Energy Decommissioning Yard · Peterhead, Dales Voe & Altens yards

Mobile Crane Training on the Decom Quay

Mobile crane operation with lift-plan discipline for your load mix. Delivered on-site around Peterhead, Dales Voe & Altens yards, typically ~45 miles from our Aboyne (AB34) base.

Audit finding we design out

"Appointed-person lift plan approved but rigger / slinger training not evidenced against the specific module."

Delivered on NE Scotland decom quays and cutting yards.

Regulations we reference

  • PUWER 1998
  • LOLER 1998
  • COSHH (NORM, hydrocarbons)
  • OSPAR guidance

Hazards we design the cohort around

  • Legacy topside modules with unmapped internal loads
  • NORM-contaminated pipe stacks handled by FLT and telehandler
  • Heavy-lift crane picks on tight quayside footprints
  • Cutting operations sharing airspace with lift zones

Why mobile crane training looks different on a decom site

Every module is different — competence has to translate from one lift plan to the next, not just tick a generic ticket.

Typical structures & spaces: decom quays, cutting halls, pipe-stack yards, module lay-down areas.

Anchor operators in Peterhead, Dales Voe & Altens yards: Veolia decom framework, John Lawrie Group, ASCO decom-support base.

What the mobile crane cohort covers

  • Lift plan interpretation and duty charts
  • Ground bearing, mats and outrigger setup
  • Contract lifts vs supply-only distinctions

Outcome: CPCS / NPORS-aligned crane operator competence, evidenced with your typical loads.

When we typically run cohorts

Cohorts sequenced with module arrivals and cutting-hall availability.

Coverage from Aboyne

Peterhead, Dales Voe & Altens yards sits roughly 45 road miles from our Aboyne (AB34) base — well inside our normal same-week mobilisation radius across North-East Scotland.

Base: Aboyne, Aberdeenshire AB34 · Typical building types on-site: decom quays, cutting halls, pipe-stack yards, module lay-down areas

FAQ — Energy Decommissioning Yard operators

Can you deliver mobile crane training on a working decom site?

Yes. We mobilise onto operating decom sites across Peterhead, Dales Voe & Altens yards — typically ~45 road miles from our Aboyne (AB34) base — and run the cohort around your live programme. Book against your module inbound date — we can mobilise inside a fortnight.

Which regulations does the course reference for decom operations?

We reference PUWER 1998, LOLER 1998, COSHH (NORM, hydrocarbons), OSPAR guidance. Evidence and paperwork are prepared to satisfy client and insurer audits typical of Peterhead, Dales Voe & Altens yards.

What decom-specific hazards does the course cover?

The cohort works through hazards we see repeatedly on decom sites: Legacy topside modules with unmapped internal loads; NORM-contaminated pipe stacks handled by FLT and telehandler; Heavy-lift crane picks on tight quayside footprints.

How often should mobile crane refreshers run on a decom?

Cohorts sequenced with module arrivals and cutting-hall availability. We schedule cohorts to avoid your peak windows and land refreshers before the audit or insurance review that would flag them.

What does the operator leave with?

CPCS / NPORS-aligned crane operator competence, evidenced with your typical loads. We also hand over the paperwork you'll need for a client or HSE audit — the recurring finding we design out is: "Appointed-person lift plan approved but rigger / slinger training not evidenced against the specific module."

How does the course handle wind cut-offs, contract lifts and appointed-person interface?

That's built into the decom-specific delivery — we adapt the content to your site's actual conditions rather than run a generic classroom cohort.

Book against your module inbound date — we can mobilise inside a fortnight.

Call Chris directly or request a quote — most Peterhead, Dales Voe & Altens yards bookings mobilise inside a week.