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TAPS Valves
Ongoing program of improvement
Alyeska discovered in 1997 that it had a
valve problem. The maintenance service levels on the Trans Alaska
Pipeline System’s (TAPS) 176 mainline valves were not standardized
and the valves were starting to
show their age. More important,
the mechanisms that control these and other facility valves were
wearing out and requiring more and more maintenance while
replacement parts were getting harder to find.
Alyeska came up with a two-part solution. First they launched an
intensive program that concluded in 2001 to bring all of TAPS high
priority valves up to a known service level. They then developed
the TAPS Valve Maintenance Management Plan to standardize the
system’s valves and establish routine maintenance procedures that
will ensure the valves continue to function properly well into the
future.
“The valve maintenance management plan is the control document
that tells us how to maintain TAPS valves and it directs us to do
it,” said Bill Aus, Alyeska’s valve and contingency repair
engineer. “The plan defines the standard to which TAPS must hold
itself in order to meet or exceed legal and regulatory standards.”
Under the plan, TAPS valves that do not meet Alyeska’s performance
standards either have been or are scheduled to be replaced with
standardized, modern valves. To untrained eyes, the upgraded
valves look substantially the same. However, they are both safer
and more durable than the old valves.
The upgraded valves have higher machine tolerances and some use
metal-to-metal seating so that materials will not break loose that
could injure workers. Some valve parts are tungsten carbide coated
to reduce wear and certain valves have additional automatic
lubrication injection ports that simplify and improve maintenance.
A bigger improvement will be the new actuator and operator
mechanisms that control the valves.
Their electronic upgrades will enhance future valve operations and
allow for automated and/or remote control and self-diagnostics.
“Standardizing valve-related equipment will increase efficiency
and safety on TAPS by reducing training and inventory expenses,
decreasing the variety of potential problems and increasing
maintenance and operations worker familiarity with all of TAPS
valves,” said Aus. “It all dovetails perfectly with strategic
reconfiguration planners’ efforts to modernize TAPS.”
A big step toward implementing the valve maintenance and
management plan was accomplished last year when Aus finished the
pipeline valve maintenance manual. This document details virtually
everything there is to know about TAPS pipeline valves and how
workers maintain them.
"The valve program has significantly improved external confidence
in Alyeska's valve integrity,” said Aus. "Having one document
control valve-related decisions leads to TAPS-wide standards that
improve safety and reliability and reduce operations and
maintenance costs. It just makes sense.”
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