Offshore Oil Rig Infection Exposes Coronavirus Dangers

Shadia Nasralla
Thursday, March 12, 2020

Equinor reported the oil industry's first coronavirus infection on an offshore installation on Wednesday, highlighting the challenge in preventing contamination for thousands of workers living in the close quarters on rigs and platforms.

A worker was in isolation on the Norwegian energy firm's Martin Linge oil and gas platform off Norway where production is due to start at the end of this year, the company said. It said it would cut activity at the field, but personnel would remain at installations, while workers would reduce meetings and sit further apart in canteens to prevent further contamination.

 It has 776 people working on the project spread across three installations, Martin Linge, the Maersk Intrepid drilling rig and the Floatel Endurance accommodation rig. 

The company was also waiting for test results from two other people, it said. The case highlights the risk for the industry, which is already reeling from the crash in crude prices after Russia and Saudi Arabia disagreed over output cuts. 

Offshore oil installations, which account for about a quarter of total global oil output, are as vulnerable to the epidemic as cruise ships, investment bank Stifel said in a note. 

Oil workers come from different nations, work in close proximity and share the same helicopters and airports to fly to rigs, making it difficult to prevent contamination, it added. 

"Our conversations with industry suggest screening measures are being deployed, but as with airports these are likely to be only moderately effective," Stifel said.

Equinor said it had taken steps before the diagnosis, including asking employees and suppliers to avoid visiting its office or remaining onshore for at least 14 days if they had previously traveled to high-risk areas, such as China or Italy. 

The infected person, who had recently been to Austria, arrived on the Martin Linge platform, located 160 km out in the North Sea, on March 4 and was isolated five days later, it said. 

Equinor Chief Executive Eldar Saetre told Reuters last week shutting down production would be the "very last resort" if somebody tested positive for coronavirus. "Business continuity is the concept that we are working on, how can we continue the business," he said. 

Norway, western Europe's top oil and gas producer, has between 8,000 and 10,000 people working at offshore production platforms, drilling rigs and supply vessels at any given time, industry data shows. MARKET IMPACT If offshore oil output is cut due to coronavirus by at least 10% from around 27 million barrels per day (bpd), it would have a bigger impact on global supply than the failed OPEC-Russia deal to cut output by 1.5 million bpd, Stifel said. 

Norway produces about 2% of global oil and is the second-largest natural gas supplier to Europe after Russia. Crude streams from Norwegian fields Ekofisk, Oseberg and Troll are included in S&P Global Platts dated Brent price assessment, the global price benchmark. Rival producers are taking steps to prevent contamination. 

Italy's Eni, whose subsidiary operates the Arctic Goliat field in Norway, said it had taken measures to protect staff, without elaborating. Repsol, which is developing the Yme oilfield off Norway, said it was following official guidelines for infectious diseases while Austrian OMV said it had contingency plans, but did not disclose any details. 

Frode Alfheim, the head of Norway's largest oil workers union, said he was confident that Equinor could handle the situation, but said the virus posed a significant risk.

 "As in the rest of the society, there is a huge risk that it's going to spread offshore," he said. 

(Additional reporting by Shadia Nasralla in London, Isla Binnie in Madrid, Stephen Jewkes in Milan, Kirsti Knolle in Vienna; editing by Giles Elgood, Kirsten Donovan and David Evans)

Categories: People Industry News Activity Europe Oil Safety & Security

Related Stories

IEA Unleashes Record 400M Barrel Oil Stockpile Release Amid Iran War Disruptions

Iran War Exposes Risks of Fossil Fuel Dependence

Sunda Energy Secures Environmental License for Drilling Ops off Timor-Leste

Aramco Warns of Severe Oil Market Fallout from Hormuz Blockade

Valeura Lifts Output with Three Producing Wells at Thailand’s Manora Field

Subsea7 Extends Engagement on Türkiye’s Sakarya Field with New Deal

GLO Marine to Invest $7M in New Vessel Retrofit Hub in Romania

Eni Enlists Shearwater for 3D Seismic Survey in Timor Sea

Saipem Lands $425M Turkish Gas Contract in Sakarya Expansion

EnQuest Set to Top 2025 Production Forecast on Southeast Asia Gains

Current News

Offshore Vietnam: Energy Imports Rise as Domestic Production Falls

Eni Advances Major Deep Water Gas Hubs with Dual FIDs

Eni Advances Angola Gas Project, Secures $9B Credit Facility

TVO Customizes Tethered BOP Technology

Eni: New Gas Discoveries in Libya

Petronas Makes New Hydrocarbon Discovery in Southeast Asia

PTTEP Picks Everllence Compressors for Thailand’s Offshore CCS Project

IEA Unleashes Record 400M Barrel Oil Stockpile Release Amid Iran War Disruptions

OneSubsea Bags Third PTTEP Subsea Systems Contract in One Year

Iran War Exposes Risks of Fossil Fuel Dependence

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com