NSTA:北海运营商正在提出丰富的减排计划

作者:
, 《油田技术》副主编


北海石油和天然气运营商可以在 14 个主要项目中投资最多 30 亿英镑,这些项目能够在其生产活动中减少最多 3200 万吨生命周期二氧化碳当量排放,这一数量高于伦敦预计的 2021 年年排放量。

北海过渡管理局 (NSTA) 对英国前 20 家运营商的年度绩效审查中强调的这些项目包括在平台上使用低碳电力、安装旨在消除常规火炬和通风的技术以及氢气。它们有可能在 2024 年至 2030 年间在新项目和现有项目上投入使用,为实现该行业的减排目标做出重大贡献。

然而,迄今为止,只有不到一半的项目已获得最终投资决定,这凸显出仍有工作要做。行业监管机构 NSTA 预计运营商将继续推进所有这些措施,并在未来几年提出更多的减排计划。

在年度零级会议上,NSTA 使用世界一流的数据和基准分析见解,向运营商展示他们如何相互比较,以展示良好实践并推动改进。它也是监管机构制定近期优先事项的平台,其中今年的优先事项包括能源生产、减排和油井退役。

石油和天然气满足英国约四分之三的能源需求,即使需求下降,预计到 2050 年英国仍将是净进口国。去年 UKCS 产量下降了 11%,意外停电加剧了这一下降。而生产效率(衡量公司资产使用情况的关键指标)为 77%,下降了一个百分点。运营商被提醒要牢记长期以来的80%目标,并敦促加倍努力从根源上解决一些资产不可靠的问题。

NSTA 还推广油井干预措施,将其作为提高产量的一种经济有效的方式,但令人失望的是,干预次数从 450 次下降到 2023 年的 402 次。监管机构正在与领先的运营商密切合作,以使干预措施回到正确的方向。

自2023年初以来,NSTA已同意八项石油和天然气开发项目,目标产量为4.3亿桶,需要44亿英镑的投资,以改善英国的能源状况、创造税收和创造供应链就业机会。此外,运营商正在为 14 个产量超过 7.5 亿桶的石油和天然气项目制定提案。所有提案都必须经过有效的净零评估,以确保它们与净零目标兼容。

令人鼓舞的是,该行业在 2018 年至 2022 年间将生产排放量减少了 23%,初步数据显示 2023 年将进一步下降。然而,该行业存在无法兑现到 2030 年减排 50% 的承诺的风险,到 2040 年,这一比例将达到 90%,并在 2050 年实现净零排放,无需采取进一步的减排措施。

NSTA 于 2024 年 3 月发布了专注于减排的 OGA 计划,以实现这些目标并让工业走上净零排放之路。它明确指出,要继续生产,就必须逐步变得更加清洁,并呼吁采取协调一致的行动,包括在发电方面采取一致行动,并在 2030 年之前停止常规排放和燃烧。

NSTA 负责人还利用零级呼吁许可证持有者履行其油井退役承诺。随着盆地不断成熟,更多的油井将永久停止生产并需要堵塞和废弃。公司必须自行清理,以保留对其运营的支持。

尽管提供了关于油井退役的明确指导,但近年来合规情况参差不齐,被许可人继续要求延期。 NSTA 于 2023 年 11 月写信给被许可人,警告那些不遵守规定的人将被追究责任。

NSTA 还牵头一个项目,以确定哪些 UKCS 油井将在 2026 年至 2030 年间做好退役准备,并评估及时且具有成本效益的方式开展这项工作所需的供应链能力。这些见解将指导我们与行业的合作,以促进合作,并在适当的情况下促进涉及多个运营商和油田的油井退役活动,这种方法可以节省时间和金钱,同时减少排放。 NSTA 希望业界给予全力支持。

NSTA 首席执行官斯图尔特·佩恩 (Stuart Payne) 表示:“尽管继续国内生产的论点很强烈,但只有运营继续变得更加清洁,这种观点才站得住脚。今天,我们再次看到了行业在降低排放和确保生产方面所拥有的一系列机会。我们知道英国拥有世界一流的劳动力队伍,能够创新、适应和提供复杂的技术解决方案。”

“运营商必须经常寻找机会来实现大幅减排,不遗余力。这对于保持对该行业的广泛支持至关重要,使其能够追求未来的石油。”

“行业还需要履行其良好的退役责任”,这是对其信誉的另一个威胁,这是悬而未决的。未达标的公司将被国家统计局追究责任。我们不会在这一优先事项上让步。”

在线阅读文章:https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-product/13052024/nsta-north-sea-operators-are-producing-a-wealth-of-emissions-reduction-schemes/

 

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NSTA: North Sea operators are proposing a wealth of emissions reduction schemes

Published by , Deputy Editor
Oilfield Technology,


North Sea oil and gas operators could invest up to £3 billion in 14 major projects capable of cutting up to 32 million t of lifetime CO2e emissions from their production activities, a quantity greater than London’s estimated annual emissions in 2021.

