Offshore Swing Rope Training Service | in Dammam - Riyadh - Jeddah - Makkah
Offshore Swing Rope training per OPITO and IOGP, covering safe rope transfers, emergency actions, and personnel safety protocols.

Course Title
Offshore Swing Rope
Course Duration
1 Day
Competency Assessment Criteria
Practical Assessment and Knowledge Assessment
Training Delivery Method
Classroom (Instructor-Led) or Online (Instructor-Led)
Service Coverage
Saudi Arabia - Bahrain - Kuwait - Philippines
Course Average Passing Rate
97%
Post Training Reporting
Post Training Report(s) + Candidate(s) Training Evaluation Forms
Certificate of Successful Completion
Certification is provided upon successful completion. The certificate can be verified through a QR-Code system.
Certification Provider
Tamkene Saudi Training Center - Approved by TVTC (Technical and Vocational Training Corporation)
Certificate Validity
2 Years (Extendable with additional training hours)
Instructors Languages
English / Arabic / Urdu / Hindi / Pashto
Training Services Design Methodology
ADDIE Training Design Methodology
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Course Overview
This comprehensive Offshore Swing Rope training course provides participants with essential knowledge and practical skills required for safely transferring personnel between vessels and offshore installations using swing rope systems. The course covers fundamental rope transfer principles along with critical techniques for equipment inspection, emergency procedures, and safe operations aligned with Offshore Petroleum Industry Training Organization (OPITO) standards, International Association of Oil & Gas Producers (IOGP) Report 373-18 guidelines, and maritime safety regulations.
Participants will learn to apply industry best practices and safety protocols to assess transfer conditions, use swing rope equipment correctly, and respond to emergency situations. This course combines theoretical concepts with extensive practical applications and hands-on simulations to ensure participants gain valuable skills applicable to their professional environment while emphasizing personal safety and risk mitigation.
Key Learning Objectives
Understand swing rope transfer regulatory requirements and industry standards
Recognize hazards and risks associated with personnel transfers
Inspect and use swing rope equipment and personal protective equipment
Execute safe boarding and disembarking procedures using swing ropes
Apply proper body positioning and techniques during transfers
Respond appropriately to emergency situations during transfers
Assess weather and sea conditions for safe transfer operations
Communicate effectively during transfer operations
Group Exercises
Transfer planning exercise based on Middle East offshore scenarios including (assessing weather conditions, determining transfer feasibility, developing contingency plans for deteriorating conditions)
The importance of proper training in preventing transfer accidents and ensuring safe personnel movements between vessels and offshore installations
Knowledge Assessment
Technical quizzes on swing rope safety including (multiple-choice questions on OPITO standards, true/false on weather limitations)
Hazard recognition exercises including (identifying transfer risks from scenario descriptions, categorizing hazard types, determining control measures)
Equipment inspection scenarios including (evaluating rope condition from images, determining harness serviceability, identifying rejection criteria)
Emergency response evaluation including (selecting appropriate actions for stuck-on-rope situation, prioritizing rescue steps, coordinating emergency communication)
Course Outline
1. Introduction to Swing Rope Operations
Offshore personnel transfer methods including (swing rope, personnel basket, gangway, helicopter, walk-to-work systems)
Swing rope applications including (vessel-to-platform, platform-to-vessel, emergency situations, routine transfers)
Regulatory framework including (OPITO standards, IOGP Report 373-18, IMO guidelines, SOLAS requirements, flag state regulations)
Industry incident statistics including (common accidents, injury types, root causes, fatality analysis)
Roles and responsibilities including (master of vessel, offshore installation manager, swing rope operator, transferring personnel)
Risk assessment principles including (hazard identification, likelihood and consequence, control measures, residual risk)
Transfer decision-making including (weather limits, operational criteria, go/no-go decisions, abort procedures)
2. Hazard Recognition and Risk Assessment
Environmental hazards including (wave height, wind speed, vessel motion, visibility, darkness, precipitation)
Vessel dynamics including (heave, pitch, roll, surge, sway, yaw, relative motion)
