Recent guidance updates to DP annual trials should eliminate the poor practices that seeped in prior to and during Covid-19, writes IMCA marine technical adviser, Richard Purser
The key main objectives of a dynamic positioning (DP) annual trials programme are to verify that the DP system is fully functional, well maintained, and that the failure modes and effects analysis remains valid. Conducting trials incorrectly can put both lives and property at risk, while also wasting time and money.
Trial standards began to slip in the run-up to the Covid-19 pandemic, with the subsequent prolonged social distancing legitimising poor practice through a lack of realistic alternatives, while ambiguity in the original wording of IMCA guidance was also being exploited.
IMCA, keen to ensure that trials are conducted as they should be, has decided to revise key guidance in this space – IMCA M 190 and M 191 – and is tackling any misinterpretation that could lead to poor practices slipping through.
Coming after a lengthy period of consideration, discussion, and extensive member engagement through IMCA’s DP Committee and attendees of our DP Conferences in 2022 and 2023, we have identified and addressed areas where shortcuts were being taken by a small number of bad actors, resulting in poor outcomes and safety incidents.
“Conducting trials incorrectly can put both lives and property at risk”
Being written in clearer, more precise language will not only discourage misinterpretation and remove any ambiguity when conducting remote trials, but helps us – as an industry – to restore the ‘spirit’ of previous versions.
We have also been able to explore recommendations on the use of technological advancements which have emerged over the last seven years. This will allow for greater industry adoption and increases the potential for recognition by advisory bodies.
These recommendations include cumulative testing being performed only when specific provisions for appropriate supervision are in place, as outlined in a section exploring ‘Class Approved Data Driven/Digital Trials’ in IMCA M 190, and include ensuring that class-approved digital data acquisition applications are in place which link to the DP control system. This means that relevant data is recorded during each test and can be replayed and fully assessed by an independent accredited verifier onshore.
Given the significance of these two documents, they have both been reclassified as an IMCA Code of Practice. This means that IMCA now expects the highest level of compliance from its members. IMCA’s Code of Practice for Developing Conducting DP Annual Trials Programmes, IMCA M 190 Rev. 3 (July 2023) and Code of Practice for Annual Trials for Mobile Offshore Drilling Units, IMCA M 191 Rev. 1 (July 2023) are now available.
Not only do the revisions set a new standard for best practice in all areas of DP trials, but they also ensure that should they take place remotely, they are ready to take full advantage of recent innovations in technology and data capture.
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