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OIL AND GAS
British energy body says safety could be better offshore
by Daniel J. Graeber
London (UPI) Jun 20, 2013


London starts search for CEO of new Oil and Gas Authority
London (UPI) Jun 20, 2013 - The British government said it was looking for a top quality executive to serve as the steward for offshore oil and natural gas reserves.

The British government in February said it was moving forward with recommendations from retired businessman Ian Wood, who led a panel tasked with finding ways to breathe new life into North Sea reserves.

Part of Wood's recommendation was the establishment of the Oil and Gas Authority, which would serve as an "arm's length body" funded by the industry.

The British Department of Energy and Climate Change said it was now looking for a chief executive to lead the new body.

"The CEO of the new body will be at the forefront of the future of the UK's oil and gas industry," the DECC said Thursday.

The British government has said it expects to secure $330 billion in the next two decades through the recovery of the 3 billion to 4 billion barrels of oil equivalent left in the North Sea.

Oil and natural gas production in the North Sea declined by 40 percent in the past three years.

The region's economy relies on the North Sea for about half of its used resources and Wood said there were still opportunities off the British coast.

The British offshore oil and gas sector is not where it needs to be in terms of preventing releases, industry body Oil & Gas U.K. said in a report.

Oil & Gas U.K. published its annual safety report Thursday, which found there's been a 49 percent reduction in the number of reportable releases in the three years ending March 2013. That narrowly missed a 50 percent industry target.

Robert Paterson, health and safety director for the group, said the industry is working with regulators on preventative strategies to ensure targets are met. Nevertheless, Oil & Gas U.K. found the rest of 2013 beyond March saw an overall increase in the number of releases and a slight increase in the number of injuries offshore.

"Despite the ongoing and encouraging decrease in major and significant releases over the last year -- the industry is not yet where it needs to be," he said in a statement.

The group said the industry's health and safety record was mixed. Safety indicators in particular have deteriorated recently, it said.

Four workers were killed in a North Sea helicopter accident in August.

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