Structural hazards including (platform edges, vessel rails, protrusions, rotating equipment, overhead obstructions)
Human factors including (fatigue, inexperience, panic, communication breakdown, complacency)
Equipment failures including (rope failure, harness failure, connection failure, inspection deficiencies)
Pinch and crush points including (vessel movement, platform contact, between structures, rope entanglement)
Weather window assessment including (forecast monitoring, deteriorating conditions, abort criteria, delay decisions)
Near-miss recognition including (incident reporting, lessons learned, prevention strategies, continuous improvement)
3. Swing Rope Equipment and Systems
Swing rope components including (main rope, safety rope, harness connection points, energy absorbers, hardware)
Rope specifications including (material types, diameter, breaking strength, elongation, ISO standards compliance)
Attachment systems including (platform attachment points, vessel attachment, load-tested fixtures, inspection certification)
Personal protective equipment including (full-body harness per EN 361, helmet with chin strap, gloves, survival suit when required)
Harness features including (dorsal D-ring, chest attachment, leg straps, adjustment points, inspection criteria)
Connection hardware including (karabiners, snap hooks, double-action gates, locking mechanisms, rated capacity)
Fall arrest systems including (shock absorbers, energy absorption, free fall distance, total fall distance)
Equipment markings and identification including (serial numbers, inspection dates, capacity ratings, manufacturer information)
4. Equipment Inspection and Maintenance
Pre-use inspection requirements including (visual examination, tactile inspection, functional testing, documentation)
Rope inspection criteria including (cuts, abrasion, chemical damage, UV degradation, diameter reduction, kinks)
Harness inspection including (webbing condition, stitching integrity, hardware function, label legibility, buckle operation)
Hardware inspection including (gate function, locking mechanisms, corrosion, deformation, cracks, manufacturer markings)
Rejection criteria per OPITO standards including (damage types, wear limits, age restrictions, uncertainty conditions)
Inspection documentation including (inspection tags, logbooks, tracking systems, out-of-service procedures)
Storage requirements including (dry storage, UV protection, chemical isolation, proper hanging, organized systems)
Service life and retirement including (manufacturer recommendations, usage frequency, inspection results, disposal procedures)
5. Safe Transfer Procedures and Techniques
Pre-transfer briefing including (weather conditions, transfer sequence, emergency procedures, communication methods, personnel fitness)
Harness donning and fitting including (proper positioning, strap adjustment, connection verification, buddy check)
Rope connection techniques including (double-checking connections, locking verification, backup attachment, load testing)
Boarding sequence including (timing with vessel motion, hand placement, foot positioning, body alignment)
Transfer body positioning including (upright posture, rope grip, leg position, head protection, arms placement)
Swing control including (minimal swing, pendulum effect, vessel motion timing, platform approach)
Landing techniques including (controlled contact, foot placement first, hand transition, rope disconnection timing)
Disembarking procedures including (secure footing, rope release, clear transfer zone, signal completion)
6. Communication and Coordination
Communication methods including (hand signals, radio, visual indicators, flag systems, emergency signals)
Standard hand signals including (ready to transfer, hold position, abort transfer, emergency stop, all clear)
Radio protocols including (call signs, standard phrases, emergency declarations, signal strength verification)
Transfer coordination including (vessel master, platform supervisor, rope operator, transferring person, sequential communication)
Pre-transfer communication including (weather status, personnel count, special requirements, equipment verification)
During-transfer communication including (position updates, motion warnings, hazard alerts, emergency calls)
Abort signals including (immediate stop, return to origin, emergency procedures activation, clear communication)
Post-transfer reporting including (successful completion, near-miss events, equipment issues, improvement suggestions)
7. Weather and Environmental Considerations
Wind speed limitations including (maximum safe limits typically 15 m/s, gusts, sustained winds, directional effects)
Wave height restrictions including (significant wave height limits typically 3 meters, swell period, vessel response)
