1 / 26

Ministry of Transport, Public Works and Water Management Directorate-General for Water Management

This tool provides a procedure to estimate oil volumes at sea, helping to identify and quantify slicks for efficient response. It includes the detection methods and observation criteria outlined in the Bonn Agreement Oil Appearance Code.

bourbeau
Download Presentation

Ministry of Transport, Public Works and Water Management Directorate-General for Water Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ministry of Transport, Public Works and Water Management Directorate-General for Water Management North Sea Bonn Agreement Oil Appearance Code Assessing oil volumes at sea A tool in daylight operations

  2. Illegal discharge?

  3. Response required?

  4. Purpose of assessing oil volumes • Violation of MARPOL • Response required? What/How

  5. Violation of MARPOL Netherlands research Visibility limits, 1997 oil in the wake of a ship is visible from 50 ppm onwards

  6. Response required The thicker parts, in a slick, are most important to identify and quantify for an efficient response.

  7. Procedure to estimate volume Detection: SLAR: length and width UV: length and width IR: relative differences in layer thickness

  8. Observation: Area covered with oil %, % of each color according Bonn Agreement Code • Grey, 0.02 m3/km2 • Silvery, 01 m3/km2 • Rainbow, 03 m3/km2 • Blue, 1 m3/km2 • Blue/Brown, 5 m3/km2 • Brown, 10-25 m3/km2 • Black, >100 m3/km2

  9. The results is obtained Multiply length and width and % area covered, then the total area covered with oil is identified. Then take each % of observed color and quantity is “known”

  10. Do you know the color of oil?

  11. Reasons to revise the BA-CC * Only one figure, * False accuracy, * Lack of scientific prove and * In practice observers tend to adjust without justification.

  12. SINTEF study – research Initiated by Norwegian Pollution Control Authority and financially supported by Bonn Agreement Parties, SINTEF: - carried out a literature review, - executed laboratory tests followed by - small scale field trials and Relation appearance and layer thickness -- Volume Reported to Bonn Agreement working group.

  13. The breaking of light Reflection of light on water, Reflection of light on an oil film on the water surface and Reflection of light on an oil layer and absorption in the oil layer. Wave-lengths intensified.

  14. Very thin oil films reflect light slightly better than water, and can therefore be observed as silvery or grey.

  15. Interference causing the rainbow effect. Light reflecting from the oil surface and light reflecting from the water surface is combined. Light waves will cancel each other out (left) or reinforce each other (right). Depending on angle of view and layer thickness, the distinctive colors will be diffuse or very bright. Oil films with thicknesses near the wavelength of different colored light (blue, 400nm or 0,4 µm, through red , 700 nm or 0,7 µm) exhibit the most powerful rainbow effects. This effect will occur up to layers of 5 µm. Bad light conditions may cause the colors to appear duller.

  16. Intermediate layers, the appearance, a combination of light, reflected off the oil and the water surface below the oil, will become less dependent on the light passing through the oil. Thick layers. All the lightpenetrating the oil is absorbed and no light is reflecting from the water surface. Therefore the appearance is true oil color.

  17. Influence of waves Causing a variation in layer thickness: Wave top à thin layer,causing a discontinuity in the appearance Wave-trough à thicker layer,causing an intensification of the appearance

  18. The Bonn Agreement Oil Appearance Code (BA-OAC) Based on theory, laboratory experiments, supported by small scale field trials: - a lower and upper limit - no colors - scientifically underpinned

  19. BA-OAC The Code identifies following appearances: • sheen, 0.15-0.3 m³/km2 • rainbow, 0.3 - 5 m³/km2 • metallic, 5 - 50 m³/km2 • discontinuous true color, 50-200 m³/km2 • continuous true color, >200 m³/km2

  20. Advantages For enforcement purposes the lower limit is applied For decisions on response authorities will consider the upper limit as well

  21. Disadvantages • daylight use only, • inaccuracy in procedure remain,human interpretation, area estimation • not applicable in heavy oils (Erika) and emulsions.

  22. State of the art technique no sensors to accurately provide length and width no sensor to accurately discriminate layer thickness no software to improve estimation of oil volumes by sensor data.

  23. (near) Future work Validation of Appearance Code Study possibilities to estimate volumes by sensor data(day and night use) Sensor development / improvement

  24. In a sea full of oil,You can lose sight of it allAnd the darkness inside youCan make you feel so smallBut a BA observer can see your true colorsShining throughHe sees your true colorsAnd that's why he loves youSo, oil slick don't be afraid to let them showYour true colorsTrue colors are beautiful,Like a Rainbow

More Related