Operating an oil rig in the freezing, violent waters of the North Sea is inherently dangerous. But the destruction of the Piper Alpha platform in July 1988, which killed 167 men, was not an act of nature. It was a catastrophic, cascading failure of process safety, communication, and engineering hubris. This technical engineering manual dissects the timeline of the world's deadliest offshore disaster. We explore the fatal flaw in the Permit-to-Work system, where a critical pressure safety valve was removed for maintenance but the warning paperwork was lost during a shift change. When operators unwittingly started a backup pump, highly pressurized gas instantly leaked and ignited. The narrative analyzes the terrifying physics of the ensuing inferno. Because the platform was deeply interconnected with other rigs in a massive subsea pipeline network, neighboring platforms blindly continued to pump highly pressurized oil and gas directly into the fire, fueling the blaze until the steel legs of Piper Alpha physically melted and collapsed into the ocean. Study the ultimate price of administrative negligence. Understand the apocalyptic blowout that forced the global petroleum industry to completely rewrite the laws of offshore survival.



Autorentext

Author

Titel
The North Sea Inferno: The 1988 Piper Alpha Disaster
Untertitel
Hydrocarbons, Hubris, and the Catastrophic Engineering Failure That Birthed Modern Offshore Safety
EAN
9783565379927
Format
E-Book (epub)
Hersteller
Veröffentlichung
02.04.2026
Digitaler Kopierschutz
frei
Dateigrösse
0.87 MB
Anzahl Seiten
227