ArabianBusiness.com - Middle East Business News
Thursday, 08 January 2009 09:11 UAE time

YOUR DIRECTORY /

Print this page Print this page | Email this to a friend Email this to a friend | Discuss this article (0 Comments) |

Beneath the surface

by ArabianBusiness.com staff writer  on Thursday, 20 November 2008

Below the water line divers work to build and maintain the industry's subsea infrastructure.

The potential perils of constructions subsea are self-evident - deep below water wearing heavy equipment, with murky visibility and four knot currents engulfing your body.

At the same time you are trying to direct a crane to land a 15 metre stretch of pipeline in a 15 metre gap between two other pipes. One mistake and you could incur millions of dollars worth of damage and put your life on the line. Not exactly a mundane nine to five job.

Diving for eight hours each day may sound fun, but the job leaves little time to admire the surroundings. Rather it is a time to work and get things done, big things done. Just as hoards of workers construct and inspect the oil and gas industry's infrastructure above water, the same must also be done subsea, only without the hoards to help.

Story continues below
advertisement

With the aid of regulations, technology and training, divers today find themselves in safer hands than in the past. The Middle East needs to step-up though and establish its own training centres, pay the day-rates that divers demand and resolve visa issues.

Danger

"There is a big element of danger involved in subsea work, of course; you are in an alien environment where the human body is not supposed to be working. Nowadays most of the danger has been minimised, but there is a clear potential for accidents," says David Bastow, manager of projects at Dulam Subsea Solutions.

Doubtless, safety has improved in an industry that Bastow declares used to take the lives of nine or ten divers per year 20 years ago. The International Marine Contractors Association (IMCA) now dictates health and safety regulations to the diving industry, determining the length of time that divers can work for, the frequency to which equipment is maintained and the extent and nature of a diver's training.

"IMCA has done a lot of good work in regulating the industry and providing a huge number of guidelines that have made the commercial diving industry much safer than in the past," says Ram Moordhy, procurement director of Seaswift.

For some within the industry, however, safety regulations have gone too far, to such an extent that they are getting in the way of getting the job done. "Safety regulations have gone over-board in my opinion. Safety is good and I am all for it, but when safety actually gets in the way of doing the job properly, then to me it has gone too far and the safe becomes unsafe," declares Bastow.

"For example, regulations dictate that you have to wear safety glasses when diving and if you do not, and subsequently have an accident, you will not be covered by insurance. There is a reason for wearing safety glasses, which is that they protect you, but when you are diving in the North Sea and it is raining and dark, they become more of a hazard than not."

The know-how

Gaining sufficient training and experience is a critical factor in providing for a safe working environment. Working offshore comprises a considerable portion of gaining the know-how to get the job done. It is not, however, always easy for divers straight out of dive school to get the foot-hold that they need in the industry.

"Initially you train as an air diver and then, if you choose to, you move on to train to be a saturation diver. The move to become a saturation diver involves gaining a high degree of familiarity with physiology and physics so that you can understand the science behind the gas that you are breathing and how you body is reacting," says Bastow.

"All of the divers that we employ are registered with IMCA and have to be trained at a centre that is IMCA certified," explains Ashutosh Chaudhary, director business development at Marine Engineering Diving Services.

"At present there are not any IMCA registered commercial diving training centres in the Middle East, instead people mainly train in the UK, US and South Africa. I have heard that Abu Dhabi's Navy is looking to set-up an institution here and had been in contact with IMCA, but the news is not yet official."

While an engineering background is not a prerequisite for people entering the diving industry, most divers have some familiarity with engineering and construction principles before embarking on training. This is critical since divers are underwater to do a job, just as they would be onshore.

"Anyone can dive, but it is what you can do when you are down there that counts. You have to know that you are going there to work, and it is hard work and dangerous work, so common sense is critical. You may be able to cut and weld above water, but below it is ten times more complicated, because what you do on the surface with five people, you do underwater with one person," says Bastow.

In order to meet its demand for supervisors on board the dives, MEDS has sought to help divers gain extra training to become supervisors.

"Everywhere there has been an insufficient number of supervisors, so in reaction we helped people to re-train. There were many senior divers who had never had the chance to go up to the next level and train as supervisors so we sent four or five of our divers off to Singapore to train. The training takes four or five days and after they completed we give them the experience that they need being a trainee supervisor," says Chaudhary.

"Many people do not train as supervisors because companies are often unwilling to employ people who do not have a great deal of experience. In some cases, divers would do a course, but then would not be able to find work."


Print Print | Email Email | Discuss this article |


READERS' COMMENTS


Click here to post a comment


Add your Comment
All posts are sent to the administrator for review and are published only after approval. ArabianBusiness.com reserves the right to remove any comment at any time for any reason. Please keep your responses appropriate and on topic.
Name *
Remember me on this computer
Email *
(Your email address will not be published)
City
Country
Subject *
Comment *
Notify me of further comments
Security Code * Code


Please click post only once - your comment will not be published immediately.


MORE FROM ARABIANBUSINESS.COM

From  Current Issue

RELATED LINKS

  1. International Marine Contractors Association (IMCA)»
  2. SeaSwift»

 EMAIL ALERTS

  1. International Marine Contractors Association (IMCA)

  2. SeaSwift

  3. Energy



Rich List 2008
EMIRATES ID DOWNLOAD

READER COMMENTS

Read all user comments >

BUSINESS FEATURES

Qatar steps on the gas

The small Gulf state is hoping that its natural gas reserves will cushion it from the worst of the fallout.

Brain drain

The petrochemicals sector is losing skilled project managers due to outdated corporate structures.

Iran in focus

Hampered by US sanctions, Iran has its work cut out bringing petrochemical projects online.

BUSINESS INTERVIEWS

Burning ambition

Shell's Mounir Bouaziz reveals exclusively the details of the company's deal in Southern Iraq.

Global crisis sends ripples to oil price

Is the commodities supercycle over or will demand rise next year even in the face of the financial crisis.

The house that 'Charlene' built

The CEO of one of GE’s largest units says there’s no better time to sell productivity than in a recession.

MORE FROM ARABIANBUSINESS.COM