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Coverage of energy that moves beyond polarized arguments and emotional debate to explore the points of tension, the tradeoffs and opportunities, and the very human consequences of energy policy, production, use and innovation.Inside Energy is a collaboration of seven public media outlets in the nation's energy epicenter: Colorado, Wyoming and North Dakota.

For Pipeline Health, Industry Believes In The Power Of The Pig

Stephanie Joyce
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Wyoming Public Media
A "smart pig" used to inspect the Belle Fourche pipeline.

The pipeline tool known as a pig is versatile. In the 1971 James Bond film Diamonds Are Forever, Bond used a pig to blow up a pipeline. In 1987’s The Living Daylights, defecting Soviet spy Georgi Koskov used a pig as an escape route. Again in 1999’s The World Is Not Enough, a pig was used to smuggle a nuclear weapon.

Pigs aren't just excellent James Bond plot devices, they also have practical applications.

Pigs are used for cleaning pipelines that carry natural gas, crude oil, or waste water from energy producing areas to the places where that energy is used. Perhaps more importantly, they are used to inspect the millions of miles of pipeline that crisscross the country for corrosion and other problems.

Credit Karen Roe / Flickr - Creative Commons
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Flickr - Creative Commons
The prop pig James Bond used in 'The Living Daylights' to secret a defector over the border and out of the U.S.S.R.

That's what engineer Sean King was using a pig for on a blustery March morning at the True Company tank farm just outside of Guernsey, Wyoming.

By the time I arrived, the long, snaking metal instrument, equipped with a host of precision sensors for detecting things like dents and corrosion, was already in the pipeline. The only visible part was the very tail end, sticking out of the 'pig launcher' -- an aboveground entrance to the pipeline. King explained that pigs are so named because the early ones "were basically a tube that had wire wrapped around them, and when they went through the pipe, it sounded like a pig squealing.”

The project for the day was to pig a 12-mile section of the Belle Fourche pipeline, between Guernsey and Fort Laramie. Although there was nothing obviously wrong with the 40-something-year-old pipeline, King explained it was due for its federally mandated 5-year checkup.

"We have the National Historic Site with Fort Laramie and we have the river in Fort Laramie, so you can only imagine what would happen if there was a problem,” he trailed off.

"When they went through the pipe, it sounded like a pig squealing."

Of the country's 2.6 million of pipelines, only those in areas deemed 'high consequence,' get pigged on a regular basis. That ends up being less than half of hazardous liquids pipelines and less than 10 percent of natural gas lines.

Carl Weimer with the industry watchdog Pipeline Safety said pigging lines is only helpful to a point.

“It’s a pretty good technology, but it’s very dependent on the company using it correctly,” he said, and pipeline companies have a lot of latitude in how they use pigs.

The federal agency which regulates pipeline safety, the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, declined repeated interview requests for this story. But as Weimer explains, the agency mostly leaves things up to the companies.

“The [companies] do the inspections, they run the gadgets through the pipelines that find problems," Wiemer he said. "And then the federal inspectors will go into their office and inspect that paperwork to see if they’ve followed their own plans for keeping things safe.”

Credit Stephanie Joyce / Wyoming Public Media
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Wyoming Public Media
The "pig trap" for a pipeline at a tank farm in Guernsey, Wyoming.

Inspectors also review the pigging data and occasionally do site visits. But with 2.6 million miles of pipelines in the ground and a combined total of just about 500 state and federal inspectors, safety advocates like Weimer worry problems might be slipping through the cracks -- especially as companies race to build new pipelines to build new pipelines to handle booming domestic oil production.

One pipeline executive at a recent industry conference pointed out that producers have their foot on the gas pedal, and are counting on "midstream" companies to lay the track in front of the train. It's that kind of metaphor that Weimer worries about.

“The federal inspectors went out a few years ago, when the boom started, and did some some on-the-ground inspections," Weimer said. "And they were kind of aghast at what they found going into the ground.”

They found shoddy welding, poor quality pipe and inadequate coating, to name a few things.

Those are problems that Sean King, the engineer at the True Company tank farm, is hoping not to find on the decades-old Belle Fourche pipeline. The pig probably will find some corrosion or other problems in the millions of data points it collects, and those problems will need to be acted on. King said they'll probably end up digging up and repairing half a dozen sections of pipeline based on the testing, but he acknowledges there are limitations to any test.

What happens when those problems aren't found?

“I don't think there's ever been a pipeline company out there that's never dropped a drop of oil on the ground, it's kind of inevitable,” he said.

With half a million miles of new pipeline planned for the next two decades, those spills are only likely to increase.

Inside Energy is a public media collaboration, based in Colorado, Wyoming and North Dakota, focusing on the energy industry and its impacts.

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