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‘Tubes and piping are most failure-prone components in oil and gas and maritime industries’

Technology

When it comes to components failures in the maritime and oil and gas industries, tubes and piping are the top offenders, according to a new research by DNV GL

Fatigue and corrosion are the most common failure types.

The research is based on cases from DNV GL’s global network of five laboratories in the US, Europe and Asia, which specialise in failure investigation. The laboratories identified that, of the components they examined, more than a quarter (27 per cent) of failures occur in tubes and piping, and a fifth (20 per cent) in rotating machinery. Fasteners, and mooring and lifting components also appear in the top five components most prone to failure.

Fatigue (30 per cent) and corrosion (19 per cent) make up nearly half of the primary failure types occurring in the cases DNV GL analysed. Brittle fracture, overload and wear are also in the top five.

Koheila Molazemi, technology and innovation director, DNV GL - Oil & Gas, said, “The cost of prevention, monitoring, repair or replacement as a result of these forms of component degradation can run into billions of dollars. Potentially, financial penalties can occur if major incidents and loss of life result from such a failure. Our experts can provide in-depth technical advice to prevent future failure on similar components that keep operations running and importantly keep the workforce safe.”

To obtain the data for its research, DNV GL’s laboratory experts applied several methods to analyse data and documentation to assess failure trends and predict what components are most likely to fail. This included innovative approaches applying advanced search engine technologies combined with technical subject matter expertise. DNV GL continues to enhance this approach with its customers.

This systematic analytical approach means high volumes of data can be examined far more rapidly than using traditional databases and spreadsheets.

The accumulation of more and better data and learnings from failures can be applied in the front-end engineering design phase of development projects to engineer more robust assets. During operations, learnings can enhance optimisation of inspection, repair and maintenance for more efficient and safer use of capital and people.