How are leaks detected on today's oil and gas pipelines?
Often times they're found – not by the owners and operators of the pipelines – but by complaining landowners who live where the pipeline crosses.
It’s true, says Dr. David Shaw, one of the authors of a draft “Leak Detection Study” prepared for the U.S. Department of Transportation, for a report that will go to the US Congress early in 2013.
Dr. Shaw is a project engineer with independent consulting firm Kiefner & Associates, Inc., a high-end, Ohio-based consulting firm that specializes in pipeline engineering.
Read more: http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/The-Report-That-Could-Effect-Huge-Change-in-the-Pipeline-Industry.html
Often times they're found – not by the owners and operators of the pipelines – but by complaining landowners who live where the pipeline crosses.
It’s true, says Dr. David Shaw, one of the authors of a draft “Leak Detection Study” prepared for the U.S. Department of Transportation, for a report that will go to the US Congress early in 2013.
Dr. Shaw is a project engineer with independent consulting firm Kiefner & Associates, Inc., a high-end, Ohio-based consulting firm that specializes in pipeline engineering.
Read more: http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/The-Report-That-Could-Effect-Huge-Change-in-the-Pipeline-Industry.html
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