improvements to the national pipeline mapping system

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U.S. Department of Transportation Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration Improvements to the National Pipeline Mapping System Amy Nelson, GIS Manager US DOT PHMSA

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Improvements to the National Pipeline Mapping System. Amy Nelson, GIS Manager US DOT PHMSA. Introduction: 1998. What hasn’t changed since 1998?. The data the NPMS collects. 1998: NPMS data standards were written. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Improvements to the  National Pipeline Mapping System

U.S. Department of TransportationPipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration

Improvements to the National Pipeline Mapping

System

Amy Nelson, GIS ManagerUS DOT PHMSA

Page 2: Improvements to the  National Pipeline Mapping System

U.S. Department of TransportationPipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration

Introduction: 1998

Page 3: Improvements to the  National Pipeline Mapping System

U.S. Department of TransportationPipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration

What hasn’t changed since 1998?

The data the NPMS collects.

Page 4: Improvements to the  National Pipeline Mapping System

U.S. Department of TransportationPipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration

1998: NPMS data standards were written

• The NPMS (National Pipeline Mapping System) is PHMSA’s program of collecting geospatial data from pipeline operators, analyzing the data, and disseminating it

• 1998 Standards reflected the state of GIS and GPS at the time

• Optional submissions began in 2000/2001; attributes collected were minimal, to encourage operators to submit

• Only 6 months for operators to submit after PSIA 2002; PHMSA opted not to change data standards

• As years go by and technology advances, the deficiencies in PHMSA’s dataset become more apparent

Page 5: Improvements to the  National Pipeline Mapping System

U.S. Department of TransportationPipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration

Reauthorization MandatesPHMSA’s reauthorization stated:• PHMSA must promote greater awareness of the NPMS• The Secretary may collect additional geospatial dataResult: PHMSA is drafting an Information Collection to obtain the data it needs to perform its mission• Will aid mission goals of safety, environmental stewardship,

reliability, and assisting emergency responders and government officials

Page 6: Improvements to the  National Pipeline Mapping System

U.S. Department of TransportationPipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration

IC OverviewThe upcoming Information Collection will expand the data that operators submit to the NPMS and will modify some existing submission elements• Positional accuracy will be tightened• Additional pipeline attributes will be collected• Pipeline-related facility data will be collected• LNG plant submissions will have additional attributes• Breakout tank submissions will be mandatory

Page 7: Improvements to the  National Pipeline Mapping System

U.S. Department of TransportationPipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration

IC Timeline• Federal Register notice will be published in fall 2013• 60 day comment period will follow• Final notice expected in 2014• Operator submissions of the new data will begin in 2015 at

the earliest• Security implications of new data will be discussed with

TSA; it’s unlikely most new data will appear on public portion of NPMS website

Page 8: Improvements to the  National Pipeline Mapping System

U.S. Department of TransportationPipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration

Meeting mission goals• The Information Collection will strengthen PHMSA’s ability

to accurately identify, regulate, and respond to emergencies for pipelines, LNG plants, and breakout tanks

• PHMSA’s ability to evaluate risk for a pipeline will be improved by obtaining basic information about that pipe, such as coating, SMYS, and MAOP

• Improved positional accuracy will assist emergency responders as well as PHMSA staff and stakeholders in accurately locating the pipe, especially in densely pipelined areas

• Key PHMSA datasets refer to features not in the GIS; they cannot be analyzed geospatially

Page 9: Improvements to the  National Pipeline Mapping System

U.S. Department of TransportationPipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration

Current 500 foot positional accuracy

Dozens of lines are in the 500 foot radius!

Page 10: Improvements to the  National Pipeline Mapping System

U.S. Department of TransportationPipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration

Referencing data the NPMS does not have

From PHMSA’s Pipeline Datamart

Pump/Compressor stations

Diameter

Page 11: Improvements to the  National Pipeline Mapping System

U.S. Department of TransportationPipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration

Process of defining data needs• Gathered requirements from all levels of PHMSA to

understand organizational/mission needs• Reviewed currently collected data and identified

deficiencies• Interviewed five operators about their GIS data; thanks are

due to– Nisource– Marathon– National Grid– Colonial– Access Midstream

• Spoke with current and former industry employees

Page 12: Improvements to the  National Pipeline Mapping System

U.S. Department of TransportationPipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration

Simplifying Annual Reports• Over the past 10 years, PHMSA has made several attempts

to replace AR data with NPMS submissions• PHMSA does not want to collect duplicate data• Our goal: data in the NPMS will replace data currently

collected through Annual Reports• Should streamline operator’s annual report preparation and

result in time savings after the initial submission– Easier and faster reporting for operators. Better quality

and more precise data for all.

Page 13: Improvements to the  National Pipeline Mapping System

U.S. Department of TransportationPipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration

How PHMSA will use the new data

• Aid government and industry in promoting public awareness of hazardous liquid and gas pipelines and improving emergency responder outreach.

• Permit more powerful and accurate tabular and geospatial analysis which will strengthen PHMSA’s decision support, regulations, and program evaluation.

• Strengthen the effectiveness of PHMSA’s pipeline risk assessment models.

• Allow for more effective assistance to emergency responders by providing them with a more reliable, complete dataset of pipelines and associated data.

• Provide better support to PHMSA’s inspectors by providing more accurate pipeline locations and additional pipeline-related geospatial data which can be linked to tabular data in PHMSA’s inspection database.

Page 14: Improvements to the  National Pipeline Mapping System

U.S. Department of TransportationPipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration

[email protected]

202-493-0591