March 12, 2020
Between 1999 and 2018, gas pipeline incidents in the United States contributed to . The vulnerability of our aging gas pipeline infrastructure is increasing over time. In the United States, were installed before 1970, and over 80% of gas pipelines and nearly 75% of liquid pipelines were installed before 2000 (from the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) Annual Gas Transmission and Gathering Data 2018; PHMSA Annual Hazardous Liquid Data 2017).
The relative age of these pipelines and the recent potential liability of utility companies for devastating damage (e.g., wildfires in California) underscore the importance of a systematic and comprehensive approach to managing the safety and integrity of pipeline systems.
On October 1, 2019, the U.S. Department of Transportation's Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) issued amendments to the federal pipeline safety regulations for gas transmission pipelines and hazardous liquid pipelines (a.k.a. "Mega Rule"). These amendments strengthen the requirements for seismic and geotechnical evaluation of pipelines and other infrastructure to ensure that these assets can effectively and efficiently perform their required functions throughout their lifecycle. Utility operators will need to incorporate these changes into their integrity management programs using a robust framework for identifying and addressing threats to pipelines from weather and outside forces and incorporate the seismic and geotechnical amendments contained in the PHMSA's new Mega Rule.
Amended Regulations for Outside Force Damage
While the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) already implicitly required pipeline operators , PHMSA's amended Mega Rule now explicitly requires operators to identify and evaluate all potential threats including "." In this way, the Mega Rule requires operators to "analyze seismicity and related geotechnical hazards, such as geology and soil stability" as part of their efforts to identify and mitigate threats to their pipelines. The amended Mega Rule also requires that operators take measures to prevent damage from outside forces (new amended text in bold): "."
As the July 1, 2020, effective date for this amendment approaches, it will be important for utility operators to consider how best to incorporate the seismicity, geology, and soil stability of the area into their integrity management program.
A Framework for Reducing Risk Exposure
Ä¢¹½tv has partnered with multiple utility operators to develop prioritized prevention, detection, and mitigation plans to address threats to pipelines from weather and outside forces. Our team begins by identifying potential threats to pipelines and developing a relative quantitative estimate of the hazards based on historical and readily available data, as well as non-intrusive studies. We then take a phased approach to quantify geotechnical and seismic hazards in a systematic and consistent manner across the entire pipeline system.
Ä¢¹½tv's approach includes 1) identifying input parameters; 2) establishing factors that provide a measurable indication of the hazard; 3) evaluating data quality or confidence parameters; 4) calculating a hazard measure and uncertainty range in the hazard measure; and 5) assigning a hazard category (typically, High, Moderate, Low, or Insufficient Data) to each pipeline segment.
Utility operators can then use the information gathered from this process to inform the allocation of resources across programs. Effective resource allocation can in turn help utilities prioritize work, limit liability, improve compliance, enhance accident prevention, and increase reliability.
How Ä¢¹½tv Can Help
Ä¢¹½tv's multidisciplinary team of engineers and scientists can help utility operators develop and execute improved integrity management plans that align with amended regulations for outside force damage and help reduce risk exposure.