Building collaborative capacity to address Australia’s growing decommissioning needs
Francis G. Norman A *A Centre of Decommissioning Australia (CODA), Perth, WA, Australia.
The APPEA Journal 62 S334-S336 https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ21145
Accepted: 26 February 2022 Published: 13 May 2022
© 2022 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing on behalf of APPEA.
Abstract
Australia and indeed the Asia-Pacific region is facing a significant decommissioning workload. Recent work by the Centre of Decommissioning Australia (CODA) puts Australia’s potential offshore decommissioning cost at around US$40 billion and Wood Mackenzie predicting the region’s decommissioning to be in excess of US$100 billion. CODA was established in 2021 to support the coordinated effort required across the entire Australian value chain to address this immense domestic workload safely and effectively. Building on the release of the 2021 liability report, CODA, in conjunction with a number of operators, has undertaken three additional studies, looking at: planning and execution global best practice applicable to Australian operations; a decommissioning technology roadmap, and; a recycling and disposal pathways report. Supported by these studies to understand the current state and needs of the Australian decommissioning industry, CODA’s primary focus is to build domestic capacity and capability. To this end CODA is working with operators, the service and supply sector, state and federal government, regulators and researchers to establish a collaborative network that can enhance the visibility of upcoming work, surface and support the growth of domestic capability and share best practice in decommissioning. This paper highlights findings from the new reports and shares insights into CODA’s ongoing work to build an inclusive Australian decommissioning community of practice ready to undertake the next decades of activity.
Keywords: decommissioning, decommissioning best practice, decommissioning technology, future work, recycling.
Dr Francis Norman is a highly experienced strategic leader. His role of General Manager, leading the Centre of Decommissioning Australia (CODA) is informed by over 40 years of experience in resource project engineering and business leadership. CODA has been established to bring together the Australian decommissioning industry, including operators, service suppliers, government, research and regulators to grow the local capacity and capability to undertake the upcoming decommissioning work in a safe, efficient, environmentally sensitive and cost-effective manner. A former WA Division President for Engineers Australia, Francis holds a MSc in project management and a PhD in management. For the past 5 years he has helped lead NERA’s work in supporting companies translate their ideas into business offerings for the energy sector, working with researchers, the service sector, producers and government to build relationships and grow the Australian economy. |
References
Centre of Decommissioning Australia (2021) A Baseline Assessment of Australia’s Offshore Oil and Gas Liability. March. Available at https://www.decommissioning.org.auCentre Of Decommissioning Australia (2022a) Development of a decommissioning innovation and technology roadmap. Available at https://www.decommissioning.org.au/our-studies/development-of-decommissioning-innovation-and-technology-roadmap/
Centre Of Decommissioning Australia (2022b) Global review of decommissioning planning and execution learnings. Available at https://www.decommissioning.org.au/our-studies/global-review-decommissioning-planning-and-execution-learnings/
Centre Of Decommissioning Australia (2022c) Understanding the opportunity for local disposal and recycling pathways. Available at https://www.decommissioning.org.au/our-studies/understanding-the-opportunity-for-local-disposal-and-recycling-pathways/
Wood Mackenzie (2018) Decommissioning Asia Pacific on a budget. Available at https://www.woodmac.com/reports/upstream-oil-and-gas-decommissioning-asia-pacific-on-a-budget-11831