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President's Message
David Wight, President and CEO
Review
process continuously improves spill preparedness
Our staff works closely with the Joint Pipeline
Office (JPO), a consortium of 11 government agencies that monitors
pipeline operations, to develop and maintain oil spill prevention
and response plans. In addition to ongoing oversight, the Bureau
of Land Management (BLM) reviews and approves our plan every year.
The Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation approves the
plan on a five-year review cycle.
As part of this ongoing process, BLM recently asked Alyeska to
improve spill response training for TAPS employees and the way JPO
and Alyeska officials review TAPS' minimum of 64 spill response
exercises on the pipeline and approximately 40 at the Valdez
Marine Terminal and Prince William Sound that are conducted every
year. The goal is to better disseminate lessons learned during
spill exercises throughout TAPS.
BLM also wants to ensure that new personnel who will have initial
oil spill response duties receive appropriate training prior to
field deployment. Currently, each responder receives a minimum of
eight hours of Occupational Safety and Health Administration
training prior to field deployment, the minimum required by law.
This includes general safety and personal protective equipment
training that is not oil spill response specific. BLM is requiring
Alyeska to define a minimum level of specific response training on
top of the eight hour mandatory requirement. BLM also wants
uniform procedures to review and document worker training and to
increase personnel's hands-on practice with response equipment.
These changes will support our ongoing strategic reconfiguration
plan that should be fully implemented in 2006. This pipeline
modernization plan will automate four pump stations and update
TAPS' staffing and systems to reflect improved technology and
decreased throughput.
We are making these changes so that TAPS will continue to operate
safely and reliably into the foreseeable future. Toward this goal,
we will maintain our current number of spill responders on the
line while we continue to improve TAPS' spill contingency plan.
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