Ice rubble generation for offshore production structures : Current practices overview

Ice Rubble Generators and Ice Protection Structures (IRG and IPS, respectively), if successful, would have a major impact on the economics of an offshore production structure in the Beaufort Sea. A hybrid design of these structures has the potential to reduce ice loads by stabilizing the ice rubble...

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Main Authors: Barker, Anne, Timco, Garry
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.4224/12340901
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spelling ftnrccanada:oai:cisti-icist.nrc-cnrc.ca:cistinparc:12340901 2023-05-15T15:19:08+02:00 Ice rubble generation for offshore production structures : Current practices overview Barker, Anne Timco, Garry 2005-02 text https://doi.org/10.4224/12340901 https://nrc-publications.canada.ca/eng/view/ft/?id=234d2d02-73c3-4f8e-a5ee-4c16b63813ef https://nrc-publications.canada.ca/eng/view/object/?id=234d2d02-73c3-4f8e-a5ee-4c16b63813ef https://nrc-publications.canada.ca/fra/voir/objet/?id=234d2d02-73c3-4f8e-a5ee-4c16b63813ef eng eng Technical Report; no. CHC-TR-030, Publication date: 2005-02 doi:10.4224/12340901 open access technical report 2005 ftnrccanada https://doi.org/10.4224/12340901 2021-09-01T06:30:59Z Ice Rubble Generators and Ice Protection Structures (IRG and IPS, respectively), if successful, would have a major impact on the economics of an offshore production structure in the Beaufort Sea. A hybrid design of these structures has the potential to reduce ice loads by stabilizing the ice rubble surrounding offshore structures during the winter, and by providing a depth-limiting mechanism for summer ice floes. The use of a year-round passive load-reduction technology would significantly reduce the ice loads, which would result in a lower-cost structure. With lower-cost structures, this enables more timely development of frontier gas reserves. Additionally, by both lowering the loads on offshore structures and helping to control the distribution of ice surrounding such structures, the environmental integrity of the protected structure(s) may be increased, leading to increased safety for onboard personnel. This report researches the state-of-the-art use of IRG and IPS to examine innovative technological concepts concerning these structures. The research assembles available information on protective structures that have generated rubble. The information was assembled through a literature review and discussions with national and international personnel involved in the past or at present with this type of work. The majority of structures investigated were designed for use in shallow (approximately 4 m) of water. However a number of concepts show the potential to be adapted for deeper water use. Structures specifically designed to generate rubble have focused on rubblemound berm or barge-based structures, which, although costly for deep water, appear to hold the most promise for a number of locations in the Canadian Beaufort Sea. Additionally, an arrangement of piles designed to hold back rubble or to encourage the formation of a stable ice sheet, comprised of highly loaded torsion piles, could be suitable for the Canadian Arctic. This research will provide guidance for the model test program in Year 2 of the CCTII UGS project, in terms of both concepts and physical size of the generators. The work carried out in this project may encourage the incorporation of a hybrid IRG/IPS into structurally sound design practices for the retrieval of unconventional gas supplies in the Canadian Beaufort Sea. NRC publication: Yes Report Arctic Beaufort Sea Ice Sheet National Research Council Canada: NRC Publications Archive Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection National Research Council Canada: NRC Publications Archive
op_collection_id ftnrccanada
language English
description Ice Rubble Generators and Ice Protection Structures (IRG and IPS, respectively), if successful, would have a major impact on the economics of an offshore production structure in the Beaufort Sea. A hybrid design of these structures has the potential to reduce ice loads by stabilizing the ice rubble surrounding offshore structures during the winter, and by providing a depth-limiting mechanism for summer ice floes. The use of a year-round passive load-reduction technology would significantly reduce the ice loads, which would result in a lower-cost structure. With lower-cost structures, this enables more timely development of frontier gas reserves. Additionally, by both lowering the loads on offshore structures and helping to control the distribution of ice surrounding such structures, the environmental integrity of the protected structure(s) may be increased, leading to increased safety for onboard personnel. This report researches the state-of-the-art use of IRG and IPS to examine innovative technological concepts concerning these structures. The research assembles available information on protective structures that have generated rubble. The information was assembled through a literature review and discussions with national and international personnel involved in the past or at present with this type of work. The majority of structures investigated were designed for use in shallow (approximately 4 m) of water. However a number of concepts show the potential to be adapted for deeper water use. Structures specifically designed to generate rubble have focused on rubblemound berm or barge-based structures, which, although costly for deep water, appear to hold the most promise for a number of locations in the Canadian Beaufort Sea. Additionally, an arrangement of piles designed to hold back rubble or to encourage the formation of a stable ice sheet, comprised of highly loaded torsion piles, could be suitable for the Canadian Arctic. This research will provide guidance for the model test program in Year 2 of the CCTII UGS project, in terms of both concepts and physical size of the generators. The work carried out in this project may encourage the incorporation of a hybrid IRG/IPS into structurally sound design practices for the retrieval of unconventional gas supplies in the Canadian Beaufort Sea. NRC publication: Yes
format Report
author Barker, Anne
Timco, Garry
spellingShingle Barker, Anne
Timco, Garry
Ice rubble generation for offshore production structures : Current practices overview
author_facet Barker, Anne
Timco, Garry
author_sort Barker, Anne
title Ice rubble generation for offshore production structures : Current practices overview
title_short Ice rubble generation for offshore production structures : Current practices overview
title_full Ice rubble generation for offshore production structures : Current practices overview
title_fullStr Ice rubble generation for offshore production structures : Current practices overview
title_full_unstemmed Ice rubble generation for offshore production structures : Current practices overview
title_sort ice rubble generation for offshore production structures : current practices overview
publishDate 2005
url https://doi.org/10.4224/12340901
https://nrc-publications.canada.ca/eng/view/ft/?id=234d2d02-73c3-4f8e-a5ee-4c16b63813ef
https://nrc-publications.canada.ca/eng/view/object/?id=234d2d02-73c3-4f8e-a5ee-4c16b63813ef
https://nrc-publications.canada.ca/fra/voir/objet/?id=234d2d02-73c3-4f8e-a5ee-4c16b63813ef
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Beaufort Sea
Ice Sheet
genre_facet Arctic
Beaufort Sea
Ice Sheet
op_relation Technical Report; no. CHC-TR-030, Publication date: 2005-02
doi:10.4224/12340901
op_rights open access
op_doi https://doi.org/10.4224/12340901
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