Pipeline coatings improve pipeline safety

New legislation is making pipeline safety the law in California. Three new bills were signed in to law mandating safe practices for the natural gas pipeline industry. In recent years, pipeline accidents have been far too common, negatively impacting many families and communities. These new laws are a huge step in the right direction – towards safety. 

“Better pipeline coatings are just one aspect of overall pipeline safety and health,” said Eric Nenninger, a pipeline specialist at Thomas Industrial Coatings. “Build-quality and inspecting for build-quality is where pipeline safety starts. Accidents often arise from mistakes so minimizing the risk for oversight before we even start coating always creates a better end result.”

While the pipeline industry is unique, it’s also like all other industries – it can never be too safe. Safety is a continual loop that starts with quality construction. A solid pipeline, from pipe walls to welds, needs an equally solid coating. Pipeline coatings help extend the healthy life-cycle for the entire pipeline. Mistakes in the early stages of construction and coating will leave pipeline maintenance on the defense. Ensuring quality from the start leaves room for preventative maintenance, always creating a safer, stronger pipeline.

There have been numerous pipeline failures and resulting explosions that led to the push for this legislation. As noted in this article from PaintSquare, the laws call for simple and clear change.

  • AB-578 requires the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) to adopt gas pipeline safety recommendations made by the NTSB.
  • AB-861 prohibits a public utility from either cutting spending on operations and maintenance or increasing rates to recover expenses that were used to pay executive bonuses.
  • AB-1546 requires the CPUC to adopt performance metrics for pipeline safety and evaluate the state’s gas utilities against those metrics. The commission will be able to levy penalties on the utility for poor performance.

These laws will ultimately result in a safer infrastructure, something everyone will benefit from. Read the full article on the legislation from our friends at PaintSquare.

Naval Base Point Loma tank painting and pipeline coating work detailed for all to see

As industrial painters, we’re unsung heroes. We’re often the partner, the sidekick, even the offensive line that steadily drives a football team up and down the gridiron on any given Sunday. Our work, that of painting and coating a massive structure like a storage tank, often ultimately determines the long-term success of that structure, coating the way for long-term economic value and structural strength. We fight corrosion like there’s no tomorrow, working in the most dangerous of environments.

And often, actually almost always, our work goes completely unnoticed. Don’t get us wrong – we’re okay with that. But when it does get noticed, when our painters, partners and projects do get the attention they so rightfully deserve, we tip our hard-hats in appreciation.

A Project Engineer from a partner company on our tank-coating work out at Naval Base Point Loma in California, started a blog that perfectly captures the day-to-day grandeur of work that most would overlook. That of a massive tank and pipeline initiative.

Other contractors on the project include Nova Group / Underground Construction Company Joint Venture (general contractor), Thomas Industrial Coatings, Murray Builders (subcontractor), Chicago Bridge & Iron (subcontractor), Bighorn Construction, Inc. (subcontractor) and others.

 

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