A trenching machine, a fishing net left overnight, and a $7 million recovery operation that came within meters of becoming something far worse.
A vessel — call her Donna the Dregger — was trenching a subsea pipeline in the Levantine Basin, close to a major port. The first pass at the section went exactly to plan.
Twenty-four hours later, Donna returned to the same KP to continue the trench. Within minutes of dropping the trenching machine to the seabed, the operator saw it: high tension on the stinger. The machine was stuck.
The recovery worked. But the threat envelope was wider than the trenching equipment alone. Several adjacent failure paths were live throughout the operation:
A small fishing boat can't damage a pipeline by dragging gear over it. A net left overnight can stop a multi-million-dollar maintenance operation cold — and put assets, divers, and adjacent traffic at risk.
Fishing activity is routinely dismissed as low-threat to pipelines. This case shows the second-order risk: not the boat, but what the boat leaves behind.
Continuous monitoring of fishing vessel activity — at all sizes, including the small boats most platforms ignore — is part of the same protection envelope as anchor-strike and dredging detection. Multi-sensor fusion of AIS, satellite imagery, and operational corridor data flags overnight gear deposits before the next maintenance op rolls into them.
The recovery was clean this time. Next time, the variables are different.
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