TheNextGeneration

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Friday, April 12, 2013

Exxon's Pegasus pipeline's 22-foot rupture in Mayflower, Arkansas, illustrates tremendous operating pressure of oil pipelines

Posted on 1:00 PM by Unknown

Exxon oil spill in Arkansas demonstrates how quickly pipeline accidents can turn into catastrophe

by Lisa Song, InsideClimate News, April 12, 2013

The tear in ExxonMobil's ruptured pipeline, courtesy of Duncan FirmPicture of the tear, courtesy of the Duncan Firm, in ExxonMobil's Pegasus pipeline that spilled as many as 420,000 gallons in the town of Mayflower in central Arkansas. The Duncan Firm conducted a preliminary inspection of the ruptured pipeline on April 10, 2013.


The rupture in the ExxonMobil pipeline that sent a river of oil through a suburban neighborhood in Mayflower, Ark., is now known to be 22 feet long and 2 inches wide. That's almost four times larger than the six-foot pipeline tear that sent more than one million gallons of Canadian dilbit into Michigan's Kalamazoo River in 2010, the worst accident of its kind in U.S. history.

The size and speed of the release through a long opening, thin as a mail slot, shines a spotlight on just how quickly oil pipeline accidents can turn into catastrophes. Between 200,000 and 420,000 gallons of heavy oil spewed out of the 65-year-old pipeline without warning on March 29, Good Friday afternoon, forcing the evacuation of 22 suburban homes.
Few Americans realize how much pressure is needed to operate a pipeline like the Pegasus, which moves more than 90,000 barrels a day of crude across four states, from Illinois to Texas. That's almost four million gallons of heavy oil being pushed over an 850-mile distance in a single day. 

When a rupture occurs, so much force is released that large amounts of oil can pour through the breach in minutes.

"People just don't gather how high these things can go," said Richard Kuprewicz, president of the pipeline consulting firm Accufacts Inc. "For the average person, they're just exotic pressures." But if pipeline operators drop their guard, he said, pipelines "can be highly destructive."

Exxon's Pegasus pipeline rupture/Credit: Duncan FirmExxon's Pegasus pipeline rupture/Credit: Duncan Firm
At the time of the rupture, the pipeline was operating at 708 psig (pound-force per square inch gauge), about 14% below its maximum operating pressure of 820 psig. That's more than twice the pressure of a fire hose, which can spray water 30 floors into the air. But a fire hose is a few inches in diameter, and the Pegasus is 20 inches wide.

Kuprewicz said 708 psig is considered "moderate" for oil transmission lines. Some pipelines can run at slightly above 1,400 psig, he said, "which is perfectly legal and technically sound if the pipe is of high integrity."

However, the fact that the Pegasus ruptured while running below maximum pressure "is not good," Kuprewicz said, because it means something was wrong with the pipeline's integrity management. Pipelines are supposed to be safe even if they operate at slightly above the maximum operating pressure, he said, so the Pegasus line "failed at a negative safety margin."

Exxon says it shut down the Arkansas pipeline within 16 minutes after a pressure drop in the line was detected, although questions remain about how the company detected the dip, and when. 

According to preliminary findings from the U.S. Department of Transportation, Exxon closed two valves that were 18 miles apart in order to isolate the section of pipe that had ruptured. If the line was full when the break occurred, that 18-mile section of would have contained more than 1.5 million gallons of oil.

Exxon said it began work on Sunday to excavate the damaged, underground pipe. It will be hauled away to a laboratory where scientists will try to determine the precise cause of the rupture.

A Corrective Action Order from the Department of Transportation said Exxon would use "stopple valves" to aid in the excavation. The process involves cutting into the pipeline and inserting a disk a few feet from either end of the rupture site to isolate the failed segment, Kuprewicz said. Because the pipeline is 20 inches in diameter, he added, the equipment needed is fairly large and heavy, so the process could take some time.

