The challenge
A supermajor international energy company, with production infrastructure in more than 2,000 m (6,500 ft) of water depth, wanted a single subsea leak detection system that could be permanently installed to detect and localise, within seconds, oil or gas leaks across a wide area of its subsea infrastructure.
Existing sonar-based solutions are mostly based on sensors attached to subsea assets to detect leaks at specific or very localised locations, i.e. within a few metres. Alternative, non-acoustic, systems rely on anomalies in production data rates, which can be challenging should the leak occur upstream of the monitoring device.
At worst, leak detection relies on viewing the leak at the sea surface in the form of an oil-based sheen – when it’s already too late. This option is also limited when it comes to detecting leaks at gas producing fields and offshore carbon capture and storage (CCS) sites.
With a globally significant installed and aging asset base, as well as new infrastructure in the form of offshore CO₂ and hydrogen transport and storage, there’s increasing interest in alternative leak detection technologies that can operate autonomously and sustainably over wide areas in all water depths.