Proposal
To British Petroleum For Oil Evacuation Safety Measure For Offshore Oil
Drilling Rigs
Matti
Joyner, Shane Goff, Michael Carlock & Robert Feagans
New
Mexico State University
Las
Cruces, New Mexico
2011
Table
of Contents
Tittle
Page 1
Table
of Contents 2
Abstract 3
Description
of Problem 3
Executive
Summary 5
-Method Procedure 5
-Why oil drilling makes sense 5
-Alternatives 7
-Cost and Resources 8
-Personnel 9
Conclusion 10
References 11
Abstract
Being
British Petroleum, one of the biggest oil companies in the world, you must be very aware of our nation’s
consumption; oil is used in every aspect of our daily lives, everything from
cars to lawnmowers and even some toys run on oil. To say that it is important
to our lives would be an understatement. Without oil our lives would
dramatically change in many ways. The biggest would be traveling to work and to
other locations. Offshore oil drilling
helps us obtain this oil needed to maintain our standard of living. No matter
how many ways we try to make it safe there are always unexpected occurrences
that can happen. You can try to prevent these occurrences but something
unexpected is bound to happen. We are proposing to design a pressure gauge that
when it hits that max pressure it opens a valve that releases the pressure.
This may prevent the explosions that are happening on the offshore drills.
Adding this gauge may prevent the oil drills from blowing up by stopping the
pressure before it gets to the top of the drill creating the explosion. This
may help decrease the numbers of drills that explode due to pressure build up.
In the end this can help save the lives of many workers onboard the oil rigs
and also of those animals around the rigs. The amount of money that would be
saved is astronomical, when your oil rig exploded in the gulf there were many
different ways in which mass amounts of money was used for unforeseen costs,
including: bereavement checks, cleanup of oil and those who depend on the gulf
for work were unable to do so at that time.
Description of
Problem
The United States consumes an average of 20% of the
world’s oil, and only provides about 2% (Obama, 2010, Remarks Offshore
Drilling). This large gap in oil consumption accounts for 30% of the country’s
trade deficit, due to the dependency of foreign oil (Gibson, 2005, US Oil
Consumption). Offshore drilling is when the land that is going to be drilled
cannot provide a base for the platform, meaning that an artificial platform
must be created in order to extract the oil being pursued. These platforms can be situated in water up
to several hundred meters in depth and are classified as either permanent rigs
or rigs that can be moved from place to place (used more for exploratory
purposes), with the latter being more prominent.
Oil rigs are fixed to the seabed with steel posts,
are built to house a number of the workers as well as harbor all the processing
equipment used in extraction. The building of the rig can take anywhere between
2-4 years. An investment in offshore
drilling, according to President Obama, is expected to create or save more than
700,000 jobs throughout America (Obama, 2010, Remarks Offshore Drilling). An estimated additional 18 billion barrels of
oil is contained in the areas where the original congressional law had taken effect. America is averaging around 7 billion barrels
of consumption a year, and this figure seems to be rising steadily within the
current decade. The majority of American
oil, sixty percent, is supplied by other nations. If America could provide oil
on its own accord there would be no fear of what takes place outside American
borders.
The oil has been 99.99% clean since the year
1980. 620,500 barrels of oil will
naturally leak from the ocean floor each year; the number of barrels lost to
the ocean due to human error is vastly smaller at approximately 6,000. Through
this time 17 permits along with 90 regulations have been established to ensure
that every step is taken to optimize efficiency as well as keep in mind the
sanctity of the ecosystem. When Hurricane Katrina as well as Rita occurred,
3,050 rigs lay in the path of these two terrible storms, of those 3.050 rigs,
slightly over 200 of them were damaged. However, they were able to be capped
thus avoiding disaster while keeping the integrity of the operations (Murdock,
2008, Vol. 64 Issue 26, p8-8, 1/3p).
Oil is used to fuel vehicles, heat homes, lubricate
machinery, make asphalt for roads, plastics, and even is used to create
electricity. President Obama addresses
that both traditional sources and renewable energy must be utilized by stating,
“This is not a decision that I’ve made lightly. But the bottom line is this:
Given our energy needs, in order to sustain economic growth and produce jobs,
and keep our businesses competitive, we are going to need to harness
traditional sources of fuel even as we ramp up production of new sources of
renewable, homegrown energy.” United
State will consume around 22 million barrels of oil a day with only 27% being
of our own accord. With an estimated 18 billion lying within US coastal areas
we could reach economic stability by keeping money in our own economy. This
will raise the equilibrium for the supply and demand of oil, thus helping the
economy and our living standards.
