Robotics/unmanned systems

Use of Unmanned Aerial Systems Reduces HSE Risks

Unmanned aerial systems (UAS) are lightweight, low-cost aircraft platforms operated from the ground that can be outfitted with imaging or nonimaging payloads. UASs offer health, safety, and environment professionals a promising opportunity to reduce risks by keeping people out of harm’s way.

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A DJI Phantom 3 Professional UAS used for obtaining aerial imagery.

Unmanned aerial systems (UAS) are lightweight, low-cost aircraft platforms operated from the ground that can be outfitted with imaging or nonimaging payloads. UASs offer health, safety, and  environment (HSE) professionals a promising opportunity to reduce risks by keeping people out of harm’s way, reducing exposure to potential health hazards and performing noninvasive surveys of ecological features.

A certified operator and unit were retained in the field full-time to support a greenfield gas development in a rugged, remote area. Ready access to a UAS provided timely data to inform field decision making.  “If in doubt, put the drone up” became a common phrase in the field, affirming the value of UAS imagery as an information-providing and risk-mitigating tool during site development.  UAS collected the data and information that would have otherwise put people on aerial work platforms, in helicopters, or on the ground in remote, rugged locations, avoiding thousands of safety-critical workforce hours.

UAS were used to perform reconnaissance, monitoring, and data collection for a wide range of HSE applications, including

  • Safety: Reconnaissance of potential high-consequence situations (landslides, road washouts, avalanche assessment) and access to difficult locations (stack and powerline inspections, landfill-slope stability assessment)
  • Environmental:  Noninvasive environmental monitoring of wildlife (raptor nests, large mammals) and environmental features (marine eelgrass, forest)
  • Health: Hazardous materials surveys of legacy facilities to support decommissioning (asbestos-containing roofing materials)

In addition to enabling information-based decision-making in the field by providing real-time imagery, UAS visually conveyed information that was useful for communicating with stakeholders and regulators.
This paper will demonstrate that onsite UAS can provide timely, cost-effective information and reduce HSE risks in the field by replacing the human element for some safety-critical tasks.

Find the paper on the HSE Technical Discipline Page free for a limited time.