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Sea Gem

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Sea Gem was the first British jack-up oil rig , known for its collapse off the coast of Lincolnshire on 27 December 1965, after two of its steel support legs buckled and the rig capsized, resulting in 13 fatalities.

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6-604: In the early 1960s, oil companies had found some crude oil in Great Britain, as well as in the Netherlands and Germany, and suspected that there was more to be found under the North Sea . Barriers had to be overcome before it was to be possible to search for oil and gas. There had been no international agreements that addressed the rights to the various minerals and areas outside the three-mile (5 km) limit. Also,

12-457: The barge 15 metres (49 ft) over the water's surface; as well as a helipad , living quarters for the crew of 34, and a drilling tower with associated structures. On 27 December 1965, the rig was located approximately 67 kilometres (42 mi; 36 nmi) off the coast of Lincolnshire . The crew were in the process of moving the rig to another site approximately two nautical miles (3.7 km; 2.3 mi) away. This process involved lowering

18-484: The capsizing. Her crew sent out emergency signals and proceeded to help rescue the crew together with a Royal Air Force and civilian helicopter, rescuing 19 of the Sea Gem 's 32 crew. As a result of a public inquiry into the accident, several changes were made in order to improve the safety of oil rigs, amongst them the use of a stand-by boat, which would be able to help rescue crews in the event of future accidents, and

24-533: The oil companies to begin a search in nearby areas, including the North Sea. Sea Gem made the first British discovery of natural gas in September ;1965, although the find was too small to be commercially profitable. Sea Gem was originally a 5,600 ton steel barge, converted to function as an oil rig by BP in 1964. The conversion involved fitting 10 steel legs, making it possible to raise

30-407: The rig onto the surface of the water, to float it to the new site. When the rig was lowered, two of the legs crumpled and broke, causing the rig to capsize, with equipment and people sliding off and into the freezing cold of the North Sea. As the radio hut was among the equipment that fell into the sea, the rig never sent out an emergency signal. The nearby British freight ship SS Baltrover observed

36-613: The technology required was not yet developed, or had not matured enough to be commercially usable. The main factor was that the oil companies generally did not think that there were significant enough reserves in the North Sea to warrant the usage of resources to search for oil. This situation changed however, when fields such as the Groningen gas field in the Netherlands, and to a certain extent, Eakring in Nottinghamshire , proved to contain fairly large reserves, thus prompting

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