Flying robots replace oil roughnecks

August 21, 2015

OLIVIA SOLON

LONDON (Bloomberg Business) -- Oil rig inspection is a dangerous business. Traditionally roughnecks dangled from a wire, in gale-force winds if needed, to manually log wear and tear on the girders. Assessments include giant chimneys—called flare stacks—that belch fire during million-dollar-a-day shut-downs.

Increasingly, the industry has found that swapping abseiling humans for small drones equipped with high-definition and thermal cameras can save time, cut costs and improve safety.

"These are large metal structures in a big pond of sea water. They will rust a lot, particularly in the North Sea where rigs designed to last 20 years are lasting more than 40. They are continually getting cracks and physical damage from the waves and need to be refurbished and fixed," explains Chris Blackford, Sky Futures' COO.

Sky Futures—headquartered in London—is a drone inspection company specializing in the the oil and gas industry and counts BP, Shell, Apache, BG Group and Statoil among its clients. It's one of a handful of companies—including CyberHawk, PrecisionHawk and SenseFly—finding commercial applications for drones.

"We decided to focus on oil and gas because the barriers to entry are very high, but there are real problems to be solved and the economics were better, despite the very low oil price," Blackford explains.

Business, Blackford says, is booming. Although the first drone inspections were carried out five years ago, demand for Sky Futures' and Cyberhawk's services has surged, more than doubling in the last year alone.

At the start of 2015, the Federal Aviation Administration finally relaxed its stance on drones flying in U.S. airspace, giving companies like Sky Futures access to the world's largest offshore market. "We will continue doubling if not tripling revenues over the next three to five years," says Blackford.

Drone Data

Inspections involve sending one drone operator and one engineer out to a rig to fly a small aerial vehicle around the platform, building a 3D model of the structure and mapping any anomalies.

"What we can capture in five days using a drone could take eight weeks with human inspectors," he adds. "We can even inspect the flare stacks while in production, which saves money." Avoiding a shutdown can save save more than $4 million, the company says.

Once the data is captured it's analyzed using proprietary algorithms and presented through an online portal—instead of a traditional paper report. Each flaw is flagged in red, amber or green, based on urgency. Thanks to lasers, Sky Futures' drones can track cracks and corrosion and map how they evolve over time. They can even sniff for gas leaks.

CyberHawk, founded in 2008 in Livingston, Scotland, offers a similar service to oil and gas companies as well as inspecting renewable energy plants with wind turbines, communications towers, pipelines and railway lines and bridges.

Cyberhawk's commercial director, Phil Buchan, says his customers don't care about the drones, only the data. "They care about the information you can give them and the decisions you can help them make."

Blackford agrees: "We view ourselves as a data business and not a drone business."

North Carolina-based PrecisionHawk has served the oil and gas industry by mapping the ice roads across remote areas of Alaska. In the past, coming within five miles of a polar bear den would have meant the replanning of routes at a cost of millions of dollars to avoid the animals. PrecisionHawk's drones can identify the dens in advance.

The next milestone for inspection drones is automating their flight. "We still have to send out an oil and gas inspection engineer and a drone pilot. Our vision is total automation," says Blackford.

Trouble is, drone technology isn't yet good enough.

Jeremy Howitt, who oversees drone research at Qinetiq, says: "Once aircraft know where other vehicles and obstacles are and they have the ability to safely avoid collisions and areas of known traffic density, it will open up many new applications."

Beyond oil and gas, there are plenty of other applications for these airborne inspectors.

"Oil and gas is a big vertical, but the same technology applies to lots of industries—wind farms, solar, other refineries, pipelines and other fixed infrastructure," explains Simon Menashy, investment director at venture capital firm MMC Ventures, which invested $4 million in Sky Futures in May. That's before even looking at construction and agriculture. "There is lots of opportunity," he adds.

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