InsideAES - ASRC Energy Services
Transcription
InsideAES - ASRC Energy Services
AES ASRC Energy Services Newsletter Spring 2010 Inside In This Issue: Business Highlights Petrochem Completes Largest Project Dual Drill Rigs at Alpine Statoil Plan of Cooperation Meetings AES Gift to Petrochem CFO Corner Employee News AES Receives 2010 Governor’s Safety Award By Wayne Swann/Steve Dawson The ASRC Energy Services (AES) 624, 625, 626, and 630 Operations Groups in Kuparuk received the 2010 Governor’s Safety award. The award is based on AES’s performance and excellence in safety and health systems and corporate citizenship. The award recognizes that AES “has a high level of management commitment and employee involvement in the safety process.” The award also noted that AES has excellent hazard analysis and hazard reduction systems for managing safety in the North Slope environment. Four organizations qualified for the Governor’s Safety Award of Excellence. The recognition is awarded to a group that has demonstrated excellence in safety and health systems. The annual Governor’s Safety and Health Conference was held on March 23-25 at the Hotel Captain Cook in Anchorage, Alaska Department of Labor Commissioner Click Bishop presented the award and the AES HSET management group accepted it on behalf of the operations groups. Saluting Excellenc e at ASRC ConocoPhillips congratula tes ASRC Energy Services, one of our major operations and maintenance contractors at the Kuparuk and Alpine fields, in receiv ing the prestigious Governor’s Safety Excellence Award for 2010. ASRC Energy Services has had a long-term, proactive commitment to improving employee health and safety with a goal of zero incidents. By supporting ongoing evalu ations, training and communication, ConocoPhill ips ensures that each member of our team has a stake and a role in maintaining our safet y culture every day. Congratulations to ASRC Energ y Services on this significant accomplishment. AES met all three major criteria for the award: AES Participates in ASRC Days One-Stop Benefits Number Employee Spotlight 1. A demonstrated improvement or continued excellence in reducing lost workday injuries or days, number of recordable injuries, and in workers’ compensation claim costs in the last three years. 2. Management commitment and employee involvement in the safety process. 3. Documented system for hazard analysis and hazard reduction. Alaska Department of Labor Commissioner Click Bishop, AES Safety Specialist Ashleigh Liston, AES HSET Director Wayne Swann, AES HSET Manager Joe Buskirk (holding the pan), AES HSET Manager Dave Crooks, Alaska Labor Standards and Safety Director Grey Mitchell. Business Highlights Petrochem Completes Largest Project in its History By Art Lewis Petrochem is on the threshold of completing its largest project in company history. Subcontracted by Bechtel Construction and performed at Louisville Gas & Electric Trimble Station Unit 2 in Bedford, Kentucky. Under the direction of our Mid-American branch, the $30 million project was awarded in September 2007, and demobilization is expected by June. Petrochem employees performed the insulation, siding, roofing, scaffolding, fireproofing, and removable insulation blanket portion of the project. The work included insulation of more than 60,000 linear feet of pipe and 370,000 sq ft of duct and equipment; installation of 460,000 sq ft of siding and roofing; erection of 50 truckloads of scaffolding; application of 18,500 sq. ft. of fireproofing; and fabrication and installation of 7,500 insulation blankets. The project paired Petrochem’s finest management and field supervision. The project could not have been completed without their commitment and dedication. The team included Senior Project Manager Jim Balduff, Project Manager Dominick Ancona, Field General Superintendent Enos Guitierrez, and Scaffold Superintendent Efrain Alfaro. Branch Manager Mike Fitzsimmons said, “I appreciate the combined efforts of my entire branch and the other branch offices that helped supply the necessary manpower required to complete this project.” Petrochem was acquired by AES in 2009. Petrochem is one of the largest providers of insulation supply, installation and maintenance, and other related multicraft services to industrial facilities in the United States. AES Inside spring 2010 Dual Drill Rigs at Alpine By Steve Dawson/Tim O’Malia AES Operations and Maintenance (O&M) is completing the winter drilling season and demobilizing Kuparuk’s Doyon Rig 141 and Alpine’s Doyon Rig 19 from the CD-3 (Fiord) site within the Alpine field. A total of seven new wells were drilled at the Fiord site. The combined production from the two rigs resulted in an increase of approximately 15,5000 bbls. As a result, Alpine is back to the level of 100,000 bbl per day. AES crews supported both rigs on the small 11-acre pad. Due to the extensive amount of work in the relatively small area, 16 acres of ice pad were built for staging and storing tanks. The logistics for this scenario was a huge challenge, since alongside of the two drill rigs was a construction project to add pipe racks for the new wells. AES met the challenge by quadrupling its core equipment fleet and doubling the manpower at Alpine. In addition, AES was responsible for controlling access to the pad. Special positions were added and several of our seasonal Shareholder equipment operators came back to support