Exxon's Pegasus pipeline rupture/Credit: Duncan FirmExxon's Pegasus pipeline rupture/Credit: Duncan Firm
Kuprewicz described the tear as a small "fish mouth" opening that's wider in the middle and narrow at the ends.

A fish mouth opening is a "classic fingerprint" of a "typical liquid pipeline rupture," he said. It rules out the possibility that the rupture was caused by third-party damage such as construction activity.

"A metal lab analysis is now required to detail where in the manufactured weld seam the failure originated, and why," he said in an email. Fish mouth ruptures are "usually associated with crack-like features" that develop in pipelines for a variety of reasons.

Kuprewicz said the size of the tear wasn't unusual.

"I've seen longer, wider failures along or near certain manufacturing seams," he said. "The opening is a function of fracture mechanics and depends on a lot of factors."

Cracks and crack-like defects were responsible for the 2010 pipeline accident in Michigan, on a 30-inch pipeline owned by Enbridge Inc. That tear was about six and a half feet long and five inches wide at its largest point. In its investigation of that spill, the National Transportation Safety Board determined that Enbridge—the company that owned the pipeline—had failed to address defects found years before the accident.

The Arkansas spill has drawn new attention to the Keystone XL project, the much-debated 36-inch pipeline that will carry diluted bitumen from Alberta, Canada, to Steele City, Neb. If it is approved by the Obama administration, the Keystone's northern segment would cross the Ogallala aquifer, a crucial source of water for the Plains states. It would carry up to 830,000 barrels of oil a day, nearly 10 times the capacity of the Pegasus line, and operate at a maximum pressure of 1,308 psig.

Pipelines that carry dilbit typically run at higher pressures than those transporting conventional crude. Environmental groups say that's one of several reasons why dilbit corrodes pipelines more easily than conventional crude oil, although the oil industry says dilbit poses no more risk than other oils. A National Academy of Sciences team is studying the issue, and its report will be released this summer.

InsideClimate News reporter Maria Gallucci contributed to this report. 

http://insideclimatenews.org/news/20130412/exxons-22-foot-rupture-illustrates-tremendous-operating-pressure-oil-pipelines

Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in Big Oil Big Coal, tar sands | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Time for serious discussion about climate disruption, mitigation and preparedness
    Please see video at link http://www.climatesciencewatch.org/2013/07/19/wild-weather/
  • James Hansen: Tar Sands and Dirty Tricks
    by James Hansen, September 13, 2013 The New Yorker just published (16 September issue) an excellent article "The President and the Pip...
  • 77 ALEC Bills Advance Big Oil, Big Ag Agenda in 2013
    by Brendan Fischer, EcoWatch, August 2, 2013 Crude oil and greed fuel much of the ALEC agenda. At least 77 bills to oppose renewable energy ...
  • Living Laboratory for Coping with Drought in Brazil
    by   Mario Osava , Inter Press Service, July 4, 2013 Abel Manto with a rainwater tank and the beans he is growing despite two years of conti...
  • Alun Hubbard and Jason Box: Greenland ice sheet research -- expedition aboard sailing vessel Gambo
    This is a great video from 2009, still completely relevant: http://vimeo.com/22626746
  • Snowden NSA scandal: UK grabs David Miranda, partner of Glenn Greenwald, and detains him for 7 hours at Heathrow
    David Miranda: 'They said I would be put in jail if I didn't co-operate' Partner of Guardian journalist Glenn Greenwald gives hi...
  • Neela Banerjee: Climate change may bring drought to temperate areas, study says
    Climate change may bring drought to temperate areas, study says 'Wet areas will get wetter and dry areas will get drier,' says a sci...
  • Our international police state: Britain Detains the Partner of a Reporter Tied to Leaks
    by Charlie Savage and Michael Schwirtz, The New York Times , August 18, 2013 WASHINGTON — The partner of Glenn Greenwald, the journalist for...
  • IMPORTANT READ: SkyTruth, the environment and the satellite revolution
    by Neely Tucker, The Washington Post Magazine , July 31, 2013 Go to link to see remarkable video, I can't get the code to stay fixed: ht...
  • Between 6 and 12% of the Uinta Basin’s natural gas production escaping into the atmosphere
    (Trent Nelson | Tribune file photo) Equipment in the oil fields of the Uinta Basin shown in 2012. A new report says much more methane...

