Two leading Scottish marine engineering firms, Green Marine UK and Ocean Kinetics, have successfully completed the decommissioning of OpenHydro’s pioneering tidal energy platform at the European Marine Energy Centre (EMEC) in Orkney.
The decommissioning project, contracted by EMEC, involved a range of marine services. A joint venture partnership was formed in April to deliver the contract, combining Ocean Kinetics’ divers, riggers, welders and ROV services, and Green Marine’s offshore management, vessel, moorings and cable experience, with shared responsibility for operational engineering, cutting and heavy-lift operations.
Key work included dismantling the platform’s steel superstructure – including two 18-tonne steel piles, drilled and grouted into the seabed – as well as cable disconnection and termination. Pile foundations were cut to the seabed using reversed Diamond Wire Cutters, returning the seabed as close as reasonably practicable to its original condition.
Green Marine’s operations manager Terry Norquay said: “We are very pleased to have successfully completed this complex and wide-ranging project. Significant planning was required to complete the recent phase involving the removal of the two 18-tonne steel piles, with our vessel, the Green Isle, positioned in a four-point mooring configuration to remain stationary and allow divers to safely enter the water. This project has expanded Green Marine’s broad portfolio of work and demonstrates the turnkey offshore decommissioning solutions we can deliver in partnership with our trusted colleagues.”
Ocean Kinetics marine projects manager, Roger Goudie, said: “Working closely with Green Marine, we can deliver a full range of EPCI (engineering, procurement, construction and installation) contracts. There are few operators in the UK who can match our combined experience, reliability and cost efficiency.”
Ocean Kinetics and Green Marine share vast experience in the marine sector, from work on subsea servers, port gates, and aquaculture equipment, to retrieving sunken barges (reaching 1000 tonnes in weight) and decommissioning projects including the salvage and removal of the 4000-tonne decommissioned oil rig Buchan Alpha.
Neil Kermode, EMEC Managing Director, said: “The OpenHydro platform stood at our Fall of Warness test site for 18 years, one of the longest tidal energy installations in the world to date. It’s great to see local Orkney and Shetland companies fulfil the decommissioning requirements, a testament to the world-leading supply chain capabilities that have built up here due to marine energy testing and demonstration activities. Now that decommissioning has been completed, we can complete a full lifecycle analysis with valuable insights around marine operations, structural integrity of long-term deployments as well as the impact of biofouling and corrosion. These lessons can help guide the tidal energy industry’s continued evolution as we ready our test sites for future clients and building out to tidal energy arrays.”