“Rigs-to-Reefs”: Prospects for Large Scale Artificial Reefs in Tropical Southeast Asian Seas
This workshop will explore the opportunities created by the imminent decommissioning of 500+ offshore installations in the region (due for retirement after 20+ years of services). This decommissioning obligation coupled with the destruction of many reef habitats (whether directly from human uses or from environmental stresses) and the degradation of fisheries stocks create a compelling case for the re-use of offshore rigs as large scale artificial reefs to enhance fisheries and marine biodiversity. The workshop is designed to explore the feasibility of this idea and improve the visibility of this solution among all relevant stakeholders.
The workshop will bring together global experts on rigs-to-reefs from academia, (primarily marine biologists and ecologists, lawyers and policy analysts and engineers), governments, offshore and oil and gas industries and other relevant industries. As a multi-disciplinary initiative it is co-organized by 3 research centres of the National University of Singapore, the Tropical Marine Sciences Institute (TMSI), the Centre for International Law (CIL) and the Centre for Offshore Research and Engineering (CORE).
Topics
- The Ecological Argument
- Technical Feasibility and Practical Considerations of Reefing of Obsolete Offshore Structures
- Institutional and Legal Challenges
- Industry Perspectives
Who should attend?
- Marine Biologists and Ecologists
- Offshore Engineers
- Marine Policy Experts
- Law of the Sea Experts
- Environmental Economists
- Country Representatives from the Ministries of Energy, Fisheries and/or Environment
- Oil and Gas Industry representatives
- IMO, London Convention or other International Organizations
- Interested NGOs
For registration, kindly click HERE. For further details on the workshop, please contact Ms. Geraldine Ng at gerry.ng@nus.edu.sg.
Additional Details
Contact Person - Ms. Geraldine Ng
Contact Number - +65 6516 6842
Organizer - Tropical Marine Sciences Institute, Centre for International Law, Centre for Offshore Research and Engineering