Categories

  • 2012 temperatures (3)
  • 2013 temperatures (6)
  • acidizing (1)
  • Adam Siegel (1)
  • Adaptation (1)
  • Aerosols (7)
  • Africa (2)
  • Al Gore (1)
  • Alaska (6)
  • albedo (2)
  • albedo flip (5)
  • ALEC (8)
  • Alun Hubbard (2)
  • Amazon rainforest (1)
  • Andrew C. Revkin (2)
  • Andrew Freedman (1)
  • Andrew Glikson (1)
  • Andrew J. Weaver (1)
  • Antarctic bottom water (2)
  • Antarctic Circumpolar Winds (1)
  • Antarctic Ice Sheet -- Western (WAIS) (4)
  • Antarctic Oscillation - AAO (1)
  • Antarctic warming (1)
  • Anthony R Ingraffea (1)
  • Anthony Watts (1)
  • Arctic amplification (7)
  • Arctic melt season (1)
  • Arctic Methane Emergency Group (7)
  • Arctic Ocean (5)
  • Arctic Oscillation (5)
  • Arctic sea ice mean speed (4)
  • Arctic sea ice volume (24)
  • Argo (1)
  • Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation - AMOC (2)
  • Atmospheric CO2 (8)
  • Australia (6)
  • Barry Bickmore (1)
  • bees (9)
  • Benjamin Santer (4)
  • Bidder 70 (1)
  • Big Oil Big Coal (89)
  • Bill McKibben (11)
  • Black carbon (2)
  • BOEMRE (2)
  • Brad Johnson (1)
  • Brazil (2)
  • Brian Eister (2)
  • Canada (24)
  • Carbon sinks (2)
  • Catastrophic climate change (1)
  • Charles Monnett (3)
  • China (15)
  • Chris Mooney (1)
  • Civil resistance (33)
  • Climate Change Criminals (24)
  • Climate Denial Machine (47)
  • Climate modelling (5)
  • Climate Patriots (2)
  • Climate sensitivity (1)
  • CO2 draw-down (1)
  • Consequences to infrastructure (1)
  • contrails (1)
  • coral reefs (1)
  • Corexit (1)
  • corrupt officials (60)
  • Coupled ice-ocean model (3)
  • Coupled ocean–atmosphere model (2)
  • crop yields (9)
  • CRU e-mails (2)
  • CryoSat-2 (1)
  • cyclones (2)
  • Dana Nuccitelli (9)
  • Dansgaard–Oeschger event (1)
  • David Roberts (2)
  • David Spratt (2)
  • Deforestation (2)
  • deglaciation (1)
  • Denial psychology (9)
  • divestment (11)
  • Donors Trust (2)
  • Drought (9)
  • dust (1)
  • earthquakes (3)
  • East Siberian Arctic Shelf (1)
  • Eastern Siberian Arctic Shelf -- ESAS (2)
  • Eemian (3)
  • Eli Rabett (5)
  • Elizabeth Kolbert (1)
  • Ellesmere (1)
  • ENSO (11)
  • Eric Rignot (1)
  • Extreme weather events (15)
  • Ferrel cells (1)
  • First Nations (9)
  • Flooding (7)
  • floods (1)
  • Forest fires (3)
  • fracking (47)
  • Fred Singer (1)
  • freshwater lens (1)
  • fugitive emissions (2)
  • Gareth Renowden (2)
  • Gavin Schmidt (3)
  • Geoengineering (1)
  • George Monbiot (2)
  • Gerald Meehl (2)
  • glacial runoff (1)
  • Global dimming (1)
  • glyphosate (1)
  • Graham Readfearn (9)
  • Greenland ice melt (21)
  • Greenpeace (3)
  • Greg Laden (3)
  • GrIS (9)
  • Hadley cells (2)
  • Hadley circulation (2)
  • Hans Joachim Schellnhuber (1)
  • Harrison Loony Tool Schmitt (1)
  • Heartland Institute (14)
  • heat dome (3)
  • Heat waves (13)
  • hockey stick (10)
  • Holocene thermal maximum (2)
  • hurricanes (1)
  • IceSat (2)
  • Igor Semiletov (4)
  • Inhofe (2)
  • Insurers (2)
  • Intertropical Convergence Zone - ICZ (2)
  • Jakobshavn Isbræ (1)
  • James Hansen (15)
  • Jason Box (10)
  • Jeff Masters (6)
  • Jennifer Francis (7)
  • Jeremy Grantham (1)
