Shell weighs options of two kilometres of dropped pipe near abandoned wellhead
HALIFAX — Shell Canada may have abandoned the first of its deepwater wells off Nova Scotia, but questions remain on what to do about an undersea coil of steel pipes — each weighing at least 20 tonnes — left on the seabed of the Scotian shelf.
The pipe and the drilling equipment plunged to the ocean bottom on March 5 when the contracted Stena IceMax drilling ship unlatched from the well in heaving seas and lost control of the two kilometres of steel gear.
Since then, both Shell and the Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Board have said options are being examined for the roughly 800 huge pipes that lie around the abandoned wellhead over an area about the length and width of three football fields.
There is also a 114-metric tonne drilling apparatus known as the “lower marine riser package” that is embedded in the seafloor near the well, which Shell has said is now plugged due to a lack of oil.


