AzSPU Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) Management Process
AzSPU Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) Management Process
AzSPU Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) Management Process
AZSPU-HSSE-DOC-00129-2
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1. Introduction
Since BP initiated exploration activities in the Caspian region in 1994, a number of ESIAs have
been developed in order to assess, manage and monitor the impact of activities on people and the
environment.
ESIA documents prepared since 1998 (i.e. for ACG Phases 1, 2 and 3, Shah Deniz Stage 1, BTC /
SCP and Chirag Oil Project) have resulted in the development of considerable knowledge and
experience in this field and it is important that “lessons learned” from the compilation and
approval of these documents, and the subsequent implementation of ESIA requirements, are
transferred into the management process of upcoming ESIA projects.
A number of new developments are planned within the AzSPU over the next 10-15 years, along
with modifications to existing operations. Shah Deniz Full Field Development is currently at
Select stage. In accordance with Production Sharing Agreement (PSA) requirements, the
Azerbaijan EIA Handbook, Shah Deniz Protection Standards and international regulations, and
the BP Group Defined Practice – „Environment for Access, Major Projects, Non-Major projects
in Sensitive Areas, and Acquisition Activities‟ (GDP 3.6-0001) this new project will require the
development of an ESIA.
This document builds on lessons learnt from previous ESIAs and provides a framework for
carrying out future ESIAs in order to ensure consistency, accuracy and improved management.
The main areas to be addressed include:
2. Purpose
Outline the ESIA process and the proposed measures to improve consistency, accuracy
and management.
Define responsibilities for implementing the proposed measures.
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3. Scope
The requirements in this document are applicable to major high-sensitivity AzSPU ESIA projects,
defined as category A in the BP Group Defined Practice - „Environment for Access, Major
Projects, Non-Major projects in Sensitive Areas, and Acquisition Activities‟ (GDP 3.6-0001).
The same requirements should also be considered for smaller-scale impact assessment projects,
e.g. Category B and C ESIAs, Environmental Addendums and Environmental Technical Notes. It
is the responsibility of the Project Director / Vice President to determine the extent to which the
principles outlined in this document are applied to smaller-scale projects.
4. Specific Requirements
5. Proposed Approach
The approach outlined below aims to keep the ESIA process as simple as possible, while avoiding
contradictory and unrealistic commitments.
An ESIA Coordinator will be appointed who is responsible for overseeing the development of the
ESIA. It is recommended that the ESIA Coordinator has Operations, ESIA and compliance
management experience in order to carry out a „reality check‟ on ESIA commitments and to
ensure that they are feasible.
The ESIA Coordinators responsibilities will include, but are not limited to:
Interfacing with the Project Team, Operations, the AzSPU Safety & Compliance Team,
the AzSPU Environment Team, and Communications and External Affairs (C&EA) in
order to ensure strong links between the teams, and transfer of knowledge and lessons
learned.
Leading the review of compliance documentation compiled by the AzSPU Safety &
Compliance Team.
Coordinating internal reviews of technical information prior to release to the ESIA
Contractor.
Identifying the environmental studies required for the ESIA and relaying this information
to the AzSPU Environment Team, through the Integrated Ecological Monitoring
Programme (IEMP).
Liaison with Operations to ensure that suggested environmental and social mitigation
measures from the Project Engineers can be implemented in the field and that these
commitments are practicable.
Coordinating the internal and external approval processes.
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The ESIA shall be prepared by, or in consultation with, one or more recognized international
environmental consulting firms.
The ESIA Coordinator will provide the ESIA Contractor with a standardised ESIA Table of
Contents (ToC) Template developed by Major Projects PU, with input from the AzSPU Safety &
Compliance Team.
The AzSPU Safety & Compliance Team is responsible for preparing and maintaining a Policy,
Regulatory and Administrative Framework chapter for inclusion in the ESIA. This chapter will be
submitted to the ESIA Coordinator.
