Isla Stewart#4342

Isla Stewart

Isla is an Associate in the Oil & Gas team. She qualified in 2010 after spending her traineeship with a leading international law firm. Isla then spent three years with the offshore oil and gas industry's leading trade association, Oil & Gas UK, as their in-house lawyer where she gained a strong background in working on complex industry issues across the UKCS.

Isla advises both operator and service sector clients on a range of aspects including asset acquisitions and disposals, joint venture matters and service sector contracts.

She has also been involved in a number of industry initiatives, most prominently the revision of the LOGIC general terms and conditions, the competing interests of the renewables industry offshore and the development of post-tax security for decommissioning security agreements.

Isla has also spent time on secondment to upstream oil and gas companies Talisman-Sinopec and Maersk Oil.

Contributed to

6

Allocation of liability in the UKCS: the Industry Mutual Hold Harmless Scheme (IMHH)
Allocation of liability in the UKCS: the Industry Mutual Hold Harmless Scheme (IMHH)
Practice notes

This Practice Note provides an overview of the purpose and extent of LOGIC’s Industry Mutual Hold Harmless Scheme (the ‘IMHH’), designed to ensure that oil and gas industry contractors operating in the UK North Sea and Irish Sea benefit from a direct contractual allocation of liability among one another.

Decommissioning—decommissioning relief deed
Decommissioning—decommissioning relief deed
Practice notes

This Practice Note gives an overview of the decommissioning relief deed (DRD), the prescribed form contract entered into between a company that is required to undertake decommissioning activities in the UK (or on the UK Continental Shelf (UKCS)) and the UK government. It looks at what a DRD is, why it is required, who can apply for a DRD, payments made under a DRD and the procedure for making an application for a DRD.

Decommissioning—International Law and UK Government Policy
Decommissioning—International Law and UK Government Policy
Practice notes

This Practice Note provides an overview to the UK government policy on decommissioning in the UK, the process for permanently removing installations and infrastructure from the seabed or securing wells. Although the legislation that defines responsibility for decommissioning programmes and execution of such programmes lies within domestic legislation, the UK’s policy in respect of decommissioning programmes is heavily influenced by international law. The Convention for the Protection of the Marine Environment of the North-East Atlantic 1992 (OSPAR) plays a significant role in UK policy, in particular Decision 98/3 of that convention. The founding principle is that a clear sea-bed should be left though there are certain exceptions to this and derogations may be granted from time to time by the UK government.

Decommissioning—legislative background
Decommissioning—legislative background
Practice notes

This Practice Note provides an overview to the legislative background to oil and gas decommissioning on the United Kingdom Continental Shelf (UKCS), the process for permanently removing installations and infrastructure from the seabed or securing wells. The primary legislation is contained in Part IV of the Petroleum Act 1998. However, legislation (and policy) is constrained by the international conventions to which the UK is a signatory. The founding principle is that a clear sea-bed should be left, though there are certain exceptions to this and derogations may be granted from time to time by the UK government.

Decommissioning—planning for decommissioning
Decommissioning—planning for decommissioning
Practice notes

This Practice Note gives an overview of the process of planning for decommissioning of oil and gas pipelines or installations on the United Kingdom Continental Shelf (UKCS) (which will vary depending on whether or not a derogation will be sought) and looks at the contents of a ‘typical’ decommissioning programme, however each decommissioning programme will be bespoke to the particular installation/pipeline.

Transfer of assets on the UKCS—the Master Deed
Transfer of assets on the UKCS—the Master Deed
Practice notes

This Practice Note gives an overview of the Master Deed process, the standardised transfer mechanism for oil and gas assets on the United Kingdom Continental Shelf (UKCS).

Practice Area

Panel

  • Consulting Editorial Board

Qualified Year

  • 2010

Membership

  • Law Society of Scotland

Education

  • LLB, University of Edinburgh and Diploma in Legal Practice, University of Edinburgh

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