Oil and Natural Gas
Corporation (ONGC) started its hunt for “Black Gold” in Indian waters in 1976
and is currently operating more than 265 offshore fixed jacket platforms in
water depths ranging from 25 to 90 meters. Most of these platforms had a
25-year design life, with many of them having already outlived this milestone
and many more approaching it. Additionally, modifications on many of the
platforms have been made due to updated design criteria or because of revamping
projects executed for enhanced oil recovery. As a result, the requalification
of these structures was highly important to ensure continued oil production,
thus sustaining the energy supply needed for the national growth. ONGC also
wanted to avoid installing new platforms at a net cost of US$25 million per
platform.
ONGC invested US$150
million to assess its jacketed platforms for extended “fit for use” and
strengthen the platforms as required to meet industry safety requirements. ONGC
used SACS for design-level analysis to carry out detailed structural analyses
and SACS Collapse for ultimate strength analysis. This technology became part
of ONGC’s methodology for platform life extension/requalification, which added
10-15 years to the average life of each structure
The analysis included
dent modeling, member/joint component strengthening, additional pile modeling,
and soil convergence, as well as extensive load modeling to recommend equipment
removal if necessary. SACS and SACS Collapse, with the efficient multi-run
option, allowed multiple analyses with parametric variations to be carried out
simultaneously and enabled ONGC to optimize the strengthening/mitigation
measures, saving at least 12 resource-hours per platform.
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