the effort. The amount of daily traffic in and out of the site was a logistical challenge and had to be limited. On a typical day, an average of 120 people entered the drill site and on the busiest day about 160, for a total of over 10,000 workers in the three-month period. AES Drilling & Wells, Roads & Pads, O&M, Fleet Maintenance, Materials and Managment played a critical role in supporting the complicated and dangerous task of this year’s drilling season. Nearly 200,000 man-hours were safely completed and with the utmost care to the environment. Statoil North Slope Community Plan of Cooperation Meetings By Sheila Schooner In early January 2010, AES-RTS assisted Norwegian energy company Statoil with Plan of Cooperation (POC) meetings as a part of its 2010 Open Water Seismic Survey Plans in the Chukchi Sea. Visiting several Chukchi Sea communities on the North Slope, Elizabeth Benson and Michelle Russell from the AES-RTS Community Relations group travelled with a team of Statoil advisors. The team included the Alaska Exploration Plan Manager Martin Cohen and HSE/Stakeholder Advisor Karin Berentsen who presented the plans for a seismic survey. The attendance from the community was very good and many comments and suggestions regarding Statoil activities were received. POC meetings, in conjunction with leadership meetings and co-management meetings, give an operator the opportunity to describe its plans and to listen to local subsistence hunters share Traditional Knowledge about animals that may frequent the area where activities may occur. The POC meeting is part of the permitting process. This is the second time AES-RTS has worked with Statoil. In 2007, AES-RTS conducted a pre-feasibility study to assess the viability of acquiring leases in the 2008 Chukchi Lease Sale 193. Consequently, Statoil acquired 16 leases of which 14 are a joint venture with ENI Petroleum. Located near the Hanna Shoal, the lease area extends 215 square miles and is over 100 miles offshore, northwest of Wainwright. Last year, AES-RTS won a contract to provide Statoil with consulting services for regulatory permitting assistance and stakeholder engagement. AES-RTS will also recruit and train Inupiat Marine Mammal Observers for the Environmental Monitoring Program that Statoil has prepared as an integral part of a seismic survey. If successful in the initial stages of this project, Statoil’s goal is to begin drilling in 2013. In the meantime, Statoil will continue its stakeholder outreach and looks forward to establishing a long-term relationship with North Slope residents. AES Inside spring 2010 AES Employee News Gift from AES to Petrochem “The Spirit of the Wolf” by Bill Wright AES recognizes and values Petrochem as an integral part of our company. The employees of Petrochem were presented with a custom clock created by well-known Inupiat artist Bobby Nashookpuk. Bobby set a clock into the hand-shaped vertebra of a whale harvested by an Inupiat whaling crew off the coast of the North Slope. The artist left a scar on the bone that appears to have been from a harpoon that the whale survived years earlier. The wolf teeth are made from fossilized walrus ivory and the claws are made from baleen-a filtering structure in the mouth of whales. The harpoon and ice tester called “Unaaq” are positioned across the vertebra to represent traditional hunting tools. The tail is from a wolf taken by Bobby’s brother during a hunt last summer. Bobby was born and raised in Pt. Hope, Alaska where he learned his craft by watching his father and uncle create masks and carvings using natural materials available in this northern coastal community of Alaska. He has dedicated his life to creating artwork using natural materials such as whalebone, ivory, driftwood, and fur to represent the traditional images and close relationship between nature and the Inupiat people. His distinctive, one-of-a-kind carvings are on display in museums in Alaska and New York, and in private collections across the country. AES Inside spring 2010 Mark Guzman Named North Slope Manager for BP Operations AES congratulates Mark Guzman on his promotion to North Slope Manager for the BP business unit. The appointment was announced by Scott Selzer, Business Unit Manager – BP, O&M, on April 7, 2010. In his new position, Mark is responsible for overseeing all O&M activities on the North Slope and reports directly to Scott. Mark was previously Operations Manager for the Corrosion, Inspection, and Chemicals portion of our BP contract. Mark has worked on the North Slope for 26 years and has been with AES for the past 20 years. His expertise includes HSE, customer interface, contract management, human resources management, supply chain management, and logistics. In his new role, Mark looks forward to pursuing methods to further enhance O&M efficiencies. CFO Corner By Jens Beck Arctic Slope Regional Corporation (ASRC) was recently audited for the year 2009 by Grant Thornton, LLP, the U.S. member firm of Grant Thornton International Ltd, one of the six global accounting, tax, and advisory organizations. ASRC received an “unqualified opinion” report, which is equivalent to a “clean bill of health.” This type of report is issued by an auditor when the financial statements presented are free of material misstatements and are represented fairly in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP). The report states that ASRC’s financial