Executive Summary
Method and Procedure
The initial stage of the project will involve a
basic research and development cycle. We will begin with work in AutoCAD (computer
animated design), where the initial design of the wastegate will be
conceptualized. Due to the fact that our product is not a new idea, but simply
an update of an existing design, the development process will be fairly short.
Once we have designed the initial product we will make a prototype which will
allow the testing stage to begin. In this stage we will make sure that the
product functions as planned. After the product has been proven to work, we
will begin the final productions stage in which the product will be produced in
a timely manner without compromising quality. In order to create the required
8,000 waste-gates it will take a great amount of time. However, our plan is to
begin working on each rig as soon as enough of the product is available. We
hope to have this done in a year’s period. This is assuming a day to install
with travel time, and at about 16 waste-gates a day.
Why Oil Drilling makes
Sense
An investment in offshore drilling, according to
President Obama, is expected to create or save more than 700,000 jobs
throughout America (Obama, 2010, Remarks Offshore Drilling). You, BP are one of
the largest oil companies in our countries, there is great potential for growth
in the U.S. With the economy in need to stabilize offshore drilling provides
the chance for economic growth, and ultimately expanding our nation’s capacity
to generate renewable electricity from sources like the wind and sun. An estimated
additional 18 billion barrels of oil is contained in the areas where the
original congressional law had taken affect (Baird, 2008, Vol. 68 Issue 3,
13-17, p5.). America is averaging around 7 billion barrels of consumption a
year, and this figure seems to be rising steadily within the current decade, it
is without question that the potential is there to become energy independent
rather than reliant. Due to the congressional ban on offshore drilling rigs in
the Gulf of Mexico, which account for nearly all of US offshore oil production,
our foreign dependency for oil has risen. A statement like this instills the
thought of having to ultimately rely in foreign nations due to the dependency
of the oil that these nations provide to our country. This statement contains
more truth than most would like to believe. The majority, sixty percent, of
American oil is supplied by other nations. South American nations are the major
provider of our oil, other nations near the Persian Gulf, and Africa (Gibson,
2005, US Oil Consumption) are other major providers. The ability to drill for
our own oil keeps Americans safe from the mercy of the world oil market. When
prices of crude oil rise, prices of gasoline rise. Drilling for our own oil
removes the other markets from the equation and thus removes markups on prices.
Alternatives
There are
several alternatives to offshore oil drilling, such as oil shale, natural gas,
oil sand, and coal. Each of these alternatives has their own pros and cons, but
none are viable.
Oil shale is an organic rich stone that contains a
variable type of oil. After the shale is
mined, it is taken for whatever use one may want. It can be burned like a crude
cheap dirty heat source or to power districts. It can also be processed to
retrieve the oil out of the shale, and then process the oil into something
useable. There are a few big problems with oil shale, the mining causes
irreversible damage to the landscape from which it is harvested, the mining
process is expensive, after all is said and done from shale to useable material
almost as much energy that can be created has been spent. This keeps oil shale
from being a viable option until a better method of farming, and processing has
been achieved.
Oil sand is another alternative that fairs poorly on
profit, and on being environmentally friendly. The oil sand can be gathered in
many different ways. Surface mining, cold flow where the oil is pumped out of
the sand which can only be done in ideal conditions, steam assisted gravity
drainage where they inject steam into
the sand to heat the oil making it more liquid so it can be pumped out, and
several others. The problems with this are profit can be lost at any moment if
the steam cannot supply enough oil to the well to be pumped with the steam
assisted gravity drain. With surface mining, it takes roughly two tons of oil
sand to produce an eighth of a barrel of oil. As you can imagine, the effort
required to get oil from this source in comparison with the returns it offers
renders it a very cost inefficient option. However, it is an option that may be
looked upon when oil wells begin to run dry, leaving us with no other options
for acquiring oil.
Natural gas is harvested many ways, including a way
very similar to oil drilling. Finding natural gas is sometimes a mistake, and
causes a great deal of damage in coal mines as its usually odorless and always
colorless. The gas can accidentally be ignited and kill hundreds at any time.
The gas also must undergo a lot of processing depending on how it is to be
used. It can simply power a furnace, or be processed into several other gasses
for specific purposes. This can make natural gas a variable constantly on
profit, feasibility, and safety.
Coal is a cash cow for the United States. It is in
abundant supply, and therefore can be sold for a fair and good looking low
price. The downside to coal is it destroys the earth where it’s gathered via
surface and strip mining. Coal must also go a lot of traveling before it
reaches its destination, and as it can’t be broken down, compacted, or
preprocessed, it must be shipped as solid chunks. This makes it very heavy, and
hard to transport. Coal burning also comes at a cost, containing many air
pollutants, it yields large amounts of carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide,
nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, and these are the greenhouse gasses believed
to be responsible for global warming.
