Lessons Learned….. Were PG&E practices an anomaly or the tip of a bigger problem?How would we know?
2011 Pipeline Safety Trust Conference – Getting to Zero
November 17, 2011
Evolution of Pipeline Safety
Regulations, standards and operating practices continue to evolve producing continuous improvement
19251925 19301930 19351935 19401940 19451945 19501950 19551955 19601960 19651965 19701970 19751975 19801980 19851985 19901990 19951995 20002000 20052005 20102010 20152015
2001-02Pipeline Safety Act amended IMP & ASME
B31.8S
2012Operators
will complete baseline
assessments in HCAs
1928 API 5L First
standard for pipeline
1951American Standard Code For Pressure
Piping
1970First DOT
Regulations
2010INGAA forms Task Force on Pipeline
Safety
1998DOT Risk
Management Demonstration
Projects
What are these Practices?
•What are the Assets?•What are the Business and Regulatory Models?
•What is the Culture?•What are the Communication Practices?
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Do you have confidence in Assets?
• Physical Infrastructure Inventory Operations Integrity Management
• Information Management Asset Management Decision Support Systems
• Human Resources Employees Management Suppliers Professional Support
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Do you have confidence in the Business and Regulatory Models?
• Safety Policy and Practices Pipeline Company and their Service Providers Industry Associations Regulatory Agencies
– PHMSA
– State Partners
Legislative Federal and State
• Economic Policy and Practices Intrastate
– 50 Individual States
Interstate– Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
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Do you have confidence in the Culture?
• Culture Company Industry
– INGAA
– AGA
– R&D Organizations
Other Industries Regulatory & Legislative
– PHMSA– State Safety Agencies– Economic Regulators– Legislators
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INGAA Board Pipeline Safety Task Force
• Formed in January 2011• Lead by Alan Bradley (Questar)• Steering team formed to develop & implement INGAA Pipeline Integrity
Strategic Plan• Four work streams under the direction of the Task Force
Work-Streams
Focus Areas
Commitment & Communications
Integrity Management Continuous
Improvement
LegislativeStakeholder Communication
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
Research & Development
Pipeline Safety Re-Authorization
Improvements in Operational Practices
Cost Recovery Mechanisms
INGAA Guiding Principles of Pipeline Safety
• Our goal is zero incidents - a perfect record of safety and reliability for the national pipeline system. We will work every day toward this goal.
• We are committed to safety culture as a critical dimension to continuously improve our industry’s performance.
• We will be relentless in our pursuit of improving by learning from the past and anticipating the future.
• We are committed to applying integrity management principles on a system-wide basis.
• We will engage our stakeholders - from the local community to the national level - so they understand and can participate in reducing risk.
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INGAA’s View on What is Needed?
Holistic Approach to Pipeline Safety• INGAA plans to work together with key stakeholders and PHMSA to accommodate
NTSB’s concerns, striking a balance between safety benefits and disruptions of service, and prioritizing those actions which yield the greatest reduction in risk.
• Reauthorize Pipeline Safety Act• Stronger state and federal excavation prevention measures• Industry
R&D Share lessons learned Infuse best practices Invest in next generation of workers and safety tools Make safety culture an integral part of the pipeline industry day in and day out
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Effective pipeline safety is a shared responsibility - and requires active engagement between operators, the government and the public
Integrity Management Continuous Improvement Action Teams
1. 1. Stakeholder OutreachStakeholder Outreach Two-way communication with meaningful performance measures. Actively promote PIPA (Pipeline and Informed Planning Alliance)
2.2. Risk Management Risk Management Apply risk management concepts beyond High Consequence Areas (HCAs) with comprehensive threat analysis
3. 3. Integrity Management Tools Integrity Management Tools Enhance corrosion control methods and anomaly management protocols
4. 4. Pipelines Built Prior to Pipelines Built Prior to PHMSA RegulationsPHMSA Regulations Develop inventory and protocols to manage integrity
5. 5. Technology Development Technology Development & Deployment & Deployment
• Improve crack-detection tools & management• Work with PHMSA to produce a R&D road map, and• Define assessment alternatives for non-piggable lines
6. 6. Management SystemsManagement Systems Apply safety culture principles to drive learning across the industry
7. 7. Emergency Preparedness Emergency Preparedness Response Response Update isolation valves automation and enhance public awareness
8. 8. New Construction New Construction Fully implement the 2010/2011 INGAA Foundation Pipe and Construction Action Plans
9. 9. StorageStorage Clarify regulatory oversight for storage facilities
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INGAA Members 9 Step Action Plan
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Apply Risk Management beyond High Consequence Areas (HCAs)
Raise the Standards for Corrosion Anomaly Management
Demonstrate Fitness for Service on Pre-Regulation Pipelines
Shorten Pipeline Isolation and Response Time to 1 Hour
Improve Integrity Management Communication and Data
Implement the Pipeline and Informed Planning Alliance (PIPA) Guidance
Evaluate, Refine and Improve Threat Assessment and Mitigation
Implement Management Systems across INGAA Members
Provide Forums for Stakeholder Engagement and Emergency Officials
References on INGAA Policies and Positions
• INGAA Web Site Pipeline Safety Section http://www.ingaa.org/Topics/Safety.aspx
• INGAA Positions supporting “DOT Report to America” http://www.ingaa.org/Filings/15735.aspx
• INGAA Initial Policy Filing to PHMSA ANPRM http://www.ingaa.org/Filings/16943.aspx
• INGAA Member Companies http://www.ingaa.org/Members/963.aspx
• INGAA Foundation Member Companies http://www.ingaa.org/Foundation/FoundationMembers.aspx
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