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A calamity averted {Pump station upgrades prevent long Alaska pipeline shutdown}
Petroleum News ^ | Week of April 28, 2013 | Wesley Loy

Posted on 04/27/2013 5:22:46 AM PDT by thackney

The operator of the trans-Alaska oil pipeline has been working for years to modernize pump stations along the 800-mile route.

The chief objective of this “strategic reconfiguration” program is to save costs.

But it has yielded other important benefits, says operator Alyeska Pipeline Service Co.

After an oil leak forced a pipeline stoppage in January 2011, new pump station equipment helped avert a shutdown of unprecedented length, a top Alyeska manager said.

The problem facing Alyeska was the rapid chilling of idle oil inside the pipeline. New pumps and power units installed as part of strategic reconfiguration were able to restart the flow, something the old “legacy equipment” probably couldn’t have done, said John Baldridge, Alyeska’s senior director of pipeline operations.

“At best, we probably would not have achieved restart until ... summer, meaning North Slope production would have been shut down for months, and the pipeline and its associated equipment likely would have sustained significant damage,” Baldridge said.

Such a long shutdown of Alaska’s most important physical asset would have been a financial calamity for the state.

Behind schedule, over budget

Baldridge’s remarks, signed June 14, 2011, are among extensive filings in a huge tariff battle now pending before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and the Regulatory Commission of Alaska. The issue is to what extent the pipeline owners may recoup their strategic reconfiguration costs from rate payers. Two companies that ship oil on the line, Anadarko and Tesoro, argue the project was poorly conceived and has been plagued by mismanagement and massive cost overruns.

The state likewise is arguing a substantial portion of strategic reconfiguration costs should be disallowed from carrier rate bases. Higher oil transportation costs have the effect of reducing state royalty and production tax revenue, and state lawyers told legislators in February that hundreds of millions of dollars are at stake in the tariff litigation.

Regulatory filings show that strategic reconfiguration is years behind schedule, and far over the original budget.

The pipeline owners sanctioned, or approved, the project in early 2004 at $242 million.

Work to modernize three of the pipeline’s main pump stations has been completed. These are stations 3, 4 and 9. Work continues on Pump Station 1 and, according to the state, isn’t expected to wrap up until the end of 2014.

The owners and the state agree that strategic reconfiguration costs have exceeded $700 million so far.

The 2011 drama

Alyeska is an Anchorage-based consortium that runs the pipeline on behalf of owners BP, ConocoPhillips, ExxonMobil and Chevron. While Alyeska acknowledges strategic reconfiguration has experienced some bumps, managers say the new pumps, turbine generators, electric motors and other upgrades are working as designed and are proving to be wise and needed investments. The program is allowing Alyeska to automate its pump stations, save maintenance costs and reduce the risks associated with the line’s aging original equipment, they say.

The new equipment really showed its value in early 2011, said Baldridge, who started at Alyeska in 1977, the year the pipeline began operations.

On Jan. 8, 2011, an oil leak at Pump Station 1 forced a three-day pipeline shutdown as Alyeska looked for the source of the leak.

A shutdown in the frigid Interior Alaska winter is a big problem for Alyeska, bigger than it used to be. Because of declining production from North Slope fields, the pipeline is moving much less oil than it once did, and the oil takes longer to reach the Valdez tanker terminal. If the warm oil stops moving, it can chill rapidly, inviting very serious problems.

Thus, the January 2011 shutdown was extremely worrisome.

“We were concerned that by stopping pipeline flow to contain the leak, the cold weather would preclude us from restarting the pipeline until the summer because wax would have built up, water would have separated from the crude oil, and ice would have built up in the pipeline at low areas and on the mainline valves,” Baldridge said.

During the shutdown, he said, the oil temperature dropped at several locations to a point where slush and ice likely were forming in the pipeline.

Meantime, North Slope oil field operations, limited to only 8 percent of normal production, faced “even greater jeopardy” with the potential for wells and gathering and transit lines to freeze and fail, Baldridge said.

Federal and state regulators fully supported Alyeska’s scramble to fix the Pump Station 1 leak and restart the pipeline, he said.

Crucial to the restart was the ability of the newly reconfigured pump stations to recirculate oil. That is, to move oil through the pump stations multiple times. This adds frictional heat to the crude.