Cost
The
cost of our proposed oil pressure release system, known simply as: a wastegate
will be a fraction of BP’s yearly profit margin. If you factor in the costs
associated with clean-up of an oil spill, our device has the potential to save
vast amounts of money for your company. The overall cost of the project can be
seen in a number of different areas. The cost can be seen in three basic areas,
materials, labor and tools. These three areas can be seen here:
·
Labor, needed to operate the machines
·
Materials, needed to create the actual
product
·
Tools, needed to install the completed
product
The materials needed to create our waste-gate will
be limited to aluminum. Other metals are available at a cheaper price; however,
the product needs to be strong in order to avoid failure from the high
pressures seen inside the oil pipeline.
At this point in time the price of aluminum is approximately one dollar
per pound. In order to create one waste-gate, we will need 5.85 pounds of
aluminum. For the waste-gates to properly evacuate all of the oil from the
pipeline, we will need 4 per pipe. This results in a total of 23.4 lbs. of
aluminum per pipe and a price of $24 dollars in materials.
The cost to actually create the waste-gate will be
$15,000 for the initial tooling price(cost to make the initial design plans and
setup the machine) and 188 dollars per unit. We will need four units per oil
rig, giving us a total of 3040 units. For this number of units, we get a total
of $659,480 for all of the units, including the initial tooling price.
Installing the waste-gates will require a welder
that is proficient in underwater, deep sea welding. For each and every rig to
be outfitted, it will cost another $45,600. This is assuming $15 and hour, four
hours a rig, for 760 rigs. The overall total to outfit all of the rigs with our
product will come to: $705,080.
Personnel
Ronald Shane
Goff
·
Studying Electrical Engineering
·
Worked as a mechanic for one year
·
Time Management
·
Organizational Skills
·
Public Speaking
·
Training Skills
·
High school General Education
Matti Joyner
·
Studying Civil Engineering
·
High School General Education
·
People Skills
·
Organization Skills
·
Welding
Michael Carlock
·
Studying Industrial Engineering
·
High School General Education
·
Taken Manufacturing process experience
·
Experience with networking through
Government contracts
·
3-D modeling experience
Robert Feagans
·
Studying Mechanical Engineering
·
High School General Education
·
Experience with mechanics
·
Welding including: Arc, Mig, Oxy
Acetylene and Brazing
·
3-D modeling experience
Conclusion
While the
overall cost of fitting multiple wastegates to 4,000 oil rigs is neither a
cheap, nor a quick process, the implications of doing so are great. When an oil
spill happens, it is often due to a quick pressure wave traveling through the
oil pipe line. It is common for this to break a large amount of expensive
equipment and has the overarching danger of creating a fire. The addition of
the multiple wastegates will allow that quick pressure wave to be evacuated
from the pipe line and in-turn, stop the oil explosion from ever happening.
Whenever an oil spill happens, it often kills people due to the explosions and
will also spread throughout great areas of the ocean harming animals and other
parts of the area’s ecosystem. While our product doesn’t stop the latter, it
keeps the pipeline from being damaged and allows the well to be capped quicker,
safer and easier, which will stop the further spread of oil. We are greatly
looking forward to discussing the details of our project with your company. Our
goal is to make oil rig explosions a thing of the past, enhancing safety for
both people and the ecology around the rigs.
References
Obama, Barrack, (2010). Obama’s
Remarks on Offshore Drilling
The
New York Times, Full text of Speech.
Legislative Bodies, (2010).
Legislative Background on Offshore Oil Drilling (offshore oil well law and
legislation) Congressional Digest, Vol. 89 Issue 6, p177
Baird, Stephen L. (2008). Technology
Teacher
Offshore
Oil Drilling: Buying Independence or Buying Time? Vol. 68 Issue 3, 13-17, p5.
National Environmental Health Association,
(2010). Article: Safety measures.
Journal
of environmental health, Vol. 73 Issue 2, p5-40, 2p
Murdock, Deroy, (2008). Industrial
Safety: Offshore Oil Drilling Cleaner than Mother Nature. Human Events, Vol. 64
Issue 26, p8-8, 1/3p.
Donatoni, Matthew, (2002). Offshore
drilling. What is it?
Technological
Breakthroughs, Article: Offshore Drilling
NaturalGas.org. (2004-2010).
Offshore Drilling
Extraction-
Natural gas, http://www.naturalgas.org/naturalgas/extraction_offshore.asp
Gibson, Dick, (2005). American oil
consumption
US
oil demand, Gibson Consulting online-Article: US oil consumption
http://www.metalprices.com. (2011). Cost
of Aluminum
http://www.qafinc.com. (2011). Cost
comparison between Hogout and precision forging
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