"MacLean, Alistar - Seawitch" - читать интересную книгу автора (Maclean Alistair)Feb 2003 V1.1 Sort of proofed. (xyz) SEAWITCH THIS BOOK CONTAINS THE COMPLETE TEXT OF THE ORIGINAL HARDCOVER EDITION Published by Fawcett Crest Books, a unit of CBS Publications, the Consumer Publishing division of CBS Inc., by arrangement with Doubleday and Company, Inc. Copyright й 1977 by Alistair MacLean ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ISBN: 0-449-23597-1 All the characters in this book are fictitious, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead is purely coincidental. Alternate Selection of the Literary Guild, August 1977 Printed in the United States of America 10 987654321 Prologue Normally there are only two types of marine machines concerned with the discovery and recovery of oil from under the ocean floor. The first, mainly engaged in the discovery of oil, is a self-propelled vessel, sometimes of very considerable size. Apart from its towering drilling derrick, it is indistinguishable from any ocean going cargo vessel; its purpose is to drill boreholes in areas where seismological and geological studies suggest oil may exist. The technical operation of this activity is highly complex, yet these vessels have achieved a remarkable level of success. However, they suffer from two major drawbacks. Although they are equipped with the most advanced and sophisticated navigational equipment, including bowthrust propellers, for them to maintain position in running seas, strong tides and winds when boring can be extremely difficult, and in really heavy weather operations have to be suspended. For the actual drilling of oil and its recovery -- principally its recovery -- the so-called "jack-up system" is in almost universal use. This system has to be towed into position, and consists basically of a platform which carries the drilling rig, cranes, helipads and all essential services, including living accommodations, and is attached to the seabed by firmly anchored legs. In normal conditions it is extremely effective, but like the discovery ships it has drawbacks. It is not mobile. It has to suspend operations in even moderately heavy weather. And it can be used only in comparatively shallow water: the deepest is in the North Sea, where most of those rigs are to be found. This North Sea rig stands in about 450 feet of water, and the cost of increasing the length of those legs would be so prohibitive as to make oil recovery quite uneconomical, even though Americans have plans to construct a rig with 800-foot legs off the California Coast. There is also the unknown safety factor. Two such rigs have already been lost in the North Sea. The cause of those disasters has not been clearly evaluated, although it is suspected, obviously Seawitch not without basis, that there may have been design, structural or metallic faults in one or more of the legs. From each of the bases of the three legs, three massive steel cables extended to the base of the ocean floor, where each triple set was attached to large sea-floor anchors. Powerful motors could raise or lower these cables, so that the anchors could be lowered to a depth two or three times that of most modern fixed oil derricks, which meant that this rig could operate at depths far out on the continental shelf. The TLP had other very considerable advantages. Its great buoyancy put the anchor cables under constant tension, and this tension practically eliminated the heaving, pitching and rolling of the platform. Thus the rig could continue operating in very severe storms, storms that would automatically stop production on any other type of derrick. It was also virtually immune to the effects ot an undersea earthquake. It was also mobile. It had only to up anchors and move to potentially more productive areas. And compared to standard oil rigs, its cost of establishing position in any given spot was so negligible as to be worth no more than a passing mention. The name of the TLP was Seawitch. Chapter 1 In certain places and among certain people, the Seawitch was a very bad name indeed. But, overwhelmingly, their venom was reserved for a certain Lord Worth, a multiЧsome said bultiЧ millionaire, chairman and sole owner of North Hudson Oil Company and, incidentally, owner of the Seawitch. When his name was mentioned by any of the ten men present at that shoreside house on Lake Tahoe, it was in tones of less than hushed reverence. Their meeting was announced in neither the national nor local press. This was due to two factors. The delegates arrived and departed either singly or in couples, and among the heterogeneous summer population of Lake Tahoe such comings and goings went unremarked or were ignored. More importantly, the delegates to the meeting were understandably reluctant that their assembly become common knowledge. The day was Friday the thirteenth, a date that boded no good for someone. There were nine delegates present, plus their host. Four of them mattered, but only two seriouslyЧCorral, who represented the oil and mineral leases in the Florida area, and Benson, who represented the rigs off Southern California. Of the other six, only two mattered. One was Patinos of Venezuela; the other, known as Borosoff, of Russia, whose interest in American oil supplies could only be regarded as minimal. It was widely assumed among the others that his only interest in attending the meeting was to stir up as much trouble as possible, an assumption that was probably correct. |
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