After the restart, the pipeline would be shut down for another 58 hours to finish the leak repairs. This led to oil in the pipeline cooling even further, to “dangerously low levels,” Baldridge said.

Alyeska again used the new pumps and recirculation lines at stations 3, 4 and 9 to heat oil. After the pipeline restarted, it took more than three weeks to clear the line of cold oil and achieve normal operations, he said.

Baldridge said he was “convinced that the legacy equipment would not have been able to generate enough heat to restart the pipeline in the winter after the 2011 repair shutdown.”

Lawyers for the state, however, are skeptical. They argue much of Alyeska’s strategic reconfiguration was unnecessary and “imprudent.”


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Alaska
KEYWORDS: energy; oil; pipelinetaps
Declining throughput: a continuum of challenges
http://www.alyeska-pipe.com/assets/uploads/pagestructure/NewsCenter_MediaResources_FactSheets_Entries/634957398640875372_LowFlow_final.pdf
1 posted on 04/27/2013 5:22:46 AM PDT by thackney
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To: thackney

ANWR will keep the pipeline flowing...too bad.


2 posted on 04/27/2013 7:11:38 AM PDT by BobL (Look up "CSCOPE" if you want to see something really scary)
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To: BobL; thackney

Maybe wishful thinking, but I am suspecting America’s pendulum to swing back to the Right as far as it has to the Left and after our progressive / muslim experiment goes bust in 2016, common sense things like ANWR, Keystone PL and fracing will free us from being held hostage by Arab oil.


3 posted on 04/27/2013 9:10:52 AM PDT by X-spurt (Republic of Texas, Come and Take It!)
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To: thackney
Lawyers for the state, however, are skeptical. They argue much of Alyeska’s strategic reconfiguration was unnecessary and “imprudent.”

I just love it when "lawyers" get to make engineering decisions. Engineers deal with physical laws, lawyers deal with sophistry.

Regards,
GtG

4 posted on 04/27/2013 9:28:08 AM PDT by Gandalf_The_Gray (I live in my own little world, I like it 'cuz they know me here.)
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To: X-spurt

“I am suspecting America’s pendulum to swing back to the Right as far as it has to the Left and after our progressive / muslim experiment goes bust in 2016,”

I agree. Politics is a pendulum with the distance of a future swing proportional to the zenith of the current momentum.


5 posted on 04/27/2013 10:00:58 AM PDT by Rebelbase (1929-1950's, 20+years for full recovery. How long this time?)
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To: Rebelbase

It has happened many times previously. America has been through many sad and dangerous times, with a multitude of corrupt politicians stealing whatever they can only to have this great country recover in a miraculous resilience. No doubt at the time looked like the end. This time is no difference, just different persuasion from attackers that also underestimate AMERICA.


6 posted on 04/27/2013 10:23:03 AM PDT by X-spurt (Republic of Texas, Come and Take It!)
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To: Gandalf_The_Gray
While Alyeska acknowledges strategic reconfiguration has experienced some bumps, managers say the new pumps, turbine generators, electric motors and other upgrades are working as designed and are proving to be wise and needed investments. The program is allowing Alyeska to automate its pump stations, save maintenance costs and reduce the risks associated with the line’s aging original equipment, they say.

In 2006, they were in construction of some of the new station pumps. My company had been hired to fix some of the horrible drawings that had been half finished by the original design firm.

At the same time, I had started a Master programs in Project Management at UAA. The director of the PM department was trying to get a student to take on the Pipeline Strategic Reconfiguration project as a thesis. There was so many things done wrong, it should be a case study. He warned however, anyone working in the industry would like be blackballed within the state for publishing it.

It was a bigger screw-up than the New Denver Airport. There was very little you could point at and not find major flaws in execution, even if at the final end was a decent finished product. At that time, there approximately twice the original schedule and three times the original budget and still had a long ways to go.

7 posted on 04/27/2013 11:40:04 AM PDT by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: X-spurt

I am more reserved in my hope. I had similar thoughts during Bill Clinton’s first term. I was wrong.


8 posted on 04/27/2013 11:41:22 AM PDT by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: thackney

From klintoon, the pendulum still had more leftward swinging to go. From this point, the pendulum will either reverse or is forever broken.

America has always been more optimistic, that’s why we outdid all the others combined. I say it will reverse.


9 posted on 04/27/2013 11:54:49 AM PDT by X-spurt (Republic of Texas, Come and Take It!)
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