pipeline safety

14
Pipeline Safety New Orleans Nov. 18, 2011 Getting to Zero

Upload: maleah

Post on 23-Feb-2016

88 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Getting to Zero. Pipeline Safety. New Orleans Nov. 18, 2011. Not Waiting to be Told: Oil Pipeline Industry Improvement Efforts November 18, 2011 New Orleans, La . Environmental and Safety Gains Since ‘90s, a record of coordinated, focused improvements - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Pipeline Safety

Pipeline Safety

New OrleansNov. 18, 2011

Getting to Zero

Page 2: Pipeline Safety

Not Waiting to be Told:Oil Pipeline Industry Improvement Efforts

November 18, 2011

New Orleans, La.

Page 3: Pipeline Safety

Environmental and Safety Gains

• Since ‘90s, a record of coordinated, focused improvements

• Data tracked and priorities adjusted • Pipeline Performance Tracking System

• Real progress made; the numbers show …

Page 4: Pipeline Safety

Reduced Spills, Volumes(3-Year Average Ending in Year Shown)

We ask ourselves: Is this a trend reversal, or a temporary plateau?

Page 5: Pipeline Safety

Getting to Zero• Industry leadership – get the curves

headed in the right direction

• Two dozen areas of improvement identified

• The good news: most initiatives already under way

• Seven Areas identified for more intense focus and development by Executive and Subject-Matter Experts

Page 6: Pipeline Safety

R&D / Enhanced Technology

• Pipeline Research Council International• Individual company efforts significant –

better coordination• Assessing gaps and improving funding• Renewing focus on results that can be

implemented and make a difference• Priorities are:

Enhanced damage detection Improve ILI capabilities ID and repair ERW seam defects Leak detection and data integration

Page 7: Pipeline Safety

Leak Detection

• First focus on the large failures – Recognition– Response– Reporting

• Enhance systems to prioritize SCADA notifications/alerts

• Continue efforts to detect small releases

Page 8: Pipeline Safety

Enhanced Data Integration

• Develop industry approach for consistent data generation, collection, processing, integration

• Promote efficient and effective decision-making

• Provide means for sharing learnings from data combinations

• Identify and address high risk issues

Page 9: Pipeline Safety

Shared Practices & Learnings

• Build on what is already working– API Pipeline Conference– Pipeline Information Exchange (PIX)– PPTS Advisories

• Partner with gas industry to see how other industries learn from each other

• Develop real-time learning platform• Promote learnings beyond workshops • More peer-to-peer learning• Employee and contractor safety –

mirror PPTS approach

Page 10: Pipeline Safety

Damage Prevention• Excavation damage is leading cause of

death and injury • Develop model One Call provisions • Promote strong damage prevention laws

and enforcement • Engage directly with excavator groups • Develop education materials for other

stakeholder groups • Coordinate efforts and learnings with

Common Ground Alliance (CGA)

Page 11: Pipeline Safety

Strategic Planning

• Structured approach to focus on the right things– Plan today to be working on

tomorrow’s problems

• Develop a sustainable process• Include input from key

stakeholders • Prioritize and coordinate

improvement efforts

Page 12: Pipeline Safety

External Communications

• Communicate Industry challenges, successes, progress, and plans

• Listen - understand the perspectives, concerns, and ideas of others

• Discuss solutions with other stakeholders

• Improve responsiveness to concerns • Sustained versus intermittent

communications with stakeholders

Page 13: Pipeline Safety

In Conclusion …• Our intention … – Don’t wait to be told; lead ourselves to further

improvement– Avoid merely reacting to regulations and

recent events

• Our goal …– Achieve real, measurable, sustainable

reduction in spills and injuries – Drive to zero

• Our plan …– Be focused– Listen and adjust - Look forward to more

interactions with PST and others who put pipeline safety first

Page 14: Pipeline Safety