
Billing Code: 4910-60-P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration
Pipeline Safety: Corrosion Threat
to Newly Constructed Gas Transmission and Hazardous Liquid Pipelines
AGENCY: Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice; issuance of advisory bulletin.
SUMMARY: PHMSA’s Office of Pipeline Safety (OPS) is issuing this advisory bulletin to owners and operators of natural gas and hazardous liquid pipelines to consider the threat from external corrosion during and immediately after construction of new steel pipelines or pipeline segments. Operators are strongly encouraged to determine whether new pipelines are susceptible to interference and damage from stray electrical currents. Operators should carefully monitor and take action to mitigate any detrimental effects.
FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT: Richard Huriaux, (202) 366-4565; or by e-mail, richard.huriaux@rspa.dot.gov.
This document can be viewed at the OPS home page at http://ops.dot.gov. General information about the PHMSA/OPS programs
may be obtained by accessing PHMSA’s home page at http://rspa.dot.gov.
I. Advisory Bulletin (ADB-03-06)
To:
Owners and Operators of Gas Transmission and Hazardous Liquid Pipeline Systems.
Subject:
Corrosion Threat to Newly Constructed Gas Transmission and Hazardous Liquid
Pipelines.
Purpose:
To advise owners and operators of natural gas transmission and hazardous liquid
pipelines to consider external corrosion as a possible safety risk to newly
constructed pipelines and to identify and remediate the detrimental effects
of stray currents during and after construction.
Advisory:
Each operator of a natural gas transmission or hazardous liquid pipeline should
determine whether new steel pipelines are susceptible to detrimental effects
from stray electrical currents. Based on this evaluation, an operator should
carefully monitor and take action to mitigate detrimental effects. The operator
should give special attention to a new pipeline’s physical location, particularly
a location that may subject the new pipeline to stray currents from other underground
facilities, including other pipelines, and induced currents from electrical
transmission lines, whether aboveground or underground. Operators are strongly
encouraged to review their corrosion control programs and to have qualified
corrosion personnel present during construction to identify, mitigate, and monitor
any detrimental stray currents that might damage new pipelines.
SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION:
II.
Background
This action follows the discovery of substantial
external corrosion on a newly constructed gas transmission pipeline. The pipeline
had been in service a little over two years when this unexpected corrosion was
revealed by a high-resolution, inline inspection tool. The pipe wall pitting
was consistent with that caused by underground stray electrical current before
a cathodic protection system is installed. In some isolated areas, the pipeline
exhibited more than 50% wall loss. Corrosion due to stray current is most often
found on pipelines that cross other underground structures (such as other pipelines)
or that follow overhead electric transmission lines.
Pipelines are often routed along common use right-of-ways. This presents complicated corrosion scenarios that must be addressed by corrosion engineers. In some instances, the common right-of-way includes high voltage power lines that can induce alternating current on a new pipeline. This can result in significant corrosion damage to the pipeline in a short period. In other instances, the common right-of-way will cross or parallel foreign pipelines. This requires consideration of the effects of electrical interference from foreign pipeline cathodic protection systems, both on the new pipeline and on the existing foreign pipeline.
Corrosion control on gas transmission and hazardous liquid pipelines is addressed
in the Federal Pipeline Safety Regulations at 49 CFR Part 192, Subpart I and
Part 195, Subpart H. Although 49 CFR §§ 192.455(a)(2) and 195.563(a) state
that a cathodic protection system must be installed and placed in operation
within one year after completion of construction, operators are encouraged
to have qualified corrosion personnel identify, mitigate, and monitor any detrimental
stray currents prior to and during construction.
Operators should refer to recommended practices provided by national consensus standards organizations, such as the American Society of Mechanical Engineers(ASME) standards B31.4 and B31.8, NACE International (NACE) corrosion standards, and Gas Piping Technology Committee (GPTC) guidance documents for help in addressing stray underground electrical current interference on gas transmission and hazardous liquid pipelines.
Issued in Washington, DC on _________________.
Stacey L. Gerard,
Associate Administrator for Pipeline Safety.
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