near Barrow, a small Iñupiat Eskimo town between the company’s proposed drilling sites.

But first, the shipyard work must come to an end. Among other things, the U.S. Coast Guard must also review and approve dozens of items related to the ship’s mooring, structural, electrical and fire-safety capabilities.

Also, the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement must approve the containment dome that Shell has designed to lower over a gushing pipe or well, with hoses that direct natural gas and oiled water to the surface, where separation equipment will allow the gas to be flared off and the oil to be safely collected (check out an animation of the containment dome here).

Superior Energy Services of Houston has leased the Arctic Challenger from owner Crowley Maritime. Superior, in charge of the overhaul and installation of the containment dome, has spent months cleaning up and modernizing the barge.

Shell has voluntarily made the containment dome part of its spill-response plan in the Arctic following BP’s disastrous Deepwater Horizon explosion and spill in 2010, said Shell spokesman Curtis Smith. Ensuring that the containment system and other aspects of the Challenger operate flawlessly has contributed to the delay, Smith said.

U.S. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, speaking at an Anchorage press conference Monday, blamed Shell for the hold-up. He said the company should know somewhere around Aug. 23 whether the barge would be certified by the Coast Guard in time for drilling. When the containment dome has passed tests, Salazar can decide whether to issue individual well permits or not.

The media has zeroed in on the slow progress. Everyone from Alaska blogger Phil Munger, who said he was on a tug that once helped tow the Challenger, to the nation’s largest papers are asking questions. The Los Angeles Times recently zeroed in on a minor fine stemming from small discharges into the water during the vessel’s retrofit at the shipyard in Bellingham.

“It’s not a project we can rush, and since it’s a first of its kind vessel, there are always going to be delays related to construction,” Smith said in an email to Alaska Dispatch. “Unfortunately, these delays are impacting our drilling season. But make no mistake this vessel is rock solid and capable.”

In an email, Smith refused to answer why Shell chose this particular vessel to play such a pivotal role. But a review of the Arctic Challenger reveals a colorful history, from its glory days in Alaska’s Arctic to idle times at dock, with birds calling the barge home.

Challenger sets shipping record in 1970s

The Arctic Challenger began life as rock-solid. Crowley Maritime built the Arctic Challenger in 1976, following one of the company’s toughest years delivering oil-field equipment in Alaska’s Arctic.

The Florida-based shipping company had begun hauling supplies to the Prudhoe Bay oil field in 1968, just as petroleum geologists were confirming the prospect held billions of barrels of oil. The activity across the North Slope continued at a fast clip into the 1970s. But in summer 1975, with 67 barges trying to carry cargo to the oil fields, shippers ran into a problem: the ice never left the coast.

As a result, Crowley had the icebreaking Arctic Challenger built to expand its shipping window, said Bruce Harland, an Anchorage-based vice president with Crowley.

Today, sea ice is also making life challenging for Crowley shipments this summer – not to mention for Shell’s drilling plans – because it hasn’t blown far off the state’s northern coast. But it’s nothing like it was in 1975, a year that required ice roads across the tundra so that supplies could be hauled over the mainland by truck to Prudhoe Bay, rather than by barges and other vessels, Harland said.

“That was the single toughest ice year we’ve ever had,” said Harland. “We have a pretty good track record of when ice goes in or out, and nothing like that has happened before or since.”

After the Arctic Challenger began operation in 1976, pushed by two of the era’s most powerful tugs, its primary mission was smashing through ice to open up sea lanes for other vessels hauling modules to build up oilfield facilities at Prudhoe Bay. It also helped supply other Alaska towns and villages not connected to the state’s road system.

In fact, the Russian tanker Renda, which made international news this past January, wasn’t the first ship to plow through ice to help the city of Nome. The Arctic Challenger set a record in spring 1977 when it was used to make the earliest delivery of supplies ever to the historic town along the Bering Sea, Harland said.

As oil production at Prudhoe Bay began to wane, Crowley’s sealifts to the North Slope began to slow. By the late 1990s, Crowley was no longer using the vessel. It sat unused for years, Harland said. At some point it ended up in California.

In 2003, Crowley sold it to Sause Bros., an ocean shipping company based in Coos Bay, Ore.

Crowley included a buy-back option in the sale if the Arctic Challenger wasn’t modified, said Dick Lauer, a vice president with Sause. Sause had intended to upgrade the vessel to a cargo container barge, but the nation’s economy hit the skids, slowing the shipping business. Also Sause decided to invest in barges with more modern, fuel-efficient hull designs, so it didn’t revamp the Arctic Challenger, Lauer said.

Sause owned the vessel in 2007, when the barge was anchored in California’s Long Beach Harbor, near Los Angeles.