Visibility requirements including (minimum visibility distance, fog, rain, darkness, lighting adequacy)
Daylight versus night operations including (enhanced risks, additional lighting, personnel restrictions, emergency considerations)
Vessel motion assessment including (heave amplitude, pitch angle, roll angle, period of motion, transfer window timing)
Sea state evaluation including (Beaufort scale, Douglas sea state, operational limits, safety margins)
Weather forecasting including (forecast review, deteriorating conditions, weather window planning, delay decisions)
Seasonal considerations including (monsoon periods, storm seasons, temperature extremes, regional weather patterns)
8. Emergency Procedures and Response
Stuck on rope scenarios including (mechanical failure, entanglement, medical emergency, weather deterioration)
Rescue techniques including (secondary rope deployment, basket rescue, boat rescue, platform recovery)
Medical emergencies during transfer including (consciousness loss, injury, cardiac event, immediate actions)
Equipment failure response including (rope failure, harness failure, connection failure, emergency disconnect)
Fall arrest activation including (shock absorber deployment, suspension trauma, rescue priorities, medical treatment)
Man overboard procedures including (immediate actions, recovery methods, hypothermia prevention, medical response)
Evacuation procedures including (platform evacuation, vessel evacuation, muster points, accountability)
Emergency communication including (distress signals, emergency contacts, regulatory notifications, incident reporting)
9. Special Operations and Conditions
Night transfer operations including (enhanced lighting, high-visibility equipment, additional personnel, reduced limits)
Emergency evacuations including (time-critical transfers, injured personnel, deteriorating conditions, priority sequencing)
Transfer with cargo or equipment including (weight limits, securing methods, balance considerations, additional hazards)
Multiple personnel transfers including (sequencing, time management, fatigue monitoring, continuous assessment)
Vessel types and configurations including (supply vessels, standby vessels, floating installations, unique challenges)
Platform configurations including (fixed platforms, floating platforms, wellhead platforms, access variations)
Adverse weather transfers including (marginal conditions, enhanced precautions, minimum manning, emergency-only)
Transfer refusal rights including (personal assessment, unsafe conditions, stop work authority, no-blame culture)
Practical Assessment
Harness donning and inspection including (performing proper harness fitting with correct adjustments, conducting pre-use inspection using checklist, demonstrating connection verification)
Simulated transfer demonstration including (executing safe boarding technique on training rig, maintaining proper body position during swing, performing controlled landing and disconnection)
Emergency procedure simulation including (responding to simulated equipment failure scenario, communicating emergency effectively, executing appropriate rescue actions)
Gained Core Technical Skills
Swing rope equipment inspection per OPITO standards
Safe transfer techniques and body positioning
Harness fitting and connection verification
Weather and sea state assessment for safe operations
Emergency response and rescue procedures
Communication protocols during transfers
Hazard recognition and risk evaluation
Equipment selection and serviceability determination
Pre-transfer safety checks and briefings
Abort decision-making and emergency procedures
Training Design Methodology
ADDIE Training Design Methodology
Targeted Audience
Offshore Personnel requiring platform access via swing rope
Marine Crew involved in personnel transfer operations
Offshore Installation Workers transferring between locations
Safety Officers managing offshore transfer operations
Vessel Masters responsible for transfer decisions
Platform Supervisors coordinating personnel movements
Emergency Response Team Members conducting rescues
Contractors requiring offshore facility access
Why Choose This Course
Comprehensive coverage aligned with OPITO and IOGP standards
Extensive hands-on practice with transfer simulations
Focus on real-world offshore conditions and challenges
Emergency procedure training with realistic scenarios
Emphasis on weather assessment and decision-making
Practical equipment inspection and maintenance skills
Communication and coordination technique development
Regional considerations for Middle East offshore operations
Note
Note: This course outline, including specific topics, modules, and duration, can be customized based on the specific needs and requirements of the client.
