Firms join forces to tap into North Sea’s £58bn opportunity

From left: Callum Falconer, CEO of Dundeecom; Charles Hammond, group CEO of Forth Ports; and Bill Cattanach, head of supply chain of the Oil and Gas Authority. Picture: Alan Richardson.From left: Callum Falconer, CEO of Dundeecom; Charles Hammond, group CEO of Forth Ports; and Bill Cattanach, head of supply chain of the Oil and Gas Authority. Picture: Alan Richardson.
From left: Callum Falconer, CEO of Dundeecom; Charles Hammond, group CEO of Forth Ports; and Bill Cattanach, head of supply chain of the Oil and Gas Authority. Picture: Alan Richardson.
A group of businesses have joined forces in a bid to ensure Dundee makes the most of the opportunities in the North Sea oil and gas decommissioning market, which is estimated to be worth some £58 billion in the years ahead.

Companies including engineering giant ABB, Forth Ports and John Lawrie Group have launched Forth and Tay Decommissioning (FTD) to position the city as the UK hub for oil and gas decommissioning.

More than 300 North Sea oil fields are expected to cease production over the next 15 years and some 100 offshore platforms and 5,700 kilometres of oil and gas pipelines are forecast to be decommissioned or reused over the next decade alone on the UK Continental Shelf.

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The FTB alliance aims to deliver an integrated, end-to-end service for decommissioning managed from the Port of Dundee. Backers of the project said the city offers a highly-skilled local workforce and access to major transport links with the Port of Dundee’s strategic location, ample dockside, and infrastructure making it an ideal hub for decommissioning

The potential for the creation of a new virtual deep water port in the Firth of Forth capable of accommodating the largest decommissioning projects is now also being explored with a feasibility study commissioned and being carried out by Bureau Veritas.

Charles Hammond, chief executive of Forth Ports that owns the Port of Dundee, said: “Through significant private investment and strong partnerships, Dundee now offers a full service for the North Sea oil and gas decommissioning sector. The proximity to the skills base in Dundee, along with unrivalled land space and heavy lift quayside facilities, makes [it] the logical choice for large-scale decommissioning in Scotland.”

Other founding partners in the alliance include Augean North Sea Services, Offshore Decommissioning Services, and Well-Safe Solutions.

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COES Caledonian, a subsidiary of a Chinese engineering firm, is also involved after it opened a base on Dundee’s waterfront late last year in a move aimed at winning work in the North Sea decommissioning sector.

Callum Falconer, chief executive of Dundeecom that is a public-private partnership set up to capitalise on decommissioning work, said the alliance was a “natural evolution” of the organisation.

“Dundeecom was started two years ago with the vision of creating a decommissioning hub in Dundee. This vision is now being realised,” he said.

“FTD will create the framework for a sustainable, profitable and low-cost decommissioning industry in Dundee, and better serve the future needs of our industry in Scotland.”

Supporting partners in the alliance include Bureau Veritas, DC Thomson, Dundee City Council, OM Heavy Lift Robertson Recycling and Texo Group.

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