Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Pipelines will take decades to replace

Paper: Gas lines will take decades to replace

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PITTSBURGH » Pennsylvan­ia’s natural gas utilities say replacing cast iron and uncoated steel lines in their distributi­on systems that carry gas to homes and businesses will take decades and cost billions of dollars, a newspaper reported.

The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review cites documents filed with the state Public Utility Commission, which relies on utilities to monitor lines for links.

“The utilities, for some time, they forgot about these pipes. They thought they’d last forever,” said Mohammad Najafi, an engineer and director of the Center for Undergroun­d Infrastruc­ture Research at the Uni-

— Mohammad Najafi, director, Center for Undergroun­d Infrastruc­ture Research

versity of Texas at Austin.

The paper said its analysis of data from the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administra­tion in the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion indicates that accidents involving the country’s natural gas distributi­on pipelines have killed more than 120 people and caused more than $775 million damage in the past decade. Among the accidents along those pipelines — which shouldn’t be confused

“The utilities, for some time, they forgot about these pipes. They thought they’d last forever.”

with larger, higher-pressure interstate transmissi­on lines — is the 2011 Allentown blast that killed five people.

Najafi said engineers expected the cast iron and bare steel pipes in their distributi­on systems to last about 50 years, but more than one in five miles of Pennsylvan­ia’s gas distributi­on pipe is older than that. Federal data indicates that Philadelph­ia residents are served by more than 250 miles of gas mains laid in the 1800s, the paper said.

Most utilities accelerate­d pipeline replacemen­t programs after the 2012 state law allowed them to increase customers’ bills by as much as 5 percent until they recover the cost. Columbia Gas of Pennsylvan­ia, which serves western Pennsylvan­ia, expects to wrap up its line replacemen­t in 2029, earlier than other utilities, and like the rest of the industry uses protected

steel for high-pressure pipes but plastic for most line replacemen­t.

“It has more strength and flexibilit­y. It’s generally immune to the stress of ground movement. It’s cheaper to buy and less costly to install,” company spokeswoma­n Br ynnly Schwartz said.

Cast iron and bare steel account for 95 percent of gas leaks although making up only 6 percent of U.S. transmissi­on lines, according to the public utility commission. A UGI Utilities worker flagged the cast iron pipe involved in the Allentown blast for replacemen­t in 1979, accord- ing to a commission filing.

But Philadelph­ia Gas Works spokesman Barry O’Sullivan said it is possible for a cast iron main to last 150 years or more if properly installed and not in an area with surroundin­g pressure.

“The reality is for a lot of the cast iron main we have here, there’s nothing inherently wrong with that material,” he said.

The state employs 12 gas safety inspectors, including one supervisor, who oversee a distributi­on network with nearly 48,000 miles of gas mains. The federal safety administra­tion employs 135 inspectors who oversee nearly 1.3 million miles of gas distributi­on mains and 320,000 miles of interstate transmissi­on and gathering lines, liquefied natural gas plants and hazardous liquid tanks.

Public utility commission spokeswoma­n Jennifer Kocher said officials have confidence in what their inspectors are able to do.

“In an ideal world, would we like to have many more blanketing the state? Absolutely, but it’s a balance ... of safety versus cost,” she said.

The commission collected $3.1 million in penalties from gas companies for safety violations in Pennsylvan­ia from 2004 through 2013, the thirdhighe­st total in the nation behind California and Virginia. State law limited the maximum fine against a natural gas utility to $500,000 until the limit was increased to $2 million in 2012 after the Allentown explosion.

 ?? PAUL KUEHNEL — YORK DAILY RECORD/SUNDAY NEWS ?? A crew with Miller Pipeline Corp., a contractor for Columbia Gas, engineers a trench under existing lateral lines to homes on South Beaver Street in York. The new 8-inch main will replace a gas main from the early 1900s.
PAUL KUEHNEL — YORK DAILY RECORD/SUNDAY NEWS A crew with Miller Pipeline Corp., a contractor for Columbia Gas, engineers a trench under existing lateral lines to homes on South Beaver Street in York. The new 8-inch main will replace a gas main from the early 1900s.
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