  • Jet stream (4)
  • John Abraham (15)
  • John Christy (1)
  • John Cook (2)
  • John Kerry (2)
  • Joseph Romm (12)
  • Josh Willis (2)
  • Judith Curry (1)
  • Julie Brigham-Grette (1)
  • Justin Gillis (3)
  • Katharine Hayhoe (2)
  • Kerry Emanuel (2)
  • Kevin Grandia (1)
  • Kevin Trenberth (14)
  • Keystone Principle (14)
  • Keystone XL (57)
  • Koch Industries (13)
  • Konrad Steffen (2)
  • Lake El'gygytgyn (1)
  • Leo Hickman (2)
  • Marc Morano (3)
  • Mark Boslough (1)
  • Mark Hertsgaard (1)
  • Mark Serreze (1)
  • Mass extinctions (1)
  • Mauri Pelto (1)
  • Medieval Climate Anomaly (2)
  • Meridonal heat transport - MHT (1)
  • Methane (2)
  • Methane Gun hypothesis (9)
  • Methane hydrates (11)
  • Michael Mann (20)
  • Michael Oppenheimer (2)
  • Michael Tobis (2)
  • Milne Ice Shelf (1)
  • Mitigation (1)
  • Monckton (6)
  • Monsanto (3)
  • Myles Allen (1)
  • Naomi Klein (1)
  • Natalia Shakhova (4)
  • national security (3)
  • Neela Banerjee (1)
  • neonicotinoid pesticide (9)
  • Nitrous oxide (1)
  • North Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (1)
  • North Atlantic Oscillation (2)
  • Obama (1)
  • OccupyWallStreet (5)
  • ocean acidification (2)
  • Ocean chemistry (1)
  • ocean heat content (15)
  • Ocean salinity (2)
  • Ocean temperatures (4)
  • ozone levels (1)
  • paleo-climate (4)
  • Paleo-CO2 (2)
  • Patrick Michaels (1)
  • Paul Douglas (1)
  • PDO - Pacific Decadal Oscillation (4)
  • Peak food (10)
  • Peak oil (1)
  • Peak Water (3)
  • Permafrost (1)
  • Permafrost - subsea (2)
  • Permian mass extinction (1)
  • Peter Gleick (3)
  • Peter Sinclair (13)
  • Peter Wadhams (4)
  • Petermann Glacier (1)
  • Phil Jones (1)
  • Pinatubo rebound effect (2)
  • pine beetles (1)
  • Pine Island Glacier (1)
  • PIOMAS (3)
  • polar bears (5)
  • Polar jet stream (8)
  • Polar vortex (2)
  • Positive feedbacks (1)
  • Precipitation extremes (4)
  • radiative forcing (2)
  • Ray Weymann (1)
  • Raypierre (1)
  • resilience (1)
  • resource scarcity (3)
  • Richard Alley (3)
  • Richard Somerville (1)
  • Rick Piltz (2)
  • Robert Corell (1)
  • Roger Pielke Jr. (1)
  • Rossby waves (2)
  • Russia (1)
  • saltwater intrusion (1)
  • Scott Mandia (1)
  • Sea level rise (13)
  • sea surface temperature anomalies (1)
  • Sediment cores (2)
  • Shell Oil (4)
  • snow cover (3)
  • Snowden (1)
  • Solar activity (1)
  • solar radiation (1)
  • Soot (3)
  • Stefan Rahmstorf (5)
  • Steve Horn (13)
  • Storm intensity (1)
  • Storm tracks diverted polewards (1)
  • Stratospheric Sudden Warmings (3)
  • sulfoxaflor (1)
  • Tamino (1)
  • tar sands (57)
  • Ted Scambos (1)
  • Terracide (1)
  • These people are completely insane (7)
  • Thomas L. Friedman (2)
  • threat multiplier (1)
  • Threat to our democracy (49)
  • Tim DeChristopher (1)
  • Tipping elements (1)
  • Tom Steyer (1)
  • Tornado statistics (2)
  • TransCanada (3)
  • trees (1)
  • tropospheric water vapor (1)
  • Typhoon Yasi (1)
  • Van Jones (2)
  • volcanism (1)
  • WAIS (1)
  • Waleed Abdalati (1)
  • Walker circulation (2)
  • Walt Meier (1)
  • Water shortage (2)
  • William Krabill (1)
  • Willie Soon (1)
  • Wind pattern changes (2)
  • Wind power (2)

