Current understanding of the ecological risk of mercury from subsea oil and gas infrastructure to marine ecosystems

J Hazard Mater. 2022 Sep 15:438:129348. doi: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2022.129348. Epub 2022 Jun 11.

Abstract

Many oil and gas fields are nearing production cessation and will require decommissioning, with the preferred method being complete infrastructure removal in most jurisdictions. However, decommissioning in situ, leaving some disused components in place, is an option that may be agreed to by the regulators and reservoir titleholders in some circumstances. To understand this option's viability, the environmental impacts and risks of any residual contaminants assessed. Mercury, a contaminant of concern, is naturally present in hydrocarbon reservoirs, may contaminate offshore processing and transmission infrastructure, and can biomagnify in marine ecosystems. Mercury's impact is dependent on its speciation, concentration, and the exposure duration. However, research characterising and quantifying the amount of mercury in offshore infrastructure and the efficacy of decontamination is limited. This review describes the formation of mercury-contaminated products within oil and gas infrastructure, expected exposure pathways after environmental release, possible impacts, and key research gaps regarding the ecological risk of in situ decommissioned contaminated infrastructure. Suggestions are made to overcome these gaps, improving the in situ mercury quantification in infrastructure, understanding environmental controls on, and forecasting of, mercury methylation and bioaccumulation, and the cumulative impacts of multiple stressors within decommissioned infrastructures.

Keywords: Contaminated pipelines; Environmental impact assessment; Offshore decommissioning; Rigs to reefs.

Publication types

  • Review
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Ecosystem*
  • Environment
  • Mercury* / toxicity
  • Oil and Gas Fields

Substances

  • Mercury