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Britain moved away from prescriptive government regulations after a 1988 fire on the Piper Alpha platform in the North Sea killed 167 workers. It also moved oversight of safety for the offshore oil and gas industry from the Department of Energy to the Health and Safety Executive, or HSE. Canada last year changed its Oil and Gas Operations Act to make it less prescriptive and more goal-oriented, National Energy Board spokeswoman Sarah Kiley said. Australia also uses a "performance-based" system in which operators must submit plans detailing its safeguards for approval. The offshore regulator then conducts inspections and audits to verify that operators are adhering to their commitments. Industry and government officials say the current system is working, though they concede the explosion in the Gulf of Mexico may prompt reviews. "We will continue to monitor the Deepwater Horizon incident to see if there are any lessons that can be learned and applied to the UK offshore industry," said Steve Walker, who heads the offshore division at Britain's HSE. The situation is different in Mexico and Venezuela where foreign oil companies work under tight government control. Mexico's state oil monopoly Pemex has struggled with safety issues related to pipelines and a shallow-water platform disaster in 2007 that killed 21 workers. But it has little exposure to the dangers of deep-water drilling because Pemex lacks technology to explore untapped resources in the Gulf of Mexico. In Nigeria, where oil majors like Royal Dutch Shell PLC and others explore the oil-rich Niger Delta, regulators often fall back on international standards set by engineering and trade groups as a yardstick. They also at times ask that oil companies take "reasonable" steps to ensure oil doesn't leak out into the environment. Enforcement is another matter, as Nigeria's government remains encumbered by a system of institutionalized graft that has given it the reputation of being one of the world's most corrupt nations. Moving back to more prescriptive rules is not necessarily the answer, said Clifford Jones, an offshore engineering expert at the University of Aberdeen. He noted that there have been relatively few serious accidents in recent years. "Tragic though the recent event has been, it's 22 years since Piper Alpha," Jones said. "And I think if the numbers were processed in a risk analysis, that would be a fairly impressive record." Still, the Deepwater Horizon incident has raised could-it-happen-here concerns outside the U.S. Brazil's National Petroleum Agency requested that all companies operating in Brazilian waters send information on the control systems used in their wells and to re-evaluate their emergency plans. The Norwegian Oil Industry Association launched a study comparing the rules in Norway and the U.S. and the results are expected in a few weeks, said Jan Krokeide. "I'm sure there's going to be a lot of lessons learned," Krokeide said.
[Associated
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