Introduction To Oi and Gas Piping Engineering
Introduction To Oi and Gas Piping Engineering
Introduction To Oi and Gas Piping Engineering
Fig. 1–2. Crude oil tank battery at a well site (Courtesy Miesner, LLC)
Refined Products
Pipelines
The refined products
pipeline value chain
begins at refineries
and ends at
petroleum products
terminals.
Fig. 1–3. Oil product tanks at a pipeline terminal (Courtesy Explorer
Pipeline Company)
Natural Gas
Pipelines
Natural gas is always injected into
transmission lines as other gas goes by.
Since the gas is more or less fungible
(interchangeable), batching is not
required. As natural gas enters the
main line, commercial adjustments can
be made for the energy content of the
injected natural gas. This might be
Fig. 1–4. Natural gas processing plant (Courtesy ConocoPhillips)
done if it is higher or lower than the
typical 1,000–1,050 British thermal
units (BTUs) per standard cubic foot
(scf ).
Pipeline
Customers
Natural gas transmission companies have the same generic customers as crude oil
pipelines, such as producers and traders. Instead of refiners,. Natural gas is
transported “as is” from the wellhead all the way to consumers, with the exception
of some minor processing at gas plants.
Gaslights captured the imagination of cities
around America in succeeding decades, arriving in
2 The First Leg subsequent years in the following cities:
1825 New York City
1829 Boston
Creating Nostalgia
1832 Louisville
In 1806 in London, the London and Westminster Gas
Light and Coke Company (LWGL&C) began laying 1835 New Orleans
the first gas mains ever placed under a public street. 1836 Philadelphia
unnatural gas (not the methane eventually tapped in 1843 Cincinnati
underground reservoirs) assumed the name
manufactured gas and sometimes town gas. 1846 St. Louis
Only a few years later, the Baltimore City Council 1854 San Francisco
received a petition from some entrepreneurial 1867 Los Angeles
Marylanders for a similar franchise. In 1817 they
granted the Gas Light Company of Baltimore a 1872 Minneapolis
contract. 1873 Seattle
The distribution systems, some
fashioned pipelines initially of
hollowed, wooden log segments
(fig. 2–2), with inside diameters as
large as 8 in. Lengths ran from 2 ft
to 8 ft. By the 1820s, British-
designed cast-iron pipe arrived to
replace logs.
Gaseous Progress
The Rochester Gas Light Company (RGLC) saw an
opportunity to displace the manufactured gas in its
distribution system with natural gas from a well 25 mi
away.
After J. L. Hutchings’ first pipeline failed 1911 U.S. Supreme Court decision that broke the Standard Oil
Company into 33 autonomous companies, including 13
mechanically, he had no chance to modify pipeline companies.
it.
The Russians
1885 oil production was gushing from
a mother lode in Balakhan
Transportation to Baku was only the
small prize. The industry pressed the
Russian government to build a
pipeline from there to the Black Sea,
some 530 mi away (fig. 2–7).
Fig. 2–7. Pipeline route from Baku (solid line) to a warm-water
The 8-in. line, with its 16 pumping port on the Black Sea
stations, started up in 1906. The line
delivered 10–15 Mbpd of kerosene.
By 1907, the pipeline industry had sorted itself into several distinct
business models:
Oil-producing companies, or consortiums of them, built or
acquired their own crude oil pipelines to assure physical access to
Separate Ways the refining sector, even though they were common carriers.
Independent companies built and ran crude oil trunk lines,
selling transportation as common carriers.
Natural Gas Act of 1938, reinforced the earlier model Independent companies built crude oil gathering lines and acted
of merchant ownership of natural gas pipelines
as consolidators, or buyers and sellers of crude oil.