The AzSPU Safety & Compliance Team will also prepare the following compliance documents
and provide them to the ESIA Coordinator as part of the ESIA process:
A list of existing compliance tasks (from the Compliance Task Manager (CTM) database)
which have the potential to be applicable to the project. To aid this process the ESIA
Coordinator will provide the AzSPU Safety & Compliance Team with a list of proposed
activities (see APS list requirements in Section 5.2.4). It is the responsibility of Major
Projects PU to make the final decision regarding applicability of the extracted compliance
tasks to the proposed project.
As part of this process, the ESIA Coordinator, Project Engineers and Operations
personnel will review the mandatory commitments to ensure that design and mitigation
measures are in place to meet these requirements. In addition, the same personnel will
review the commitments extracted from previous ESIA documents to identify those tasks
which aren‟t considered achievable in the field and ensure that they aren‟t transferred
into the current ESIA.
A register of potentially applicable national and international legislation and regulations.
A specific compliance and approval status document on onshore and offshore discharges
and emissions across the AzSPU.
A schedule of prepared and planned Compliance Requirement Position Papers (CRPPs).
CRPPs summarise the conflicting commitments made in different ESIAs. The AzSPU
Safety & Compliance Team is responsible for re-negotiation of previous unachievable
commitments with the regulatory authorities, as part of their ongoing HSSE advocacy
work. As a result of this process, the CRPPs will be updated with the agreed
recommended AzSPU standards and submitted to the ESIA Coordinator. It should be
noted that CRPPs will only be developed for high risk areas, or areas where uncertainties
exist.
The documents listed above will be revised as required, and amendments communicated to the
ESIA Coordinator by the AzSPU Safety & Compliance Team.
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In previous ESIAs there have been inconsistencies in impact assessment methodology, including
different definitions for determining impact categorisation, and different ESIA Contractors using
a variety of quantitative and qualitative approaches.
A methodology for assessing environmental and social impacts will be developed by Major
Projects PU in consultation with Operations, the AzSPU Safety & Compliance Team, the AzSPU
Environment Team, and C&EA. Once the methodology has been finalised the implications and
practicalities of applying this consistently across the AzSPU will be assessed.
Consideration will also be given to the inclusion of health impact assessment, in line with
Operating Management System (OMS) Essential 3.6.21. Consultation should be carried out with
the AzSPU Health Team prior to ESIA initiation to determine whether any ongoing internal
health impact assessments can feed into the process.
Previous ESIAs have been inconsistent in their coverage of this section of the report. An
assessment of the non-development option and a description of reasonable project alternatives,
including the ability of each alternative to meet project needs, will be included in this section of
the ESIA.
It is important to recognize that BP has an established process for selecting engineering options
and the ESIA must reflect this.
The accuracy and completeness of this section depends primarily on the state of knowledge
regarding the project design at the time of preparing the ESIA.
A comprehensive activities, products and services (APS) checklist will be developed by Major
Projects PU, in consultation with the AzSPU Safety & Compliance Team and PUs / Assets, in
order to verify that the relevant processes are captured and adequately described. The APS
checklist will feed into the identification of applicable compliance tasks (see Section 5.2.1) and
the environmental and social aspects screening (see Section 5.2.8).
Throughout the ESIA process it is important that a system of internal accountability for the
accuracy of information provided to the ESIA Contractor is in place. The ESIA Coordinator will
be responsible for reviewing all information passed to the ESIA Contractor and for verifying the
source of the data, where applicable, with the Project Engineers.
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“Identify the potential environmental, health and social impacts of projects, designing them to avoid or mitigate
adverse impacts and reduce use of natural resources”.
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It is also the ESIA Coordinators responsibility to check the validity of the technical information
immediately prior to ESIA submission to ensure that any late design changes are incorporated
into the document.
It is recognized that environmental monitoring is a complex and evolving field. The continuing
development of the IEMP is critical in ensuring that the appropriate data is available for the
preparation of the environmental description.
The ESIA Coordinator will be responsible for identifying the studies required for the ESIA and
relaying this information to the AzSPU Environment Team.
The AzSPU Environment Team is responsible for organizing the required IEMP activities,
collecting and analysing the resulting data and preparing and maintaining an Environmental
Description chapter for inclusion in the ESIA. This chapter will be submitted to the ESIA
Coordinator.
