TRANSCONTINENTAL GAS PIPE LINE COMPANY

gas_transmission Incident —

Incident Information

Report Date
OperatorTRANSCONTINENTAL GAS PIPE LINE COMPANY
Commodity—
Pipeline Typegas_transmission

Location

State
Coordinates28.65391, -91.00142

Cause

CauseCORROSION FAILURE
Subcause—

Casualties

Fatalities0
Injuries0

Costs

Property Damage
Lost Commodity
Public/Private Damage
Emergency Response
Environmental Remediation
Other Costs

Location Map

Incident Narrative

RCA : WE (TRANSCO) RECEIVED A CALL FROM PRODUCER (FIELDWOOD) AT APPROXIMATELY 2:50PM ON 3-18-14 REPORTING THAT THEY SPOTTED BUBBLES COMING FROM PLATFORM SS 182. A HELICOPTER IS DISPATCHED TO LEAK SITE AND THEY PLOT GIVEN COORDINATES. THE LEAK LOCATION IS VERY CONGESTED WITH PRODUCER GATHERING PIPELINES WHICH COMPLICATE OUR INVESTIGATION. WITH THE INFORMATION GATHERED WE DETERMINE THAT IT IS OUR 10"" (SELA) OFFSHORE GATHERING LINE THAT COULD BE LEAKING. A DIVE BOAT IS DISPACHED TO THE LEAK LOCATION. MULTIPLE PRODUCER LINES ARE ISOLATED. 03-21-2014. EXAMINATION BY DIVERS IDENTIFIED AN ISOLATED PINHOLE LEAK AT THE 7 O'CLOCK POSITION ON THE 10"" GATHERING LINE. THE ISOLATED PINHOLE LEAK WITH NO WALL LOSS IS CONFIRMED BY ULTRASONIC TEST READINGS . 03-22-2014 REPAIR CLAMP IS INSTALLED AND THE 10"" GATHERING LINE IS PUT BACK INTO SERVICE. THIS OCCURRENCE SUPPORTS THE LEAK CAUSE IS DUE TO INTERNAL CORROSION; THIS CONCLUSION IS CONSISTENT WITH OUR EXPERIENCE WITH PREVIOUS INCIDENTS OF THIS NATURE. THE LINE IS UN-PIGGABLE, AND IS IN TWO-PHASE WET GAS GATHERING SERVICE. THE LINE IS TREATED WITH CHEMICAL INHIBITORS AND BIOCIDES THROUGH CONTINUOUS INJECTION AND BATCH TREATING. THIS LINE AND SEVERAL OTHERS COMINGLE FLOW TO OUR FACILITY AT MOSQUITO BAY, WHERE WE COLLECT SAMPLES AND MONITOR RESIDUALS. THE CHEMICAL INJECTION EQUIPMENT OPERATION AND CHEMICAL QUANTITIES ARE CHECKED MONTHLY BY OUR FIELD TECHNICIANS. THESE ACTIONS ARE CONSISTENT WITH OUR SOP 20.11.03, WILLIAMS GENERAL INTERNAL CORROSION POLICY

About This Pipeline Incident

Pipeline incident data is reported to the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA). All significant incidents involving fatalities, injuries, or property damage over $50,000 must be reported.

Back to All Incidents More Incidents in