Challenger becomes bird rookery

In 2007, the Arctic Challenger made headlines in The Los Angeles Times after a tour boat captain called for help rescuing a baby seabird that had apparently tumbled off the vessel and was drowning.

Tourists applauded as lifeguards rescued the baby tern, the paper reported. On the idle vessel were some 350 Caspian terns.

“Back on the barge, a raucous colony of Caspian terns had transformed mounds of coiled rope into shady camouflage for pale yellow hatchlings,” reported The LA Times. “Adult terns swooped in every few minutes with tiny silver fish in their beaks and promptly fed newly hatched birds. Others chased intruding brown pelicans, double-crested cormorants and Heermann’s gulls away from their nests on the flat deck.”

Sause Bros., which had hoped to relocate the Challenger to its shipyard in Coos Bay for the upgrades, agreed not to move it until the terns had migrated away. State wildlife officials in California, concerned that the nesting terns lacked appropriate habitat in the congested harbor, also swung into action to protect them.

A California Fish and Game report recommended weekly observations by wildlife officials from a safe distance and that private boats and fireworks be kept well away from the barge.

Where the heaviest nesting occurred, portions of the deck were crusted with “dirt, sand, crushed seashells, and avian excrement” that was “approximately three-quarters to one inch thick,” said the report.

Wildlife officers observed scores of other birds roosting on the deck, the report said. Nearly half the baby terns had fallen off the deck and needed rescuing by Long Beach lifeguards. They were transported to a bird rescue center or animal hospital for rehabilitation.

In 2009, Sause sold the Arctic Challenger back to Crowley, which eventually leased it to Superior – the firm that’s renovating the barge for Shell.

Harland, the Anchorage-based vice president with Crowley, said he didn’t know what modifications Superior is making to the vessel, but it had a very capable life as an icebreaker when his company operated it.

“It’s just been a dependable piece of equipment,” he said.

As far as Harland knows, the ship’s return to the Arctic as part of Shell’s oil drilling operations would be its first duty since the late 1990s. And he expects the Challenger’s reliability to continue with its second life in the Arctic.

Requests to Superior Energy and Shell seeking more information about the overhaul went unanswered.

Contact Alex DeMarban at alex(at)alaskadispatch.com

I remember this barge doing the Prudoe Bay sealifts on the 70’s. It would have two of the INVADER class boats made up in notches on the stern pushing it ahead as an icebreaker for the fleet.

Just stating the facts and I believe it was the AK office that generated the report. If Shell had enough juice to squash that report they would already be drilling. No need to be insulting.

Delays Leave Shell With Only Weeks to Drill in Arctic
By Kasia Klimasinska - Aug 20, 2012 12:00 AM ET

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Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDSA) has spent seven years and $4.5 billion, and fought off at least 50 lawsuits, for a chance to tap what is thought to be the biggest source of oil in the U.S. outside of the Gulf of Mexico.

With the last of more than 30 permit applications still pending, time is running out to get much drilling done off the coast of Alaska before having to stop for winter.
Enlarge image Delays May Leave Shell With Only Weeks To Drill in U.S. Arctic

An artist’s rendition of the Arctic Challenger barge. The vessel needs at least 14 days to get from Bellingham, Washington, to the exploration area, Shell said. Source: Superior Marine Technical Services

Even if the U.S. Interior Department granted the final permit this week another 14 days would be needed to get a specially designed barge to the area. That means work the company had planned to have under way in July couldn’t begin until September. Drilling has to end by Sept. 24 in the Chukchi Sea, and Oct. 31 in the Beaufort Sea – and can’t resume until July under the terms of permits it has already obtained.

“It seems to me that we are getting closer and closer to the point where they might not be able to do anything this year,” Philip Weiss, an analyst at Argus Research Co. in New York, said Aug. 17 in a telephone interview. “They’re running out of time.”
Permits, Lawsuits

Shell, based in The Hague, is seeking to be the first company to drill in the federally controlled U.S. arctic waters in two decades. It has spent $4.5 billion to obtain drilling rights, purchase equipment and procure permits from various federal agencies in pursuit of an underwater supply of oil estimated to hold more than 20 billion barrels.

“Our goal remains to drill and complete as many wells as time will allow this open-water drilling season,” including beginning wells that can be completed next year, Kelly op de Weegh, a Shell spokeswoman, said in an e-mail Aug. 16.

“We are in communication with a number of agencies and are considering our options,” she said. “We will make the most of the time we have this season.”

Shell’s drilling season is limited by the harsh Arctic climate. The Sept. 24 and Oct. 31 deadlines imposed by the Interior Department are based on historic patterns of ice formation and include time to clean up any spills before winter conditions make such work nearly impossible.

