2014 Petroleum and Chemical Industry Conference Europe 2014
DOI: 10.1109/pciceurope.2014.6900066
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Surface heating for Arctic vessels and structures to prevent snow and ice accumulation

Abstract: The world's energy demands have continued to stretch innovation and technology to aggressively pursue oil and gas reserves. Recent advancements in harvesting shale oil have slowed the race to define and develop the offshore Arctic energy resources, but the need to continue the planning and preparations for production is still present.

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…2, 2008) classify only the required minimum heat loads instead of the heating power of specific components or equipment. They do not consider changes in heating power in the engineering environment (Baen and Oldford, 2014). Consequently, an unreasonable amount of heat is supplied in actual operations (Ryerson, 2011;Brazil et al, 2013;Roeder et al, 2017), wasting energy and putting an additional burden on the electric power system.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2, 2008) classify only the required minimum heat loads instead of the heating power of specific components or equipment. They do not consider changes in heating power in the engineering environment (Baen and Oldford, 2014). Consequently, an unreasonable amount of heat is supplied in actual operations (Ryerson, 2011;Brazil et al, 2013;Roeder et al, 2017), wasting energy and putting an additional burden on the electric power system.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%