Title: Regulation of Pipelines
1Regulation of Pipelines
- Pipeline Safety Trust Conference
- Denise Hamsher
- November 2006
2Forget the Term Unregulated
- Environmental Protection Agency
- Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
- Mineral Management Service
- Occupational Safety and Health Administration
- Department of Transportation, Pipeline and
Hazardous Materials Administration - State Utility Commissions
- State Pipeline Safety Offices
- State Department of Natural Resources
- State Environmental Agencies
- U.S. Fish and Wildlife
- U.S. Forest Service
- U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
- the list goes on..
3FERC Regulation of Onshore Pipelines
- Natural Gas
- Legislation Natural Gas Act of 1938, Natural Gas
Policy Act of 1978 and Energy Policy Act of 2005 - FERC oversight clarified in case history
- Import and export
- Rates and terms of service for pipelines in
interstate commerce - Construction and abandonment of service
- System of accounts and records
- Code of conduct for affiliates
- Liquid Petroleum
- Legislation Hepburn Act made oil pipelines
subject to Interstate Commerce Act - Energy Policy Act of 1992
- oil pipeline rates now indexed, unless rate case,
negotiated or market-based rates filed - Rates and terms of service for common carrier oil
pipelines in interstate commerce
Note offshore pipelines may differ Oil
pipelines include crude oil, refined products,
etc.
4Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety
AdministrationOnshore
- Pipeline Safety Act as amended through periodic
reauthorization of Act - Regulations issued in 49 CFR Part 190-199
- Scope regulation depends on function
- Incident reporting
- Operator qualification
- Design and abandonment
- Operation, maintenance and testing
- Integrity management programs
- Drug and alcohol prevention program
- Some differences between natural gas and liquid
petroleum pipeline regulations
5Gathering PipelinesHow FERC and PHMSA regulate
- FERCs primary function test
- Natural Gas Act exempts gathering but does not
define it - Defined in extensive case history
- Numerous factors considered
- Length, diameter and operating pressure
- Extension beyond central point in the field
- Geographic configuration
- Location of wells, compressors and processing
- Gas quality
- The entity involved
- Crude oil not exempted under Interstate Commerce
Act - Short distance typically exempted, otherwise case
specific - Also subject to state regulation and oversight
6Gathering PipelinesHow FERC and PHMSA regulate
- PHSMA
- Gas Gathering (49 CFR Part 192)
- Defined in new regulations, adopts API 80
- Clarifies producer exemption
- Refocuses on populated areas (HCA) versus
government municipal boundaries - Liquid Gathering (49 CFR Part 195)
- Existing definitions 8? inches
- Proposed rulemaking re-focuses on HCA rather than
municipal boundaries - New rules focus on highest risks (damage and
corrosion) - Also subject to state regulation and oversight
7Who Regulates What?
Local distribution company lines
Natural gas transmission or main line
Underground storage
Underground steel storage
Gas plant
Industrial users
LPG distribution
Oil and gas gathering lines
Oil products line
Gathering stations
Products terminals
Crude oil trunk or main line
Refining center
Courtesy of Meisner and Leffer
8CommerceFERC and State Utility Commissions
FERC regulates oil or gas pipelines in interstate
commerce
States regulate intrastate transmission
pipelines, LDC service, rates and some oversight
of gathering (varies)
9SafetyFederal Pipeline Safety
States can and do expand regulation of intrastate
pipeline and local distribution
Gathering Was municipal boundaries (now HCAs)
Production facilities exempt from federal
pipeline safety legislation where production
ends is the issue
10Environmental Regulation
- Building new pipelines
- Host of federal and state environmental
requirements/permits to protect waterways,
wetlands, agriculture, threatened and endangered
species, cultural resources - Examples U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, State
Public Utility Commission, State DNR, U.S. Forest
Service, Tribal Councils - FERC is lead role in EIS or EA for interstate gas
pipelines - Lead role for liquid pipelines or intrastate gas
vary - U.S. State Department if crossing international
border - Operations
- Various facility emission permits
- Spills reporting and remediation
- Disposal of hazardous waste such as solvents used
to clean
11Incident ReportingFederal and State Requirements
- Federal
- Notification to National Response Center of major
incidents - Notification and alert system not reporting
system - Reporting to PHMSA
- State
- In addition to federal requirements
- Varies depending on state
- Requires reporting of incidents and environmental
spills - Local
- All first responders
- Alert to local and regional supply interruptions
12Worker Safety and Training
- Occupational Health and Safety Administration
- Worker and contractor safety
- Construction and work practices
- E.g. trenching, exposure to hazardous vapors,
working in confined spaces, etc. - Worker and emergency responder training for
hazardous material and petroleum spills - PHMSA
- Operator qualification rules
13Security
- Department of Homeland Security oversight
- Regulations for pipelines and storage pending
- Meanwhile, various local, state and federal
agencies have worked with companies to develop
and test plans - DHS consultation with PHMSA
14Whether commercial, pipeline, worker safety or
environmental regulation, there is extensive
federal and state oversight
Thank you