Most oil products pipelines were built and owned by oil
New business models resulted that included: companies or consortiums to gain cheaper access to markets as
Pipeline companies that only sold natural gas common carriers.
transportation (plus storage and other related
services) Most natural gas pipelines were built and owned by natural gas
merchants, who purchased gas at the wellhead and sold it to
A myriad of buyers and sellers of natural gas and LDCs. Few natural gas lines were owned by producers.
its transportation, which included producers, LDCs,
and traders Natural gas distribution companies bought gas from the natural
Oil products pipelines that catered to a large sector gas pipeline companies. Many also merged at some point with
of buyers, sellers, and traders the local electricity generating and distributing companies.
Expansion
Meanwhile technological advances bloomed in the pipeline
sector:
1. Seamless pipe replaced other forms.
2. Electric welded seams replaced threaded joints.
3. Pipeline lengths and diameters doubled and tripled, and line
pressures increased.
4. Steam-driven pumps and compressors gave way to gasoline-
or diesel-driven pumps, or compressors powered by natural
gas.
5. Tractors and trucks replaced mules and horses.
6. Ditching machines replaced picks and shovels.
7. Coated steel extended pipeline life.
8. The causes of cathodic corrosion were identified and Fig. 2–8. Growth of U. S. pipeline mileage. At the end of the 20th
remedied.
century, there were about 160,000 mi of oil piplines, 300,000 mi
9. Electric control boards monitored throughput, pressures, of natural gas main lines, and 1,900,000 mi of natural gas
and leak detection.
distribution lines in place.
10. Telephone lines provided communications.
The Great Offshore
As early as 1887, the Benson Pipeline crossed
under New York Harbor from the mainland, a
total of 5 mi, to deliver oil to Staten Island
from western Pennsylvania.
In 1900 a gas main was laid under the
Mississippi River by “pulling” a pipeline across
the 2,100-ft span and sinking it. At its deepest
point it reached 120 ft.
offshore drilling companies and the
construction companies like Santa Fe and
McDermott built large barges with long
extensions off their sterns.
Fig. 2–9. Pipe-laying vessel. Vessels like this one can lay pipe in water
depths as great as 10,000 ft. (Courtesy Heerema Marine Contractors)
In the 1970s, Algeria had accumulated
enormous natural gas reserves, while Italy had
a burgeoning demand for fuel. Connecting the
two required one of two things:
1. Converting the gas to liquid in multibillion
dollar plants and shipping it to market in
special LNG tankers
2. Building a pipeline connecting the two
countries
Shifting Sands pipeline system. Transneft has been unable to separate badly needed
pipeline debottlenecking incentives from government-mandated oil-
production incentives.
4. The TransMed pipeline experienced protracted negotiations between
two national companies and three governments in the run up to
Notorious examples of political disasters have weighed
heavily in planning and negotiations. construction. The conflict was not about the pipeline but over the
price of the gas in it.
1. The pipeline system through the Levant was built in
1932, 1942, and 1952 from western Iraq through 5. The Alyeska Pipeline, though not international, had as its alternative
Syria, Palestine, and Israel to the Mediterranean. It a route through Canada. Ten years of negotiations between the North
was held hostage from time to time by the transit Slope oil producers (BP, Exxon, and Arco) and the U.S. government
countries, sometimes for decades or longer for over environmental, security, and economic interests were ended only
complex political and economic reasons. by an international oil crisis in 1973.
2. The Tapline was built in 1950 from Saudi Arabia 6. The owners of huge natural gas reserves on the Alaskan North
through Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria. It was closed
Slope have wrangled with regulators and legislators for more than two
down numerous times for political disagreements
and because of armed conflict. decades about the route of a proposed natural gas pipeline through
Canada to the lower 48 states.
References
Miller, J. Rembrandt Peale, 1778–1860: A Life in the Arts, Philadelphia: Philadelphia Historical Society, 1985, p. 125.
Aliyev, N. “The History of Oil in Azerbaijan,” summer 1994. Retrieved May 6, 2004, from:
http://www.azer.com/aiweb/categories/magazine/22_folder/22_ articles/22_historyofoil.html