An incident regarding a failure to appropriately report a hydraulic leak subsea has been reported by IMCA in order to highlight key learnings from that failure and to understand the reasons why the incident had not been reported at the time of occurrence.
The incident
The incident occurred during subsea operations which involved divers monitoring a manifold valve. A hydraulic release occurred when a valve was operated by the client FPSO. This leak was not detailed on the Dive Log or as an anomaly within the Management of Change (MoC)step of the operation. It was not reported to the Offshore Management Team nor to the client representative on board at the time. The leak was noticed some four months later following a review of as-built video footage, and onshore project management were notified of the incident. In the regulatory framework within which the vessel was operating, it is a requirement that any such releases to sea are reported by the client within 6 hours of such an event occurring.
No personnel were harmed or equipment damage sustained; however, an unknown volume of fluid was discharged to the environment which was not reported at the time of the incident.
Findings
- The requirement to report all subsea leaks was not followed. Personnel were not familiar with company procedures in place to ensure compliance with local regulations;
- Project process to manage implementation of client site instructions for additional works were not clearly
defined.
Lessons Learnt Source: IMCA Safety Flash