An example is that the BOP has to be pressure tested and function tested every seven and 14 days, respectively. Typically, if you're in the middle of an operation, that's difficult to do; and the only way you can get a dispensation from doing that is to seek approval from the regulator. The idea is that you test this big piece of equipment before it goes to the bottom, then you put it on the bottom, and then every seven days you make sure it's working. This goes back to the proper maintenance and control of the critical equipment you're going to use in your barrier provisions.
You cannot delay or defer that confirmation of the integrity of the equipment without approval of the regulators. Every day you do a minute by minute morning report for the day and you send in the report at six o'clock the next morning. The regulators, the operators, and the drilling contractors all see those details every day.
So you report when you make those tests, and if there's a delay beyond 14 days in doing a pressure test, you get picked on for that. The regulator will go to the operator and say, “You've missed your deadline. Stop what you're doing and do a test.” But typically it runs well.
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