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Lead Author: Ricardo Lopez Co-author(s): Jorge Ballesio, jorge.ballesio@nasa.gov
Robert Cross, robert.cross-1@nasa.gov
Michael Worden, Mike.Worden@bsee.gov
Estimating Tropical Cyclone Threats to Floating Rigs in the Gulf of Mexico
Offshore drilling operations in the Gulf of Mexico are particularly vulnerable during hurricane season. When a weather threat arises, a decision to evacuate the rig and/or move to a safe location may need to be made. Depending on the activities in progress at the time of the threat, securing the well, evacuating, and/or moving to a safe location can take a considerable amount of time. This transition time is called T-time. T-time is not only rig dependent, but also depends on the activity being performed at the time of the threat. For these reasons it is important to assess tropical cyclone threats and the time it takes for them to reach the rig location. The objective of this study is to use the available 50 years of past cyclone history to estimate cyclone threats at any location in the Gulf of Mexico.
The cyclone threat is estimated based on the rig location as well as the start date and duration of the offshore activity. By threat, it is meant the likelihood that a specific location with an associated offshore activity would be exposed to an upcoming cyclone whose forecasted track cone and storm size lies within that location. Three representative rig locations in the Gulf of Mexico were selected as assessment sites to evaluate the threat of incoming cyclones for different T-times. To conduct this tropical cyclone study, an Excel spreadsheet tool was developed to automate the analysis of the tropical cyclone data from the Best Track Archive for Climate Stewardship (IBTrACS) Version 4. The spreadsheet tool allows the user to input any location (i.e., longitude and latitude) in the Gulf of Mexico and displays a list of historical cyclones that have passed within 150 nautical miles of that location during the activity period selected by the user. Also, the tool allows the user to input a T-time to assess the threat of cyclones that would not provide adequate time to secure the well, evacuate, and/or move to a safe location.
Paper RI146 Preview
Author and Presentation Info
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Lead Author Name: Ricardo Lopez (ricardo.a.lopez@nasa.gov)
Bio: Probabilistic risk analyst working with NASA's Safety & Mission Assurance contract. Civil Engineer with 14 year of experience in hazard analysis, regulatory compliance, and reliability and probabilistic risk assessments of drilling and production operations for the oil and gas sector, with an emphasis on offshore operations in the Gulf of Mexico.
Country: United States of America Company: SAIC Job Title: NASA Statistician Principal