RBC Capital Markets downgraded Shell to “sector perform” from “top pick” last month, saying the company’s growth projects, including the Alaskan oil exploration and investments in liquefied natural-gas projects in Australia, are “perceived as higher cost, higher risk, less-visible reward,” according to a July 18 note to investors.
High Stakes

“The stakes are so high, and the upside of producing oil from the Arctic is potentially so high, that they may actually go ahead and decide to do as much as they can this year,” Tad Patzek, professor and chairman of the Petroleum & Geosystems Engineering Department at the University of Texas at Austin, said in an interview. “I think they’re going to just put a flag, so to speak, on the sea floor.”

An Arctic well takes two weeks to a month to drill, according to Patzek. It’s a costly endeavor: Shell’s expenses include leasing the Noble Discoverer drilling rig from Noble Corp. (NE) for $240,000 a day, along with about two dozens other vessels, according to the two companies.

“It would be better off just saving that money and putting it toward next year,” said Jackie Savitz, senior campaign director at the Washington-based environmental group Oceana that opposes the drilling. “But then, they could also say – ‘But, you know what, let’s just go ahead and do it so we can kind of, you know, sort of smooth the way for what we want to do next year.’”
Two Wells

Shell’s exploration plans originally called for 10 wells – five this year and five next – with work beginning last month. Ice that remained longer than usual and Coast Guard concerns with the spill-containment barge, the Arctic Challenger, delayed the start and caused Shell to cut the number of wells planned for this year from five to two.

Arctic Challenger is still in Bellingham, Washington. It was designed to help contain an oil spill, as required by new safety requirements imposed by the U.S. after the 2010 BP Plc (BP/) oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

The Coast Guard is waiting for Shell to fix deficiencies found in the safety systems, Jamie Frederick, a Coast Guard spokesman, said in a phone interview on Aug. 17.

Nobody has drilled in federal offshore areas north of Alaska since the early 1990s, when lower oil prices reduced potential profits.

Once the Coast Guard approves the barge, Shell will have to demonstrate its oil-containment system in open water, op de Weegh said. A similar test on another device earlier this year took only a day, and it should be the last step before obtaining the final permit, she said.

“It’s a necessity for Shell to be able to demonstrate that they have met regulatory requirements,” Interior Secretary Ken Salazar told reporters on Aug. 13 in Anchorage. If the company fails, “there won’t be Shell exploration” this year, he said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Katarzyna Klimasinska in Washington at kklimasinska@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Jon Morgan at jmorgan97@bloomberg.net

Amazingly only now is Superior advertising for barge engineer’s and foreman’s positions

Barge Engineer
Superior Energy Services, Inc - Anchorage, AK
Marine Technical Services , a Superior Energy Services Company, is a registered engineering company that provides technical solutions for all types of offshore and marine applications including emergency and non-emergency support services. Superior Energy Services and its subsidiaries are EEO/AA employers.

Marine Technical Services is currently hiring a Barge Engineer.

Main Responsibilities Manage all engineering and mechanical aspects of the barge. Maintain and manage the generator and control room. Ensure the company’s safety programs, procedures and policies are implemented. The above statements are not intended to be an exhaustive list of all responsibilities, duties and skills required of personnel so classified, nothing restricts the company’s right to change, assign or reassign duties and responsibilities at anytime or for any reason.

Minimum Requirements and Knowledge 5-10+ years of experience as a Barge Engineer Barge Engineer Certification Oil/gas or offshore experience on barges and/or platforms Understands barge and vessel operations Marine fire operations experience highly preferred

To be considered for this position, please select the link “Apply Now”. If you experience difficulties in the process or have questions, please call 1-866-771-4490 or chat with our online support staff at Live Chat Support, between the hours of 8:00 am – 5:00 pm Central Time.
Superior Energy Services, Inc

Barge Foreman
Superior Energy Services, Inc - Anchorage, AK
Marine Technical Services , a Superior Energy Services Company, is a registered engineering company that provides technical solutions for all types of offshore and marine applications including emergency and non-emergency support services. Superior Energy Services and its subsidiaries are EEO/AA employers.

Marine Technical Services is currently hiring a Barge Foreman.

Main Responsibilities Manage the day to day barge operations. Manage all hot work permits. Lifeboat safety. Ensure the company’s safety programs, procedures and policies are implemented. The above statements are not intended to be an exhaustive list of all responsibilities, duties and skills required of personnel so classified, nothing restricts the company’s right to change, assign or reassign duties and responsibilities at anytime or for any reason. Minimum Requirements and Knowledge 5-10+ years of experience as a Barge Foreman Ballast Control Operator - BCO License Oil/gas or offshore experience Marine fire operations experience highly preferred To be considered for this position, please select the link “Apply Now”. If you experience difficulties in the process or have questions, please call 1-866-771-4490 or chat with our online support staff at Live Chat Support, between the hours of 8:00 am – 5:00 pm Central Time.
Superior Energy Services, Inc

One would have thought these positions would have been months ago? Oh well…go figure!