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A large fixed platform, Piper Alpha was situated on the Piper Oilfield , approximately 120 miles northeast of Aberdeen in 474 feet of water. It produced oil and gas from 24 wells for delivery to the Flotta oil terminal on Orkney and to other installations by three separate pipelines. It hosted a compliment of about 240 personnel.
On 6 July, 1988 a leakage of gas condensate which had built up beneath the platform ignited, causing a massive explosion. The explosion ignited secondary oil fires, melting the riser of an upstream gas pipeline. The released gas caused a second, larger explosion which engulfed the entire platform. The disaster was so sudden and extreme that conventional evacuation was impossible. Only 62 crewmen survived.
That there was insufficient time for evacuation is controversial, to say the least. People were still getting off the platform several hours after the initial fires and explosions. The proximal problem was that most of the personnel who had the authority to order evacuation had been killed when the first explosion destroyed the control room. But that was a consequence of poor design of the platform, the absence of blast walls etc. Another contributing factor was that a nearby platform (the Tartan) continued to pump oil into the heart of the fire until its pipeline ruptured in the heat. The operations crew on the Tartan didn't have authority to shut off production even though they could see that the Piper was burning.
The nearby support vessel, Lowland Cavalier reported the initial explosion just before 10PM with the second explosion occurred just 22 minutes later. By the time civil and military rescue helicopters reached the scene, flames up to 400 feet in height and visible as far as 70 miles (80 miles for me on the Maersk Highlander) away prevented safe appoach. Tharos , a specialist firefighting vessel was able to approach the platform but could not prevent its destruction.
(Two crew from the Lowland Cavalier were killed when an explosion on the platform destroyed their "Fast Rescue Craft", which had recovered several survivors from the water. The Tharos could not pump sufficient water to approach the burning platform until after the rupture of the Tartan pipeline, about 2 hours after the start of the disaster. Once Tartan stopped pumping, Tharos could come alongside. Tharos recovered no-one that night.)
The Cullen Enquiry was set up in November 1988 to establish the cause of the disaster. In November 1990 it concluded that the initial condensate leak was the result of maintenance work being carried out simultaneously on a pump and related safety valve. Piper Alpha's operator, Occidental were found guilty of having inadequate maintenance procedures. A second phase of the enquiry made far-reaching safety recommendations, all of which were accepted by industry. [Practically all offshore workers in the North Sea would dispute the sincerity of the industry in some of their responses to the Cullen Report. Certainly the oil companies response to Cullens recommendation for full, organised worker representation has been less than full-hearted.]
The wreck buoy marking the remains of the Piper is approximately 120m from the SE corner of the replacement Piper Bravo platform. A lasting effect of the Piper Alpha disaster was the establishment of Britain's first "post- Margaret ThatcherMargaret Hilda Thatcher, Baroness Thatcher LG, OM, PC, FRS (born October 13, 1925) is a British politician and the first woman Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, a position she held from 1979 to 1990. She is a member of the Conservative Party and still" trade union, the Offshore Industry Liaison CommitteeThe Offshore Industry Liaison Comittee (OILC) is a trade union set up in the United Kingdom in response to the deaths of 167 workers on the Piper Alpha platform on July 6, 1988. Their deaths would be followed by the death of another worker on the Ocean Od.
PetroleumNodding donkey pumping an oil well near Sarnia, Ontario, 2001 Petroleum (from Latin petrus rock and oleum oil), mineral oil or crude oil sometimes colloquially called black gold is a thick, dark brown or greenish flammable liquid, which exists in the uppe