Layne Christensen Company is a U.S.-based global water management, construction and drilling company, providing responsible solutions for water, mineral and energy resources. The company has two divisions, which are Water Resources-Mineral Services and Inliner.
Water Management
Layne provides total water management solutions for government agencies, commercial water suppliers, industrial facilities, and energy companies. Their teams are responsible for effectively managing water in every phase of its lifecycle – supply, treatment, delivery and maintenance. Throughout each phase, Layne works to ensure compliance with complex state and federal regulations, and to meet increasingly high standards for quality, reliability and efficiency.
Construction
The geotechnical capabilities of Layne allows them to improve soil conditions and support subterranean structures in underground construction projects where effective water management is critical, such as dams and levees, tunnels, water lines, subways, highways and marine facilities.
Drilling
Layne specialists are able to define the source, depth, magnitude and overall feasibility of water aquifers, and drill high-volume wells suitable for supplying water to government agencies, industrial and agricultural customers. Their mineral exploration teams extract contaminant-free samples that accurately reflect the underlying mineral deposits. Also, Layne is able to drill deep injection wells to facilitate the disposal of treated wastewater.
Divisions
Water Resources
Water Resources provides sustainable solutions for every aspect of water supply system development and technology applications for heavy civil construction, hydrology, water treatment systems and services, as well as pipelines and transmission mains.
Mineral Exploration
Mineral Exploration Division conducts primarily above ground drilling activities, including all phases of core drilling, reverse circulation, dual tube, hammer and rotary air-blast methods. Layne's service offerings include both exploratory and directional drilling for major gold, copper and other base metal producers.
Energy Services offers water solutions to the Oil & Gas industry concerning sourcing, transfer services, treatment and vibration technology.
Inliner
Layne Inliner, LLC is the second largest cured-in-place pipe lining company in the United States. Layne began as the first U.S. licensee of the Inliner technology in 1991 and since that time have acquired the technology company, Inliner Technologies, LLC, and the liner manufacturer, Liner Products, LLC.
Markets
Water
Layne identifies and develops new water sources, delivers usable water to communities and facilities around the world, recycles water from oil and gas operations, rehabilitates existing pipelines, and safely returns wastewater to the natural environment. They work to procure a responsible solution for any water challenge. Layne's teams effectively manage water in every phase of its lifecycle.
Mineral
Layne's service offerings include both exploratory and definitional drilling for major gold, copper and other base metal producers. They conduct primarily above ground drilling activities, including all phases of core drilling, reverse circulation, dual tube, hammer and rotary air-blast methods.
Energy
Layne works to create solutions that include sourcing, delivery, storage, treatment, recycling and disposal in Upstream Oil and Gas operations. Making safe, environmentally sound and socially responsible decisions that are on time, and on budget with execution along the complete lifecycle of water is one of Layne's priorities.
History
Layne started in 1882 as a water-well drilling company in South Dakota. Through various acquisitions, proprietary rights ownerships, and expansions, Layne now has over 40 offices and affiliates in the United States, Canada, Mexico, and South America. During its growth, Layne has evolved from a water-well drilling company to global water management, construction and drilling company that provides services to the water, mineral and energy sectors.
Acquisitions
Reynolds, Inc. on 28 September 2005
Collector Wells International, Inc. on 13 July 2006
American Water's Underground Infrastructure Group on 27 November 2006
Diberil Sociedad Anonima, parent company to Costa Fortuna on 25 August 2010
Bencor Corporation of America on 17 November 2010
Wildcat Civil Services 28 February 2011
Costa Fortuna Fundacoes e Construcoes Ltda on 19 June 2012
In the news
In 2010, Layne Christensen assisted in the rescue of 33 miners trapped for 69 days as a result of the Copiapó mining accident in Chile. In 2012, it was announced that certain officers and directors at Layne Christensen Company were under investigation in connection with allegations that certain payments by the company to customs clearing agents in connection with importing equipment into the Democratic Republic of Congo potentially might have violated the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. Layne voluntarily alerted the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and U.S. Department of Justice of the possible discrepancies. Necessary disciplinary actions were taken toward involved parties. On Thursday, August 30, 2012, the CEO of Layne Christensen Co., Rene Robichaud rang the opening bell at the Nasdaq Stock Market in honor of the company's 130 anniversary.
Chilean miner rescue
On August 5, 2010, a cave-in traps 33 miners underground, and rescue efforts were deployed immediately. Through a joint effort, Layne and their Latine American affiliate, Geotec, the Chilean miners were rescued after 69 days underground. Large escape boreholes were drilled simultaneously using different equipment provided by multiple international corporations with three different strategies.
Plan A, the Strata 950,
Plan B, the Schramm T130XD,
Plan C, a RIG-421 drill.
The Layne and Geotec team applied experience from worldwide operations and well over 100 years of drilling experience; Minera Collahuasi and Minera Escondida funded the project and also provided a team of geologists and engineers. On August 15, Geotec uses a Schramm Inc. 685W and two diamond rigs for the first drilling stage. Then on August 26, Geotec works to ensure that the 5 1/2-inch 6C pilot hole is drilling to reach the underground workshop. After five days of constant drilling, the third attempt succeeds. As drilling progresses, the T-130XD comes to a halt at 880 feet when the "nose" of the 12-inch hammer bit breaks. It's a setback when the metal piece blocks the well. At this time, Layne drillers flown from Afghanistan and helpers flown from the U.S. arrive. The entire team is now complete and works to clear the hole. Reaming the hole to 12 inches is completed at 2,040 feet, proving the theory of following the 5 1/2-inch hole to the mine workshop and then the hole is reamed to 28 inches to allow for the rescue pod, Fénix capsules. On October 9, cheers go up as the Plan B drill rig reaches its target - the mine workshop, allowing the rescue to begin. Finally, on October 12, final preparations and test runs are carried out. Rescuers begin pulling miners to safety in the rescue pods. The whole world watched as the miners emerged to safety, culminating a multinational, multi-disciplined team effort involving coordination and cooperation between the teams. Following the rescue operations Layne and Geotec received official recognition from U.S. President Barack Obama at the White House.