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Pipeline
Engineering
Cost
Approximately $8 billion for construction
of entire system, including Terminal and pump stations, at conclusion of initial
construction period in 1977. Does not include interest on capital investment, or capital
construction after 1977.
Concrete weights
- Pipe coating, river crossings 75,000
lbs. per 40-ft. section
- Saddles, flood plains 18,500 lbs.
each
Mainline crossings
- Animal, elevated, minimum height 10
ft.
- Animal, elevated, number 554
- Animal, buried, number 23
- Animal, buried, refrigerated, location
MP 645 and MP 649
- Bridges
- Pipeline, types and number
- Orthotropic box girder 1
- Plate girder 9
- Suspension 2
- Tied arch 1
- Total 13
- Road, number
- North of Yukon 21
- South of Yukon 23
- Road crossings, refrigerated Glenn
Highway at Glennallen
Design modes
Selection Soil sampling and other
means were used to determine soil types along the route. Where thaw-stable soils were
found, the pipeline was buried in the conventional manner. In areas of thaw-unstable
soils, and where heat from the oil in the pipeline might cause thawing and consequent loss
of soil foundation stability, the pipeline was insulated and elevated above ground by
means of a unique support system.
Basic types and miles of each
- Above-ground 420 mi.
- Conventional below-ground 376 mi.
- Refrigerated below-ground 4 mi.
Description
- Above-ground Specially
designed vertical supports were placed in drilled holes or driven into the ground. In warm
permafrost and other areas where heat might cause undesirable thawing, the supports
contain two each, 2-inch pipes called "heat pipes," containing anhydrous
ammonia, which vaporizes below ground, rises and condenses above-ground, removing ground
heat whenever the ground temperature exceeds the temperature of the air. Heat is
transferred through the walls of the heat pipes to aluminum radiators atop the pipes.
- Conventional below-ground The
pipe is underlain with a layer of fine bedding material and covered with prepared gravel
padding and soil fill material, in a ditch from 8 ft. to 16 ft. deep in most locations,
but up to 49 ft. deep at one location. Zinc ribbons, which serve as sacrificial anodes to
inhibit corrosion of the pipe, are buried alongside the pipeline. The Atigun pipe
replacement section, 8.5 miles in length, has four magnesium ribbon sacrificial anodes
installed. Electrical currents in the earth's surface, called "telluric
currents" and caused by the same phenomenon that generates the Northern Lights, can
be picked up by the pipeline and zinc anodes. The zinc anodes act like grounding rods to
safely return these currents back to the earth, reducing the risk of damage to the
pipeline.
- Special burial, non-refrigerated
In areas of thaw-unstable soils calling for elevated pipeline construction, but where the
pipeline had to be buried for highway, animal crossings, or avoidance of rockslides and
avalanches, the line was insulated, to protect the permafrost from the heat of the
pipeline, and buried.
- Special burial, refrigerated
In some areas the line was insulated and buried in a refrigerated ditch. Refrigeration
plants at each of these points circulate chilled brine through loops of 6 inch diameter
pipe to maintain the soil in a stable frozen condition.
Insulation
- Elevated pipeline, thickness-3.75 in.
- Refrigerated below-ground pipeline,
thickness-3.2 in.
- Under gravel workpad or road-2 in. to 4 in.
(limited areas only)
Gabion & concrete mats
Used in Atigun Floodplain Pipe Replacement
Project for scour protection of the new pipe because less cover on top of new pipe.
- Gabion mats, used 31,750 ft.
- Concrete mats, used 9,525 ft.
Land Ownership
Ownership, entire system, by area:
- Federal government-6.27 sq. mi. approx.
- State government-7.79 sq. mi. approx.
- Private-1.33 sq. mi.
- Owner companies-2.9 sq.
mi.
- Total area-19.29 sq. mi.
Ownership, pipeline only, length
- Federal government- 376 mi. approx.
- State government-344 mi. approx.
- Private-80 mi. approx. (including 51 mi.,
Alaska Native Corp. land)
- Total 800 mi.
Pipeline in municipal jurisdiction, approx.
- Arctic North Slope Borough - 179.2 mi.
- Fairbanks North Star Borough - 89.1 mi.
- City of Delta Junction - 5.5 mi.
- City of Valdez - 20.8 mi.
Linefill
Definition - Amount of oil in pipeline from
PS 1 to Marine terminal.
The linefill is 9,059,057 bbl.
Permanent facilities
Access roads, dimensions 120 ft. to
7.5 mi. long; 28 ft. wide, minimum 3 ft. gravel base.
Access roads, number 225, linking
state roads with pipeline, pump stations and airfields.
Airfields, land status and length
- Federal land subject to and operated under
state leases
- Galbraith Lake 5,200 ft.
- Prospect 5,000 ft.
Pressure Relief Station 1 (PS 5,
reinjects oil drained down for pressure relief, but does not have mainline pumps and does
not boost total stream).
Marine terminal 1 (Valdez).
Pig launching/receiving facilities
3 (PS 1, 4, and Marine Terminal).
Pipe shoes, number 39,000 approx.
Pump stations, operating 11 (10 pump
stations, 1 relief station)
Topping units 3 (PS 6, 8, and 10.
PS 8 and 10 topping units placed in standby, summer 1996. PS6
topping unit placed in standby summer 1997.)
Pipeline Valves, types and number
- Check 81
- Gate 71
- Block
24
- Ball
1
- Total
177
Thermal expansion
Definitions -
Thermal expansion - change in pipe length
due to change in crude oil temperature
Tie-in temperature - actual pipe
temperatures at the time when final welds were made which joined strings of pipe into a
continuous line
Hot position - pipe at maximum oil
temperature (145° F)
Cold position - pipe at minimum steel
temperature
(-60° F) (pre-startup)
Each 40 ft. length of pipe expands .031
inches with each 10° F rise in temperature and contracts the same distance with each
10°F drop in temperature.
Longitudinal expansion of typical 720 ft.
straight above-ground segment from min. tie-in temperature to maximum operating
temperature - 9 inches.
Note: due to anchoring, the pipeline does
not expand lengthwise but shifts laterally on the above-ground supports (See zig zag
configuration , below)
Maximum above-ground lateral movement-
- Tie-in to hot position - 8 ft.
- Tie-in to cold position - 4 ft.
Thermal stress - maximum, 25,000 psi -
where below ground pipeline is fully restrained by the soil, the maximum longitudinal
stress due to change in temperature from pipe temperature at tie-in to maximum oil
temperature
Zig zag Configuration
Above-ground sections of the pipeline are
built in a zig zag configuration to allow for expansion or contraction of the pipe because
of temperature changes. The design also allows for pipeline movement caused by an
earthquake.
Refrigerated Burial of Pipe
![fact_45[1].gif (13271 bytes)](../images/fact_45[1].gif)
VSMs (Vertical Support Members)
Basic data
- Number 78,000
- Diameter 18 in.
- Types 16, to accommodate variety of
soil and permafrost conditions.
Depth at which embedded 15 ft. to 70
ft.
Distance between
- Anchor supports 800 ft. to 1,800 ft.
- Standard supports 60 ft. approx.
Heat pipes, number fitted with
61,000 (122,000 individual heat pipes, 2 per VSM, where fitted)
![fact_49[1].gif (19729 bytes)](../images/fact_49[1].gif)
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