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Australian Energy Producers Journal Australian Energy Producers Journal Society
Journal of Australian Energy Producers
 

Concurrent 12. Presentation for: Recycling of Australian oil and gas assets, an Australian Basel-compliant solution

T. Soliman Hunter A *
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Macquarie Law School, Sydney, NSW, Australia.

* Correspondence to: tina.solimanhunter@mq.edu.au

The APPEA Journal 62 - https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ21341
Published: 3 June 2022

Abstract

Presented on Wednesday 18 May: Session 12

Australian offshore petroleum infrastructure decommissioning strategies are dictated by legal requirements set out in the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act, requiring prima facie that assets are removed from the title area. Legally, once assets are decommissioned, they require disposal at a Basel-compliant facility. This lack of Australian capability has forced titleholders to contemplate leaving infrastructure in situ (rigs-to-reef), which may well breach Australia’s international law obligations under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, and the London Convention on Dumping at Sea (and associated Protocols). Australia’s closest Basel-compliant facility is located in Turkey. The experience of the Iron Chieftain in 2019 demonstrated the difficulty in using this facility. In 2019 the bulk carrier Iron Chieftain caught fire in Port Kembla, and was declared a Constructive Total Loss (CTL). Disposal required decontamination, seeking Basel export approval, and towing to Turkey via South Africa. Following 9 months to complete the application, the vessel commenced its tow. The vessel was not permitted to stop or enter the port waters of any port other than Turkey after leaving. If it did stop, the application ceased and a new application was required to be commenced. If the vessel arrived in a condition not acceptable to authorities, the vessel would be turned away, requiring it to return to its home port of Port Kembla where the application commenced from. In response to such difficulties, a new Basel-compliant recycling facility has been established, co-located to a green steel recycling works, delivering a near carbon-neutral asset recycling and disposal solution for Australia’s offshore energy infrastructure. Strategically located in the mouth of the Spencer Gulf, South Australia, this facility will provide a green whole-of-asset recycling and disposal solution in-country, removing towage expenses and CO2 emissions. This extended abstract articulates the Iron Chieftain experience, highlighting the issues facing petroleum infrastructure decommissioning and disposal in accordance with Basel requirements. It also provides an overview of the Whyalla recycling and disposal facility, presenting the case for circular economy, ethical asset decommissioning and Australian capability.

To access the presentation click the link on the right. To read the full paper click here

Keywords: advanced recycling, Basel, decommissioning, EPBCA, green recycling, HK Convention, Hong Kong Convention, Iron Chieftain, London Convention, OPGGSA, rig to wreck, Sea Dumping, waste, waste export Australia, Whyalla.

Professor Tina Soliman Hunter is a Professor of Energy and Resources Law at Macquarie University, teaching and researching in petroleum and resources law, the energy transition (particularly hydrogen and carbon sequestration) and pollution of the arctic (especially oil and microplastics). She has received academic qualifications in marine sediments and geology, political science, applied science and law. She is presently an Honorary Professor at the University of Eastern Finland, and a Visiting Professor at the Biological Research Institute, Tomsk State University, Russian Federation. Tina has undertaken teaching and research in numerous countries including the UK, Australia, Norway, Canada, Iceland, Greece, Finland, Russia, the USA and the Philippines. She presently leads a multidisciplinary UK–Australia–Russia Consortium of Researchers and Experts in Northern Aquatic and Arctic Marine Ecosystems (CRENAME), investigating continental water bodies and seabed sediment contamination arising from oil spills and microplastics, the implications for legal reform and the development of specialised tools for cleaning such contamination.