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Crews repair corrosion areas
identified by pigging data
Crews
near Pump Station 1 recently installed a pressure containing
metal sleeve to repair areas of external corrosion on the
pipeline, and have since reburied the pipe at that location.
Each year, Alyeska plans to investigate and repair mainline pipe
based on data provided by “smart pigs.” The pigs use sensor
technologies, such as ultrasonic and magnetic sensors, to locate
external and internal metal loss or mechanical defects along the
pipeline.
This “pigging” process is a regularly scheduled operation along
TAPS. After receiving a report from an inspection run in 2006,
Integrity Management Engineers identified corrosion at Milepost
0.13, just outside of the Pump Station 1 facility, which
required investigation.
The corrosion area at Milepost 0.13 was one of only a few
locations that met Alyeska’s criteria for investigation and will
be examined this year. The first investigation location was
completed at Milepost 22.87 earlier this year and required
repair of the pipeline coating, but no mechanical repair. A
third location, at Milepost 784.5, will be investigated this
spring.
Integrity management teams use various methods to detect
corrosion along the pipeline. The pig – an inline mechanical
device – assists in this effort. A pig is designed to travel
through the pipe without stopping the flow of oil as it performs
cleaning and inspection operations.
The sleeve repair work at Milepost 0.13 was completed in March
and required excavation of approximately 20 feet of underground
pipeline where the inspection pig had detected corrosion.
Alyeska removed the coating from the pipeline, sandblasted the
pipe’s surface and laid out grids in the areas where the
corrosion was located, in order to obtain accurate measurements
of the pipe wall thickness. Integrity Management Engineers
calculated the remaining strength of the corrosion area and
determined it was safe to continue operation of the pipeline at
its current operating pressure. As a safety precaution, however,
it was decided to temporarily lower the safety relief pressure
set point of the pipeline until the repair sleeve was installed.
Workers fitted the pipe corrosion area with the metal repair
sleeve and welders mobilized to make final repairs within days
of when the pipe corrosion was inspected.
“Once the repair was made, the line was restored back to full
operating pressure conditions,” said Tom Webb, Engineering
Integrity Manager. “These safety precautions did not impact the
pipeline operating conditions or throughput levels.”
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