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Effective Risk Management for In Service Pipelines: Achieving ALARP by Pressure Management and Slab Protection

conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-03, 12:32 authored by Francis Carroll, Jan HayesJan Hayes
In Australia (and the UK), pipeline operating companies have a regulatory obligation to ensure that their assets are designed, constructed, operated and maintained so that risk to people and the environment is as low as reasonably practicable (ALARP). In many routine cases, demonstration that risk is ALARP is a matter of compliance with relevant technical standards. There are some cases, however, that are more complex. If a pipeline has been subject to significant urban encroachment and does not conform to current design standards for this service, how does a pipeline operator decide whether risk controls are sufficient? In Australia, rather than either 'grandfathering' requirements or mandating retrospective compliance with new standards, operators are required to ensure pipelines are safe and that risk levels are acceptable. The answer in cases such as this is a matter of judgment and we have legal, moral and reputational responsibilities to get decisions such as this right. There is currently no formal requirement in the US for pipeline risks to be ALARP, although the concept is gradually being introduced to US industry safety law. Examples include US offshore well control rules, California refinery safety regulations and the nuclear sector concept of 'as low as reasonably achievable'. In this paper, we demonstrate application of the ALARP process to a case study pipeline built in the 1960s that has been heavily encroached by urban development. The Australian risk-based approach required formal ALARP assessment including consideration of options to reduce pressure, relocate or replace the pipeline, or increase the level of physical or procedural protection. [truncated due to field restriction]

History

Start page

1

End page

10

Total pages

10

Outlet

Proceedings of the 12th International Pipeline Conference (IPC 2018)

Name of conference

IPC 2018: Building the Future Now: Volume 2

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery

Place published

United States

Start date

2018-09-24

End date

2018-09-28

Language

English

Copyright

Copyright © 2018 by ASME

Former Identifier

2006088390

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2019-02-21

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