ONGC cuts offshore helicopter sorties
It raised the duration of work-related stay of its employees at offshore platforms that help produce oil and gas from below seabed, from 14 days to 21 days
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India's top oil and gas producer ONGC has slashed helicopter sorties to its installations in the middle of sea on both east and west coast for three months to avoid any repeat of deadly accidents during monsoon that have plagued the firm's otherwise impeccable record, sources said.
Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) has raised the duration of work-related stay of its employees at offshore platforms that help produce oil and gas from below seabed, from 14 days to 21 days but still short of the international norm of 28 days. This temporary measure is only for three months from June to August and has been effected with a view to cut the number of sorties helicopters would need to undertake to ferry men and material to the installations, two sources with knowledge of the matter said. ONGC did not reply to an email seeking to know why it is following a 21-day cycle when internationally 28-day cycle is followed.
Internationally, personnel manning offshore oil and gas installations are required to stay at oil rigs and platforms for 28 days at a stretch and take an equal number of days off thereafter. The rigs and platforms are equipped with sleeping quarters, kitchens and recreation areas. The 28-day norm is also followed by private sector operators in India. However, ONGC for no defined reason follows a 14-day cycle -- 14-day stay offshore and 14-day off thereafter. Of its 25,000 employees, only 1,200 are stationed on offshore installations at any point of time. The 14-day cycle means helicopters, which are considered the most unsafe flying machines during choppy sea conditions in monsoon period, have to do more sorties to transport men and material. Unlike airplanes, helicopters need to fly through dark clouds which along with a similar coloured sea create unsafe flying conditions during rains. ONGC had in the past lost precious lives during helicopter sorties in the monsoon period. The last such accident happened on June 28, 2022 when four people died after a helicopter crashed in the Arabian Sea, near ONGC's Sagar Kiran rig. The helicopter with 9 onboard, was attempting to land at the Sagar Kiran rig, located 111 kilometre west off the Mumbai coast when the incident took place.
The helicopter fell into the sea, about 1.5 kilometre from the landing zone on the offshore rig. The deadliest offshore accident in ONGC history happened in 2003 when 27 people died after a Russian-made Mi-172 helicopter nosedived into the Arabian sea while on a sortie to one of the company's
installations.