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (500)
    • ►  September (27)
    • ►  August (78)
    • ►  July (74)
    • ►  June (56)
    • ►  May (62)
    • ▼  April (105)
      • EU restricts neonicotinoid pesticide use to help s...
      • R L Miller, DailyKos: Brian Schweitzer: bold progr...
      • Ted Glick, GRIST: Brian Eister's 27th day on hunge...
      • Climate hero Brian Eister on day 26 of hunger stri...
      • A Man For All Seasons: James Hansen Wins The Riden...
      • RealClimate: The answer is blowing in the wind: Th...
      • Richie Havens: Freedom [at Woodstock, 1969]
      • Arctic Sea Ice Loss Visualized In Animated 3-D Cha...
      • San Francisco Board of Supervisors Unanimously Pas...
      • Wisconsin GOP illegally deletes files related to r...
      • Syngenta Pesticides Kill Bees [neonicotinoid pesti...
      • Andrew Glikson: Another link between CO2 and mass ...
      • Peter Sinclair: Pesky Reality Intrudes in Deniervi...
      • Ground-level ozone confuses plants' mutualistic in...
      • Willie Soon, Koch & Exxon-funded scientist, challe...
      • Peter Sinclair: Bill McKibben to join Dark Snow p...
      • Peter Sinclair: Jet Stream Blows Winds of Change
      • Misleading GAO Report on Wind Energy Policies: GAO...
      • Dr. Charles Monnett sues U.S. Department of the In...
      • More loony tunes from Potty Peer Viscount Monckton...
      • Anti-fracking hero Sandra Steingraber sentenced to...
      • Hansen's New Climate Dice - Hot, Loaded, and Misun...
      • Peter Sinclair, Yale Forum: Greenland Ice Sheet Melt
      • Summer Ice Melt Increases Ten-fold on Antarctic Pe...
      • Advanced Energy Economy send letter to House Ways ...
      • US, China vow to boost climate efforts amid ‘incre...
      • Catholic Online: Global warming most definitely n...
      • Pulitzer Prize to Lisa Song, Elizabeth McGowan and...
      • New Interior Secretary Sally Jewell called out by ...
      • Keystone XL: Friends of the Earth files for releas...
      • Graham Readfearn: The Slippery Slope to Slime -- A...
      • Joe Romm: Silver Linings Playbook: Exxon Says Wild...
      • Global Contraction of Antarctic Bottom Water betwe...
      • Readers, a must-read: The Antarctic Half of the Gl...
      • New undemocratic rules create barrier to public pa...
      • Canadian democracy biting the dust as Harper govt....
      • Millions face starvation as world warms, say scien...
      • Arctic Circle assembly to address needs of changin...
      • David Suzuki: The Pine Beetles Are Coming
      • U.S., China joint statement calls for ‘forceful’ c...
      • Puer Loony Viscount Monckton ridiculed in New Zeal...
      • Arkansas AG McDaniel hires notorious private contr...
      • "Unsustainable fuelwood extraction from South Afri...
      • Hoerling Howler -- uses model with no skill, publi...
      • Gilbert Compo and coauthors confirm warming: 20th ...
      • Jeremy Grantham, environmental philanthropist: 'We...
      • New Study Shows Once Again How "Climategate" Email...
      • Another Hoerling Howler: NOAA study of 2012 drough...
      • James Hansen interview (video) of why he retired f...