The projects – highlighted at the North Sea Transition Authority’s (NSTA) annual performance review of the UK’s top 20 operators – involve using low-carbon power on platforms, installing technologies designed to eliminate routine flaring and venting, and hydrogen. They could potentially go live between 2024 and 2030 on new and existing projects, making a significant contribution to achieving the sector’s emissions reduction targets.

However, final investment decisions have been secured for fewer than half of these projects, to date, highlighting that there is still work to do. The NSTA, the industry regulator, expects operators to press ahead with all of them and come up with more emissions reduction schemes in the coming years.

At its annual Tier Zero meeting, the NSTA uses world-class data and benchmarking insights to show operators how they compare with each other to showcase good practice and drive improvements. It is also a platform for the regulator to set out its near-term priorities, which this year include energy production, emissions reduction and well decommissioning.

Oil and gas meet around three quarters of the UK’s energy needs and, even as demand declines, the UK is expected to remain a net importer out to 2050. UKCS production fell by 11% last year, a decline exacerbated by unplanned outages, while production efficiency, a key metric which indicates how well companies are using their assets, was 77%, down one percentage point. Operators were reminded of the longstanding 80% target and urged to redouble efforts to tackle root causes of the unreliability of some assets.

The NSTA has also promoted well interventions as a cost-effective way to boost production but, disappointingly, the intervention count fell from 450 to 402 in 2023. The regulator is working closely with leading operators to get interventions moving back in the right direction.

Since the start of 2023, the NSTA has consented to eight oil and gas developments targeting 430 million bbl and requiring £4.4 billion of investment to improve the UK’s energy position, generate tax revenues and create supply chain jobs. In addition, operators are working on proposals for 14 oil and gas projects capable of yielding more than 750 million bbl. All proposals must go through an effective net zero assessment to make sure they are compatible with net zero targets.

Encouragingly, the industry reduced its production emissions by 23% between 2018 and 2022, and preliminary data suggests a further drop in 2023. However, there is a risk that the sector will not deliver on its commitments to cut emissions by 50% by 2030 and 90% by 2040, on the way to net zero by 2050, without further abatement measures.

The NSTA published the OGA Plan, focused on emissions reductions, in March 2024 to build on those targets and put industry on pathways to net zero. It makes clear that for production to continue, it must get progressively cleaner, and calls for concerted action, including on power generation, and an end to routine venting and flaring by 2030.

NSTA chiefs also used the Tier Zero to call for licensees to meet their commitments on well decommissioning. As the basin continues to mature, more wells will permanently stop producing and require plugging and abandonment. Companies must clean up after themselves to retain support for their operations.

Despite providing clear guidance on well decommissioning, compliance has been mixed in recent years, with licensees continuing to request deferrals. The NSTA wrote to licensees in November 2023 to warn that those failing to comply will be held to account.

The NSTA is also spearheading a project to identify which UKCS wells will be ready for decommissioning between 2026 to 2030 and assess the supply chain capacity required to undertake the work in a timely and cost-effective manner. These insights will guide our engagements with industry to promote collaboration and, where appropriate, facilitate well decommissioning campaigns involving multiple operators and fields – an approach which can save time and money while also reducing emissions. The NSTA expects the sector to offer its wholehearted support.

Stuart Payne, NSTA chief executive, said: “While the argument for continued domestic production is strong, it only stands up if operations continue to get cleaner. Today we saw again the range of opportunities industry has to lower emissions and secure production. We know the UK has a world class workforce able to innovate, adapt and deliver complex technical solutions.”

“Operators must routinely seek out opportunities to deliver significant emissions cuts, leaving no stone unturned. This is vital to preserve widespread support for the sector, enabling it to go after future barrels.”

“Industry also needs to live up to its well decommissioning responsibilities – another threat to its credibility, which hangs in the balance. Companies who fall short will be held to account by the NSTA. We won’t back down on this priority.”

Read the article online at: https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-production/13052024/nsta-north-sea-operators-are-proposing-a-wealth-of-emissions-reduction-schemes/

 

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