1 / 7

Increasing Pipeline Safety Through Shared Planning

This session discusses the importance of shared planning in increasing pipeline safety. It covers topics such as pipeline routing, rights-of-way management, public education, and incident response. The session aims to protect both people and pipelines by minimizing their impact on each other.

alethiam
Télécharger la présentation

Increasing Pipeline Safety Through Shared Planning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Increasing Pipeline Safety Through Shared Planning Transmission Pipelines and Land Use: What needs to be accomplished and why? General Session --- November 15, 2007

  2. Overview • There is a need to transport liquids and gases and pipelines are often the safest and most economical way to do so • The objective is to accomplish that task with the smallest possible impact on people and on the environment • Saying it another way, the goal is • To protect people from pipelines, and • To protect pipelines from people

  3. Protecting People from Pipelines - 1 • The design, construction, maintenance and operation of pipelines is critical • Properly routing pipelines and establishing, maintaining and managing the use of rights-of-way are essential • Other requirements are educating the public and preparing for and responding to incidents effectively

  4. Protecting People from Pipelines - 2 • Considerations in routing pipelines and establishing rights-of-way • Material to be transported; quantity; future expansion; multiple lines • Topography; existing infrastructure; sensitive, cultural and historic areas; other • Availability of alternative routes • Adequacy of space to construct and maintain pipeline(s) • Community requirements, permitting conditions, etc. • Land owner requirements, demands, expectations, etc. • Need for co-existing activities • Parties needing to be involved • Pipelines • Regulators at federal, state, county and local level • Land owners and developers • Realtors, attorneys and others involved in real estate transactions • Other public interests • Other factors • Right-of-way maintenance, including control of vegetation • Signage and public awareness • Public access and co-existing uses

  5. Protecting Pipelines from People • Facilitating the selection and acquisition of optimal routes • Allowing sufficient ROW size and access for proper operation and maintenance • Prohibiting encroachments • Controlling inappropriate access or uses • Maintaining land owner and public awareness over time

  6. What should be done? • Acknowledge that many parties have a stake in protecting people and pipelines • Pipeline owners and operators • Regulators at all levels of government • Land owners and developers • Groups involved in buying/selling property • Other public interests such as school boards • Establish targets/guidelines to manage rights-of-way • Agree on most desirable characteristics of ROWs • Provide land-use guidance to county/municipal bodies • Permitted uses within rights-of-way • Permitted uses outside rights-of-way • Educate all involved parties

  7. Issues • Who was there first (pipeline or development)? • Rules cannot address all situations • There is no practical way to apply detailed, site-specific science to all situations • Parties change over time • Changes to the external environment --- for example, urbanization • Economic activity impacts the way situations evolve

More Related