'I'm very, very disappointed': Inventor dismayed by lack of progress on offshore oil safety - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 10:13 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

'I'm very, very disappointed': Inventor dismayed by lack of progress on offshore oil safety

An inventor who spent much of his career developing an emergency lifeboat for oil rigs wonders what lessons were truly learned after the Ocean Ranger disaster.

More than 30 years after Ocean Ranger disaster, Dan O'Brien sees too little work on at-sea safety

Seascape inventor Dan O'Brien says after 34 years since the Ocean Ranger disaster he's disappointed with the safety regime for lifeboat evacuation and rescue in the Newfoundland offshore. (Gary Locke/CBC)

An inventor who spent much of his career on an unfulfilled quest to build a better emergency lifeboat for oil rigs is questioning whatlessons were learned in the wake of the Ocean Ranger disaster that killed 84 people.

"I want to call on the Prime Minister of Canada, Prime Minister JustinTrudeau,to carry out an extensive review of safety for offshore Newfoundland," said Dan O'Brien, who spenttwo decades designing, building and testing a lifeboat evacuation system called Seascape.

The Ocean Ranger sank in a raging storm in February, 1982, with 84 lives lost. (CBC)

Seascape which used an aluminum boat that could be lowered from an oil platform or rig to the ocean underwent vigorous testing for years, with O'Brien motivated by the sinking of the Ocean Ranger in February 1982.

More than 34 years later, O'Brien argues that key issues sparked by the Ocean Ranger tragedy have not been resolved.

"The Ocean Ranger recommendations were not adequately addressed particularlywhen it comes to EERthat's evacuation, escape and rescue," O'Brien said in an interview.

Dan O'Brien's Seascape system involved lowering an aluminium life boat on to the water. (CBC)

The safety laws and regulations now in place do not go far enough, O'Brien said.

"I'm not looking for a job here. When I started my companyI was 32 years old.I'm now 64. And I'm kind of done," he said.

"I got to express my views here [and]I'm very, very disappointed," said O'Brien.

Final test did not go as planned

O'Brien's work developing Seascapewas in response to therecommendations made by the royal commission that investigated the Ocean Ranger sinking.

In order for Seascape to becertified, 25 different tests had to be carried out.

O'Brien said hetook his invention successfully through the first 24 tests.

The 25thandfinal testwas a burn challenge that did not go as planned.

A test burn, which badly damaged the Seascape lifeboat, ultimately led O'Brien to leave the project 10 years ago. (CBC)

The burn test involved setting fire to the water in a man-made pool at the Offshore Safety and Survival Centre in Foxtrap, just outside St. John's.

The burn lasted longer than expected andthe boat was badly damaged.

"International protocols requires that if you destroy a boat in a fire or some other way, you have to build a new boat, an entirely new boat, and do all the 25 tests [again]," says O'Brien.

The Seascape lifeboat sustained heavy damage during a burn test. (CBC)

Rather than proceed, O'Brien walked away from the project 10years ago.

Although he's not involved in Seascape,he remains deeplyconcerned about what's going in Newfoundland's offshore.

O'Brien said thatin the Hebron project review,there was no mention of life boat evacuation.

"There was something there that mentioned evacuating by helicopters in anticipation of something going wrong," he said.

"But when it all hits the fans and you got an emergency responseyou have to get off because of an explosion and fire, or whateverthen you need the lifeboat system,but nothing was addressed," said O'Brien.

Fatalities too high

O'Brien says the number of deaths in Newfoundland's offshore oil industry, at more than 100, is startling, sinceonly three fields have gone intoproduction so far.

He said the number of fatalitiesis far too highconsidering other jurisdictionsaround the worldwhere hundreds of rigs are operating.

"That's a lot of people for the amount of activity we've had in this jurisdiction, [and] compared to otherjurisdictions, like the Gulf of Mexico or the North Sea," said O'Brien.