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Oil Rig Explosion - Piper Alpha Disaster(HQ)

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Uploaded by on Nov 7, 2009

R.I.P. Credit BBC.


Piper Alpha was a North Sea oil production platform operated by Occidental Petroleum (Caledonia) Ltd. The platform began production in 1976, first as an oil platform and then later converted to gas production. An explosion and resulting fire destroyed it on July 6, 1988, killing 167 men, with only 59 survivors. The death toll includes 2 crewmen of a rescue vessel. Total insured loss was about £1.7 billion (US$ 3.4 billion). To date it is the world's worst offshore oil disaster in terms both of lives lost and impact to industry. At the time of the disaster the platform accounted for around 10% of the oil and gas production from the North Sea.
9:55 p.m. Condensate (LPG) Pump A was switched on. Gas flowed into the pump, and because of the missing safety valve, produced an overpressure which the loosely fitted metal disc did not withstand.
Gas audibly leaked out at high pressure, drawing the attention of several men and triggering six gas alarms including the high level gas alarm, but before anyone could act, the gas ignited and exploded, blowing through the firewall made up of 2.5 x 1.5 metre panels bolted together, which were not designed to withstand explosions. The custodian pressed the emergency stop button, closing huge valves in the sea lines and ceasing all oil and gas production.
Theoretically, the platform would be then have been isolated from the flow of oil and gas and the fire relatively contained. However, because the platform was originally built for oil, the firewalls were designed to resist fire rather than withstand explosions. The first explosion broke the firewall and dislodged panels around Module (B). One of the flying panels ruptured a small Condensate pipe, creating another fire.
10:04 p.m. The control room was abandoned. Piper Alpha's design made no allowances for the destruction of the control room, and the platform's organisation disintegrated. No attempt was made to use loudspeakers or to order an evacuation.
Emergency procedures instructed personnel to make their way to lifeboat stations, but the fire prevented them from doing so. Instead the men moved to the fireproofed accommodation block beneath the helicopter deck to await further instructions. Wind, fire and smoke prevented helicopter landings and no further instructions were given, with smoke beginning to penetrate the personnel block.
As the crisis mounted, two men donned protective gear in an attempt to reach the diesel pumping machinery below decks and activate the firefighting system. They were never seen again.
The fire would have burnt out were it not being fed new oil from both Tartan and the Claymore platforms, the resulting back pressure forcing fresh fuel out of ruptured pipework on Piper, directly into the heart of the fire. The Claymore continued pumping until the second explosion because the manager had no permission from the Occidental control centre to shut down. Also, the connecting pipeline to Tartan continued to pump, as its manager had been directed by his superior. The reason for this procedure was the exorbitant cost of such a shut down. It would have taken several days to restart production after a stop, with substantial financial consequences.
Gas lines of 140 to 146 cm in diameter ran to Piper Alpha. Two years earlier Occidental management ordered a study, which warned of the dangers of these gas lines. Due to their length and diameter it would have taken several hours to reduce their pressure, so that it would not have been possible to fight a fire fuelled by them. Although the management admitted how devastating a gas explosion would be, Claymore and Tartan were not switched off with the first emergency call.10:20 p.m. Tartan's gas line (pressurised to 120 Atmospheres) melted and burst, releasing 15-30 tonnes of gas every second, which immediately ignited. A massive fireball 150 metres in diameter engulfed Piper Alpha, killing two crewmen on a fast rescue boat launched from the standby vessel Sandhaven and the six Piper Alpha crewmen they had rescued from the water. From that moment on, the platform's destruction was assured.
When the pipeline burst it was releasing 1.5 times the consumption of gas in the entire UK at that moment.

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Uploader Comments (akablenk71)

  • what is the vessel next to the rig ? 37 sec ?

  • @numanath94 If you meant the oil rig type vessel then that was called The Tharos, it's a large semi submersible fire fighting, rescue and accommodation vessel. By chance it was very close by when this terrible event happened.

  • @akablenk71

    My Dad was on the Tharos at the time

  • @comatose100 Those people onboard Tharos and all the other rescue craft did everything they could to help, but Piper was a lost cause once the pipeline burst. Thank God 59 survived but we must never forget the 165 from the platform that died and 2 crew of the Sandhaven. This was an awful event that could have been avoided. Lessons were learnt the hard way.

Top Comments

  • may they all rest in peace

    "Death leaves a heartache no one can heal, love leaves a memory no one can steal."

  • my thoughts still go to the familys and people left behind .and those who lost their lifes murderd by occidental .

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All Comments (79)

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  • R.I.P dave "hindu" henderson ;( my stepdad xxx

  • @killthegun01 167 people fries in this accident . . .

  • This music is in the Drive movie

  • I knew one of the victims of this disaster,Kevin Gilligan,he used to run a paper shop near me with his brother. RIP mate.

  • @akablenk71 165? I thought it was 167.

  • The oil rig (piper alpha) is infrastucture that's currently resting at the bottom of the sea,will make exceptional structure that will help the ecosystem to form an coral reef, and will become the most outstading thing on the sea.This will make up for the oil spill that currently drifting on the surface of the water killing of the small creatures that succomb to it's harzards.

  • Unfortunately whenever a tradgedy like this happens, the majority of people seem to focus on the enviornmental stuff and do not consider the 165 who died doing a job that produces something that is used by each and every one of us. I just want to say to all my friends in the drilling business, please be safe out there, and I appreciate the job you do.

  • 167 people died in this accident . . .

    RIP

  • @tpmbe Amin

  • my uncle was on that oil rig. he was right above the explosion but unfortuantly ive never met him but R.I.P. uncle john. xx

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