Contract wins in Americas, Africa and Australia boost growth at subsea cutting specialist Decom Engineering


Decom Engineering has announced a promising start to 2025 with contracts valued at more than £2 million ($2.66 million USD) secured in the first quarter, positioning the subsea cutting specialist for further international growth.


A Decom Engineering C1-46 chopsaw deployed in the North Sea.

Decom has secured a chain cutting scope in the Gulf of Mexico in which it will deploy its new ultra-light and neutrally buoyant C1-16 chopsaw to cut studless mooring chains, while in South America a Decom team are preparing to mobilize on a 300-day campaign offshore Brazil where two C1-16 chopsaws will cut multiple link mooring chains of up to 142mm diameter. 

Added to a project due to start offshore Nigeria involving tender cutting and flexible riser cutting scopes, Decom’s reputation for tackling challenging oil and gas infrastructure inspection, repair, maintenance and decommissioning projects has been cemented with ongoing investment in R&D which extends the company’s portfolio of versatile cutting technologies. 

“Our continued growth is underpinned by listening to our customers’ needs and devising innovative and sustainable solutions using our existing tools, and where necessary designing and building new variations of our proven technologies,” said Decom Engineering commercial director, Nick McNally

“Contract wins to date in the Americas, Africa and in our own North Sea backyard, as well as in western Australia, are continuing to build on a strong track record of successfully completing challenging projects in the world’s major oil and gas regions,” McNally continued. 

Decom recognized the need to devise neutrally buoyant integration for its cutting tools when it was last year commissioned to assist with the removal of 30” conductors – with flexible risers inside – on the Brent Charlie platform in the UKCS. 

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Due to the seabed conductor layout and restricted 3-meter width access, Decom’s C1-32 Chopsaw had to be neutrally buoyant in seawater and easily maneuverable with a single ROV. 

Weighing approximately 6,700kg in air but only 50kg in seawater and with a blade diameter of 2,100mm, the C1-32 assisted with the cutting of 40 multi-string conductors, many with the added challenge of loose internal strings.

Nick McNally added: “By analyzing past campaigns in challenging environments including the Indian Ocean and the North Sea, we have fine-tuned our designs to perform seamlessly in extreme conditions.

“The development and integration of enhanced blade technology such as replaceable tips, custom deployment frames, and increased operational flexibility ensures that our tools are equipped to handle even the most demanding offshore operations with precision and reliability.

“On several projects we have been asked to assist on structural removal scopes after other cutting technologies have proven not to be capable and this contingency role is now moving Decom into a position where we are becoming the first choice on larger and more complex scopes.”



This article was originally posted at www.worldoil.com

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