A gas flare, known as a flare stack, is a gas combustion device used in industrial plants such as petroleum refineries, chemical plants, and natural gas processing plants, and at oil or gas production plants, offshore oil and gas rigs. Flare systems provide for the safe disposal of gaseous wastes. Depending on local environmental constraints, these systems can be used for: 1. Extensive venting during start up or shutdown 2. Venting of excess process plant gas 3. Handling emergency releases from safety valves, blow-down, and depressuring systems, these occasionally require changing out, it takes specialist crews and equipment and nerves of steel.
1. Tools,
Airlift-Super Puma, AS332 C1, Sn 2001 by
Cool962, on Flickr
2. Location, Yip right at the top, way out there....
Flare height by
Cool962, on Flickr
3. Equipment and specialist crew
2021-Flare tip changeout by
Cool962, on Flickr
4.
Airlift-Super Puma AS332 C1 Sn 2001 by
Cool962, on Flickr
5.
Airlift Super Puma AS332 C1 Sn 2001 by
Cool962, on Flickr
Norwegian helicopter operator Airlift is a provider of aerial work and search and rescue services in some of the world's coldest and most unforgiving climates, from Norway to Antarctica to Greenland. One member of their fleet of predominantly H125s is the world's first Super Puma ever produced, an AS332 C1, in service since 1981 and still going strong
Hope they are of interest, thanks for looking.