
Oil Rigs Could Become Coral Farms
July 17, 2007 @ 07:47 AM (EST)
Source: abc.net.au
Decommissioned oil rigs off Australia's coastline could become hubs for marine-based businesses such as coral harvesting for aquariums, a fish expert says.
Professor David Booth, of the Sydney Institute of Marine Science and University of Technology, Sydney, says there are up to 60 oil rigs in Australian waters that are due to be decommissioned in the next decade.
Most are in the Bass Strait between Tasmania and mainland Australia.
Booth was last year involved in Federal Department of Industry, Tourism and Resources (DITR) talks on the decommissioning of oil rigs.
The future of Australia's ageing oil rigs is due to be on the agenda again with the DITR to release a discussion paper in the next two months.
Booth says the options for decommissioning oil rigs include: leaving them intact and in place; towing them away for dismantling; removing the platform and using explosives to topple the remaining shell; and removing the platform and leaving the remaining shell in place.
In the last two cases, the shell of the oil rig forms an artificial reef.
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