Page 3: of Offshore Engineer Magazine (Sep/Oct 2023)
Read this page in Pdf, Flash or Html5 edition of Sep/Oct 2023 Offshore Engineer Magazine
EDITOR’S LETTER
Whether your business offshore is in the traditional oil and gas sector or the emerging offshore wind [or both], the ability to tap remote opera- tion tools and techniques with an eye toward full autonomy is driving plans like never before. While there remain plentiful challenges to Vol. 48 No. 5 minimizing or removing humans from the physical assets offshore
ISSN 0305-876x USPS# 017-058 completely, there are equal if not more opportunities to signi?cantly enhance safety and ef?ciency while slashing carbon footprint, with a 118 East 25th Street, potential personnel recruitment bump too as eliminating long travel
New York, NY 10010 tel: (212) 477-6700; fax: (212) 254-6271 to remote assets plays well into the work/life balance discussion.
Last month we had the opportunity to visit with Damiain Brown, www.OEDigital.com
Chief Product Of?cer, and Adam Ford, Special Projects Lead, from
EDITORIAL
Harvest Technology Group, a young and fast-growing company that has
GREGORY R. TRAUTHWEIN a simple yet complex premise: improving connectivity in remote environ-
Editor & Publisher ments while removing people from work in hazardous and remote loca-
BARTOLOMEJ TOMIC tions, all the while deploying its unique solution to utilize a fraction of
Managing Editor [email protected] the satcom bandwidth.
While new digital tech continues to transform the way we work off-
ERIC HAUN [email protected] shore tomorrow, reinvigorating old offshore oil and gas ?elds remains a hot area of operation, particularly as increasing geopolitical con?icts
BARRY PARKER, New York
WENDY LAURSEN, Australia make energy security and a steady ?ow of oil and gas a top priority today.
This month Bartolomej Tomic takes a deep dive into the resurgence of
PRODUCTION / GRAPHIC DESIGN
Tyra, which has been the cornerstone of Denmark’s offshore gas produc-
NICOLE VENTIMIGLIA [email protected] tion since the mid-1980s but was facing an uncertain future as infrastruc- ture aged and starting sinking ever closer to the sea’s surface. The result
SALES
TERRY BREESE, VP Sales was a multi-year project that has become Denmark’s largest infrastructure