Assessment of socio-economic impacts has generally received insufficient attention during the
ESIA process. This partly reflects the fact that the ESIA Contractors have encountered difficulties
in accessing reliable data on which to base impact assessments.
It is important that regularly updated sources of socio-economic information are used in the
ESIA. A briefing note highlighting these data sources will be prepared and maintained by C&EA
and submitted to the ESIA Coordinator.
5.2.7 Consultation
A list of key stakeholders and their contact details will be prepared by the AzSPU Environment
Team / C&EA and included in the ESIA ToC Template. This list will be updated by the ESIA
Coordinator, as required.
External consultation will be managed by C&EA with the assistance and participation of the
AzSPU Environment Team, in line with the AzSPU HSSE&S MS Communications Procedure
(AzSPU-HSSE-DOC-00018-2).
In addition, a Public Consultation and Disclosure Plan will be prepared by C&EA. This is a
common process required under national legislation as well as international best practice.
In previous ESIAs there have been impact assessment omissions, including failure to capture
major aspects, e.g. discharges associated with commissioning injection systems, platforms and
pipelines.
The impact assessment process will be initiated by conducting environmental and social aspects
screening using the methodology and template provided in the AzSPU Environmental and Social
Control Tier: 2-AzSPU Revision Date: April 5, 2010
Document Number: AzSPU-HSSE-DOC-00129-2 Print Date: 2/1/2011
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The significance scoring obtained in the environmental and social aspects screening will feed into
the ESIA impact assessment process (i.e. significant impacts identified through the Aspects
Screening should also be significant using the proposed ESIA methodology).
Previously there has been a lack of consistency across ESIAs in terms of the mitigation measures
proposed and commitments made. Whilst the ESIA Contractor is responsible for ensuring that
commitments are in accordance with best practice and national legislation, BP retains ultimate
responsibility for verifying that commitments made in ESIAs are achievable and consistent across
the AzSPU, where appropriate.
The implications / practicalities of the proposed mitigation measures will be fully reviewed and
accepted by Operations, the Project Team, the AzSPU Safety & Compliance Team, the AzSPU
Environment Team, and C&EA before the commitments in this section are confirmed during
ESIA disclosure.
In addition any environmental monitoring proposed in the ESIA should feed back into the IEMP
and be reviewed in conjunction with existing monitoring programmes.
The AzSPU Safety & Compliance Team will provide input to the Environmental & Social
Management chapter for inclusion in the ESIA. The ESIA Coordinator will be responsible for
managing the information provided by both the ESIA Contractor, and the AzSPU Safety &
Compliance Team, for this section of the report.
5.2.11 Appendices
Required appendices will be listed in the ESIA ToC Template and will include a Commitments
Register, HSE Design Standards, impact assessment tables, etc.
Commitments Register: The purpose of this appendix is to list all the commitments made
throughout the ESIA document so that they can be easily referenced.
The AzSPU Safety & Compliance Team will provide a standardized commitments register
template. Standardising the format will help simplify the process of transferring commitments
from the ESIA into the AzSPU CTM database.
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The ESIA Coordinator will be responsible for managing both the internal and external ESIA
approvals processes.
Internal review of each ESIA chapter will be carried out by the ESIA Coordinator, as it is
completed, to ensure that sufficient time is available for detailed initial review. Formal internal
approval will then be required prior to submission of the document to the Ministry of Ecology
and Natural Resources (MENR). The review panel will include representatives from the Project
Team, Operations, the AzSPU Safety & Compliance Team, the AzSPU Environment Team and
C&EA. In addition, all major AzSPU ESIA documents (Category A) will also require formal
sign-off by the Azerbaijan Leadership Team.
The AzSPU Environment Team will act as the focal point with respect to external interfacing
with Governmental agencies, e.g. the MENR and the PSA established Environmental Sub-
Committee and the Research and Monitoring Group (RMG).
If deviations to project design are required following ESIA approval, a Management of Change
process will be followed involving MENR consultation and the submission of an ESIA addendum
detailing the changes and any additional impacts and subsequent mitigation measures.
Revision Log
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