condition, position, and operations are fairly presented in the financial statements; it is the best type of report ASRC can receive from an external auditor. This audit complies with the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA) requirement for an annual audit of all Alaska Native Regional Corporations. Such audits must be conducted in accordance with GAAP by independent certified public accountants (CPAs) or independent licensed public accountants, certified or licensed by the state or a U.S. regulatory authority. Audits are to be conducted at the place or places where the accounts of the regional corporation are normally kept. All financial records and reports, including books, accounts, files, and other financial documents and property belonging to or in use by a regional corporation, are to be available to the auditors. Full facilities for verifying transactions with the balances or securities held by depositories, fiscal agent, and custodians are to be afforded to the auditors. Each audit report or an accurate summary thereof will be transmitted to each Shareholder. Once scheduled, the annual audit is conducted by a professional external auditor, who performs an examination of the financial statements of a company, government, individual, or any other legal entity or organization and who is independent of that entity. Users of ASRC’s financial information, such as investors, government agencies, and the general public, rely on the external auditor to present an unbiased and independent evaluation of such information. In the United States, CPAs are the only authorized non-governmental type of external auditors who may perform audits and attestations on an entity’s financial statements and provide reports on such audits for public review. Conducting the audit is only part of the auditor’s role. While some think auditors only detect fraud, an auditor’s consideration of fraud is only an aspect of the audit process. The primary role of external auditors is to express an opinion on whether ASRC’s financial statements are free of material misstatements. External auditors ensure that ASRC’s financial statements are a true and fair representation of the corporation’s actual position. If auditors detect any fraudulent information, the auditors must bring it to management’s attention and consider withdrawing from the engagement if management does not take appropriate actions. In addition, external auditors review the entity’s information technology control procedures when assessing its overall internal controls. Auditors must also investigate any material issues raised by inquiries from professional or regulatory authorities, such as the local taxing authority. For public companies listed on stock exchanges in the United States, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) has imposed stringent requirements on external auditors’ evaluation of internal controls and financial reporting. ASRC, through the ANCSA, is required to follow some SOX requirements, but not all. The independence of external auditors is crucial to a correct and thorough appraisal of ASRC’s financial controls and statements. Any relationship between the external auditors and ASRC, other than retention for the audit itself, must be disclosed in the external auditors’ reports. These rules also severely limit the types of non-audit services the external auditor can provide. The AES audit was quite successful, and all AES employees are congratulated for applying a high quality standard to the financial reporting processes. AES Inside spring 2010 Employee News AES Staff Participate in ASRC Days By Rick Owen AES was recently represented during ASRC Days in several village communities. Jeff Kinneeveauk, AES Shareholder Programs Senior Vice President and Point Hope native; Rick Owen, AES Corporate Counsel; Glenn Edwards, AES Shareholder Employment Coordinator; Paul Ramert, AES – RTS Vice President and General Manager; and Meghan Larson, AES – RTS Environmental Scientist, traveled to Wainwright, Point Hope, and Point Lay to participate in the activities. ASRC Days, hosted by Arctic Slope Regional Corporation, provides an opportunity for staff from ASRC and its subsidiaries, along with representatives from educational institutions, to spend a day in village schools interacting with students. During the event, students are informed about the various business and educational opportunities available to them. In addition to AES, other participants included: • ASRC (led by Robin Demoski and supported by the ASRC Village Liaisons) • ASRC Construction Holding Company • Arctic Education Foundation • ASRC Federal Holding Company • Alaska Growth Capital • Petro Star • Ilisagvik College, Barrow School administrators allowed ASRC to have day-long access to middle and high school students. Interactive exercises designed to stimulate interest in exploring personal career goals were held in the morning. During the afternoon session, high school students attended presentations by Rick Owen, Meghan Larson, Glenn Edwards, and Paul Ramert, who talked about AES, careers in science, and the challenges of working in the Arctic. Evenings were open to the entire community. Each company had a table with brochures and other information that residents could take. AES – RTS is recruiting for Marine Mammal Observers and Communication Center Operators. Village Liaisons manned iRecruitment tables