Program for converting decommissioned offshore oil and petroleum rigs into artificial reefs
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The program has been generally popular with fishers, the oil industry, and government regulators in the Gulf of Mexico, where offshore platforms develop into coral reefs, and as of September 2012, 420 former oil platforms, about 10 percent of decommissioned platforms, have been converted to permanent reefs.[4]
Opposition in California has prevented a rigs-to-reefs program on the West Coast of the US.[5] Similarly, environmental opposition has prevented implementation of Rigs-to-Reefs in the North Sea.
^Joanna D. E. Athanassopoulos, James Stanwood Dalton, and Adam P. Fischer, Off Shore Oil Platform Decommissioning, M.S. Thesis, June 1999, University of California Santa Barbara. (PDF)