Course Outline
1. Introduction to Swing Rope Operations
Offshore personnel transfer methods including (swing rope, personnel basket, gangway, helicopter, walk-to-work systems)
Swing rope applications including (vessel-to-platform, platform-to-vessel, emergency situations, routine transfers)
Regulatory framework including (OPITO standards, IOGP Report 373-18, IMO guidelines, SOLAS requirements, flag state regulations)
Industry incident statistics including (common accidents, injury types, root causes, fatality analysis)
Roles and responsibilities including (master of vessel, offshore installation manager, swing rope operator, transferring personnel)
Risk assessment principles including (hazard identification, likelihood and consequence, control measures, residual risk)
Transfer decision-making including (weather limits, operational criteria, go/no-go decisions, abort procedures)
2. Hazard Recognition and Risk Assessment
Environmental hazards including (wave height, wind speed, vessel motion, visibility, darkness, precipitation)
Vessel dynamics including (heave, pitch, roll, surge, sway, yaw, relative motion)
Structural hazards including (platform edges, vessel rails, protrusions, rotating equipment, overhead obstructions)
Human factors including (fatigue, inexperience, panic, communication breakdown, complacency)
Equipment failures including (rope failure, harness failure, connection failure, inspection deficiencies)
Pinch and crush points including (vessel movement, platform contact, between structures, rope entanglement)
Weather window assessment including (forecast monitoring, deteriorating conditions, abort criteria, delay decisions)
Near-miss recognition including (incident reporting, lessons learned, prevention strategies, continuous improvement)
3. Swing Rope Equipment and Systems
Swing rope components including (main rope, safety rope, harness connection points, energy absorbers, hardware)
Rope specifications including (material types, diameter, breaking strength, elongation, ISO standards compliance)
Attachment systems including (platform attachment points, vessel attachment, load-tested fixtures, inspection certification)
Personal protective equipment including (full-body harness per EN 361, helmet with chin strap, gloves, survival suit when required)
Harness features including (dorsal D-ring, chest attachment, leg straps, adjustment points, inspection criteria)
Connection hardware including (karabiners, snap hooks, double-action gates, locking mechanisms, rated capacity)
Fall arrest systems including (shock absorbers, energy absorption, free fall distance, total fall distance)
Equipment markings and identification including (serial numbers, inspection dates, capacity ratings, manufacturer information)
4. Equipment Inspection and Maintenance
Pre-use inspection requirements including (visual examination, tactile inspection, functional testing, documentation)
Rope inspection criteria including (cuts, abrasion, chemical damage, UV degradation, diameter reduction, kinks)
Harness inspection including (webbing condition, stitching integrity, hardware function, label legibility, buckle operation)
Hardware inspection including (gate function, locking mechanisms, corrosion, deformation, cracks, manufacturer markings)
Rejection criteria per OPITO standards including (damage types, wear limits, age restrictions, uncertainty conditions)
Inspection documentation including (inspection tags, logbooks, tracking systems, out-of-service procedures)
Storage requirements including (dry storage, UV protection, chemical isolation, proper hanging, organized systems)
Service life and retirement including (manufacturer recommendations, usage frequency, inspection results, disposal procedures)
5. Safe Transfer Procedures and Techniques
Pre-transfer briefing including (weather conditions, transfer sequence, emergency procedures, communication methods, personnel fitness)
Harness donning and fitting including (proper positioning, strap adjustment, connection verification, buddy check)
Rope connection techniques including (double-checking connections, locking verification, backup attachment, load testing)
Boarding sequence including (timing with vessel motion, hand placement, foot positioning, body alignment)
Transfer body positioning including (upright posture, rope grip, leg position, head protection, arms placement)
Swing control including (minimal swing, pendulum effect, vessel motion timing, platform approach)
Landing techniques including (controlled contact, foot placement first, hand transition, rope disconnection timing)
Disembarking procedures including (secure footing, rope release, clear transfer zone, signal completion)
6. Communication and Coordination
Communication methods including (hand signals, radio, visual indicators, flag systems, emergency signals)
Standard hand signals including (ready to transfer, hold position, abort transfer, emergency stop, all clear)
Radio protocols including (call signs, standard phrases, emergency declarations, signal strength verification)
Transfer coordination including (vessel master, platform supervisor, rope operator, transferring person, sequential communication)
Pre-transfer communication including (weather status, personnel count, special requirements, equipment verification)
During-transfer communication including (position updates, motion warnings, hazard alerts, emergency calls)
Abort signals including (immediate stop, return to origin, emergency procedures activation, clear communication)
Post-transfer reporting including (successful completion, near-miss events, equipment issues, improvement suggestions)
7. Weather and Environmental Considerations
Wind speed limitations including (maximum safe limits typically 15 m/s, gusts, sustained winds, directional effects)
Wave height restrictions including (significant wave height limits typically 3 meters, swell period, vessel response)
Visibility requirements including (minimum visibility distance, fog, rain, darkness, lighting adequacy)
Daylight versus night operations including (enhanced risks, additional lighting, personnel restrictions, emergency considerations)