      • Martin Luther King and the call to direct action o...
      • Exxon's Pegasus pipeline's 22-foot rupture in Mayf...
      • Neven: PIOMAS April 2013 - extra update
      • Bill McKibben: The Fossil Fuel Resistance. As the ...
      • Exxon Didn't Know Its Pipeline Ruptured Until Call...
      • Exxon threatens Little Rock TV station, causing th...
      • ALEC fascism at work in Indiana - bill would make ...
      • ExxonMobil Arkansas Tar Sands Pipeline Gash 22 Fee...
      • Arkansas AG Dustin McDaniel says Exxon's Pegasus o...
      • Breaking News: Oklahoma Grandmother Locks Herself ...
      • Giant pockmarks on the ocean floor off New Zealand...
      • Ties That Bind: Ernest Moniz, Keystone XL Contract...
      • Exxon's lying liars [Ken Cohen] and the lying lies...
      • "July 2012 Greenland melt extent enhanced by low-l...
      • NSIDC: for Arctic sea ice extent watchers: an int...
      • Our Home. She's alive. Beautiful. Finite. Hurting.
      • Of course conservatives care about the air, water ...
      • Bill McKibben: Is the Keystone XL the Stonewall o...
      • Monckton's nightmare week in New Zealand
      • Climate Hawks Go on Offense Against Skeptics in th...
      • Calamity for Our Most Beneficent Insect [bees: due...
      • David Spratt, Climate Code Red: “Critical decade” ...
      • Exxon acting like national guard under martial law...
      • Youth Explorers Embark to North Pole to Bury Time ...
      • Harvard Students Vote for Endowment Divestment fro...
      • Linking clean energy sources solves blackout conun...
      • Heavy rains due to intensify and increase dramatic...
      • Exxon Oil Spill in Mayflower, Arkansas, Photos Cou...
      • Deep oceans absorbing heat imbalance at an increas...
      • Rick Piltz: Keystone XL pipeline is why we need w...
      • Will John Kerry leave his reputation behind him bl...
      • Remarkable video and narration by scientist Ken Du...
      • President Obama, be sure to tell Malia and Sasha t...
      • Neela Banerjee: Michael Mann, the most hated clima...
      • NPR Gives Wind Power Hypochondriacs A Platform
      • Exxon threatens journalist with arrest at "command...
      • Groups Ask State Dept for 120-Day Comment Period o...
      • Tar Sands Protestors Chain Themselves To Canadian ...
      • GEOS-5 Analyses and Forecasts of the Major Stratos...
      • Arctic Sea Ice Mean Speed ready for Daytona
      • Exxon's Arkansas Tar Sands Spill: The Tar Sands Na...
      • > 1,000 Californians protest the "no jobs" Keyston...
      • Newspaper rag, The Australian, provides space for ...
      • Australian scientists say Australia's climate has ...
      • NSIDC Arctic Sea Ice Report of April 2, 2013: Sing...
      • "Independent confirmation of global land warming w...
      • NASA: Warm Arctic, Chilly Mid-Latitudes -- Arctic ...
      • ExxonMobil usurps EPA oversight of dilbit tar sand...
      • Republicans believe climate change is a problem an...
      • The Economist on climate science: Exploring uncert...
      • Winthrop Roosevelt on the Oil [Fracking] Boom that...
    • ►  March (98)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile