In the
Field
Pump Stations get new operating equipment
Alyeska’s strategic reconfiguration project is upgrading the
Trans Alaska Pipeline System (TAPS) to reduce oil transportation
costs and increase pipeline safety and reliability. Construction
crews spent the summer of 2005 preparing Pump Stations 1, 3, 4 and
9 for new, electric-powered pump systems that must come on-line
before their old-style pump systems can be decommissioned and
removed.
The reconfigured pump stations will use standardized pump
modules that will enable Alyeska to add or remove pumps to scale
TAPS’ capacity to match long-term changes in North Slope oil
production. They will also allow automated operation that will
increase TAPS’ operating efficiency and reduce pump station size
and environmental impact. The stations’ individual operating
components will be housed in
arctic
enclosures that will protect equipment and enable maintenance
crews to work in weatherproof conditions. The four reconfigured
pump stations will initially have three new pump modules each. At
right, workers install an electric pump module at Pump Station 4
in November 2005. The modules are being built in Anchorage and
then transported by truck to the pump stations for installation.
Each module includes:
- Electric pump motor
- Crude oil pump
- Lubrication oil skid to lubricate the pump and motor
- Sump tank to collect any leaked oil
The pump modules must be connected to variable frequency drive
modules at the pump station to control the electric motor speed
and thus the pump rate. Project managers expect to have all four
electrified pump systems online before the end of 2006.
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