Vessel motion assessment including (heave amplitude, pitch angle, roll angle, period of motion, transfer window timing)
Sea state evaluation including (Beaufort scale, Douglas sea state, operational limits, safety margins)
Weather forecasting including (forecast review, deteriorating conditions, weather window planning, delay decisions)
Seasonal considerations including (monsoon periods, storm seasons, temperature extremes, regional weather patterns)
8. Emergency Procedures and Response
Stuck on rope scenarios including (mechanical failure, entanglement, medical emergency, weather deterioration)
Rescue techniques including (secondary rope deployment, basket rescue, boat rescue, platform recovery)
Medical emergencies during transfer including (consciousness loss, injury, cardiac event, immediate actions)
Equipment failure response including (rope failure, harness failure, connection failure, emergency disconnect)
Fall arrest activation including (shock absorber deployment, suspension trauma, rescue priorities, medical treatment)
Man overboard procedures including (immediate actions, recovery methods, hypothermia prevention, medical response)
Evacuation procedures including (platform evacuation, vessel evacuation, muster points, accountability)
Emergency communication including (distress signals, emergency contacts, regulatory notifications, incident reporting)
9. Special Operations and Conditions
Night transfer operations including (enhanced lighting, high-visibility equipment, additional personnel, reduced limits)
Emergency evacuations including (time-critical transfers, injured personnel, deteriorating conditions, priority sequencing)
Transfer with cargo or equipment including (weight limits, securing methods, balance considerations, additional hazards)
Multiple personnel transfers including (sequencing, time management, fatigue monitoring, continuous assessment)
Vessel types and configurations including (supply vessels, standby vessels, floating installations, unique challenges)
Platform configurations including (fixed platforms, floating platforms, wellhead platforms, access variations)
Adverse weather transfers including (marginal conditions, enhanced precautions, minimum manning, emergency-only)
Transfer refusal rights including (personal assessment, unsafe conditions, stop work authority, no-blame culture)
Why Choose This Course?
Comprehensive coverage aligned with OPITO and IOGP standards
Extensive hands-on practice with transfer simulations
Focus on real-world offshore conditions and challenges
Emergency procedure training with realistic scenarios
Emphasis on weather assessment and decision-making
Practical equipment inspection and maintenance skills
Communication and coordination technique development
Regional considerations for Middle East offshore operations
Note: This course outline, including specific topics, modules, and duration, can be customized based on the specific needs and requirements of the client.
Practical Assessment
Harness donning and inspection including (performing proper harness fitting with correct adjustments, conducting pre-use inspection using checklist, demonstrating connection verification)
Simulated transfer demonstration including (executing safe boarding technique on training rig, maintaining proper body position during swing, performing controlled landing and disconnection)
Emergency procedure simulation including (responding to simulated equipment failure scenario, communicating emergency effectively, executing appropriate rescue actions)
Course Overview
This comprehensive Offshore Swing Rope training course provides participants with essential knowledge and practical skills required for safely transferring personnel between vessels and offshore installations using swing rope systems. The course covers fundamental rope transfer principles along with critical techniques for equipment inspection, emergency procedures, and safe operations aligned with Offshore Petroleum Industry Training Organization (OPITO) standards, International Association of Oil & Gas Producers (IOGP) Report 373-18 guidelines, and maritime safety regulations.
Participants will learn to apply industry best practices and safety protocols to assess transfer conditions, use swing rope equipment correctly, and respond to emergency situations. This course combines theoretical concepts with extensive practical applications and hands-on simulations to ensure participants gain valuable skills applicable to their professional environment while emphasizing personal safety and risk mitigation.
Key Learning Objectives
Understand swing rope transfer regulatory requirements and industry standards
Recognize hazards and risks associated with personnel transfers
Inspect and use swing rope equipment and personal protective equipment
Execute safe boarding and disembarking procedures using swing ropes
Apply proper body positioning and techniques during transfers
Respond appropriately to emergency situations during transfers
Assess weather and sea conditions for safe transfer operations
Communicate effectively during transfer operations
Knowledge Assessment
Technical quizzes on swing rope safety including (multiple-choice questions on OPITO standards, true/false on weather limitations)
Hazard recognition exercises including (identifying transfer risks from scenario descriptions, categorizing hazard types, determining control measures)
Equipment inspection scenarios including (evaluating rope condition from images, determining harness serviceability, identifying rejection criteria)
Emergency response evaluation including (selecting appropriate actions for stuck-on-rope situation, prioritizing rescue steps, coordinating emergency communication)
Targeted Audience
Offshore Personnel requiring platform access via swing rope
Marine Crew involved in personnel transfer operations
Offshore Installation Workers transferring between locations
Safety Officers managing offshore transfer operations
Vessel Masters responsible for transfer decisions
Platform Supervisors coordinating personnel movements
Emergency Response Team Members conducting rescues
Contractors requiring offshore facility access
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