Thistle SALM

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The Thistle SALM (Single Anchor Leg Mooring) was a tanker loading facility that allowed oil from the Thistle oilfield to be transported to land where a submarine export pipeline did not yet exist. It was also the site of the 8 August 1979 Wildrake diving accident that killed two divers. [1][2] and the 21 January 1981 Stena Seaspread diving accident (non-fatal).[3]

In February 1975, Burmah Oil decided to develop the Thistle SALM. It was conceived by Exxon, designed by Single Buoy Moorings, Inc. of Monaco and built by Motherwell Bridge Offshore in Leith, Scotland. It cost $6.4 million to build (equivalent to $25 million in 2023), and in March 1977 it was set into position by divers from Sub Sea International.[4]

SALM components

The SALM had three major components: a 182-foot (55 m) upper section called the buoy, a 335-foot (102 m) long middle section called the riser, and a hex-shaped gravity base which anchored the facility to the seabed to prevent it from drifting away. From head to toe it was 545 feet (166 m) long. Two articulated “universal joints” allowed the buoy and the riser to pivot in rough water.[5]

During operation, the Thistle Alpha platform fed oil to the SALM through a pair of 16-inch (41 cm) pipelines. This hard piping ran up the base from opposing sides and terminated at the bottom of the riser near the first U-joint articulation. From that point the oil bridged the articulation through a pair of very thick 16-inch flexible jumper hoses, then continued up the riser through more hard piping, and over the riser-buoy articulation through another set of jumper hoses. From there, the oil flowed through product hoses to the shuttle tanker which was moored to the buoy.

Damage

Recovery operation

References

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