to assist residents with creating an online profile and submitting employment applications on the spot. A highlight of ASRC Days for AES staff happened in Point Hope, where our staff members were treated to a program of traditional dance by a group of local dancers—including our own Jeff Kinneeveauk. By the end of the evening, everybody danced! AES Inside spring 2010 One-Stop Benefits Telephone Number by ASRC Benefits Team We are pleased to announce that the benefits phone tree has been improved. Call one number (877) 370-2772 for assistance with most of your benefit needs. The following options are available: • Option 1: Medical - Premera • Option 2: Nurseline • Option 3: Not Applicable to AES • Option 4: COBRA – COBRA Management Services • Option 5: Dental – United Concordia • Option 6: Vision – VSP • Option 7: Additional Options • Option 1: Employee Assistance Program – Magellan • Option 2: Life & Disability – Unum • Option 3: 401K • Option 4: ASRC Benefit Team • Option 9: Repeat Options Pipefitter Training By Kyle Nashookpuk This past winter, AES offered its first pipefitter training, through Northern Industrial Training. I received a call in mid-December from Glenn Edwards asking if I was interested in taking the training. He told me that it was eight weeks long and taking place in Palmer, Alaska. I attended this training because it was something in the oil and gas industry and it was a good career growth opportunity for me. During the first four weeks, we worked on the National Center for Construction Education and Research (NCCER) basic construction skills book. During this time we received a General Site Worker 40-hour HAZWOPER card, Sit-Down Counter-Balanced Forklift Operator Safety Training, and Book Truck Operator Safety Training. The last four weeks was all about pipefitting. Everyone made it through the level 1 and level 2 books, which had some difficult math sections. Course attendees learned how to calculate a rolling offset and a regular offset, which was really interesting. Our instructor (who has over 20 years experience in the field) developed an isometric drawing for us to interpret. We split into different teams, and most of us arrived at different answers, which led to some spirited discussions. The instructor was very hands-on. Everything he showed us, he wanted each one of us to try out and get used to doing. My favorite tool was the Oxyacetylene torch cutter—which was pretty intense the first couple of times I used it. I was wearing my standard steel-toed boots on my second cut, and some slag (dripping hot metal) somehow found its way into my boot and burned a hole in my sock. The instructor said that happened to him a few times as well and recommended wearing lace-less boots. At the end of training, my classmates and I received our training cards and Pipefitter Level 1 and 2 certificates. • Stay online for Customer Service AES Inside spring 2010 3900 C Street, Suite 701 Anchorage, AK 99503 Our quarterly newsletter, Inside AES, reaches ASRC Energy Services (AES) employees working in all divisions and subsidiaries located in Alaska, California, and Louisiana, U.S., and Alberta, Canada. Our goal is to keep you informed about the state of the company, with a focus on providing information about our business plans, current projects, new opportunities, and employee achievements. We welcome your comments and suggestions at [email protected] AES Welcomes Steve Teeter, Engineering Specialist By Asida Prather ASRC Energy Services (AES) is pleased to announce further growth to its Engineering and Construction division by welcoming industry expert, Steve Teeter, P.E., MBA. Steve serves as the Technical Authority for the Mechanical Engineering group. He is a registered professional engineer with over 34 years of design and engineering experience, which includes nine years in the Gulf Coast and 25 years working on projects and studies associated with North Slope oil fields. Steve is highly experienced in applying ASME, API, and other industry standards to a wide array of projects and has performed numerous studies, stress analyses, and specification-related efforts throughout his career. He was responsible for decisions, recommendations, and designs encompassing major aspects of piping and mechanical equipment at all BPXA North Slope facilities when he worked for BPXA. Before joining AES, he worked for NANA Worley/Parsons LLC. Steve has held various positions in the chemical and oil and gas industries encompassing areas such as design, maintenance, and facility engineering and project management. AES Inside spring 2010 Employee Spotlight Mike Zook By Jeff Doyle Mike Zook is into his 14th year with AES and is the Estimating Manager for the Engineering and Construction division. On a good day Mike juggles bids in his office. On a really good day he may be buried under eight proposal efforts as happened on more than one occasion during 2009. He manages a department of four estimators and is responsible for maintaining company standards and systems for estimating. Mike is also one of the AES Electrical Administrators. Outside of work Mike is an avid fisherman, skier, and gardener (who would have thought?). He has been married to Madeline for over 22 years and is looking forward to retiring one of these years. Mike brings a high level of enthusiasm and commitment to everything he does.
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