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PIPES Act Update

Yesterday, President Obama signed into law the “Protecting our Infrastructure of Pipelines and Enhancing Safety” (PIPES) Act.  This bi-partisan bill was the culmination of efforts by both the Energy and Commerce Committee and the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.  This Act is intended to increase the efficiency and transparency of the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) while enlarging safety inspections and audits of the natural gas pipeline industry.

PIPES focuses on PHMSA almost as much as it focuses on pipelines.  The Act reauthorizes PHMSA’s pipeline safety program for another 4 years.  The Act forces PHMSA to complete the directives it was supposed to complete by 2015, but failed.  PHMSA must now update Congress every 90 days on outstanding statutory mandates.  Additionally, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) will conduct studies into the effectiveness of PHMSA’s integrity management programs.

The Act also focuses on additional inspections and scrutiny for pipelines in coastal areas, marine waters, and the Great Lakes.  These pipelines will now have a new designation of “unusually environmentally sensitive.”  But along with the heightened scrutiny is an effort to help the industry comply with new safety regulations by sharing new technologies that increase safety and protect the environment.

President to Sign New Natural Gas Safety Act

Tuesday night, the U.S. Senate passed the Protecting our Infrastructure of Pipelines and Enhancing Safety Act (PIPES Act).  This bill is now headed to President Obama to be signed into law.  In addition to reauthorizing the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) through FY2019, this soon-to-be law enacts substantive changes in the pipeline industry’s regulatory landscape.

Highlights of Act

  • Increases authority for the Secretary of Transportation to quickly impose restrictions in the event of a serious accident
  • Increases state funding to run more aggressive pipeline inspections
  • Institutes state and federal collaboration on pipeline mapping
  • Insures collaboration between state and federal investigators on regular safety, as well as post-accident, inspections and investigations
  • Assesses PHMSA’s integrity management programs for liquid and natural gas pipelines
  • Provides for greater transparency and publication of reportable releases
  • Contemplates creation of new safety standards for underground natural gas storage facilities with permission for states to go above these standards
  • Creates task force to investigate causes and impacts of the Aliso Canyon natural gas leak
  • Imposes new fees on entities operating underground natural gas storage facilities
  • Increases inspection requirements of specific underwater oil pipelines
  • Mandates research, testing, and publication of innovations in pipeline materials, corrosion prevention, and training
  • Authorizes PHMSA to establish a nationwide database of oversight activities

This bill was originally introduced in the Senate by Nebraska Republican Senator, Deb Fischer, but gained overwhelming bi-partisan support, passing the House with very few amendments and the Senate with unanimous consent.

The Aliso Canyon natural gas leak, the San Bruno and Philadelphia gas explosions and the BP Gulf of Mexico Deep Horizon spill all served to highlight to the U.S. Congress, and its constituents, the inherent dangers that are possible with the exploration, transmission and use of natural gas.  These natural gas accidents coupled with the proliferation of new pipelines serving the recently accessible shale gas in the Northeast, served as a motivation for the PIPES Act.

PHMSA Proposes Significant New Regulations Regarding Transmission and Gathering Pipelines

On March 17, 2016 Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) released a 549 page Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) that significantly changes regulations for transmission lines and imposes regulations on previously unregulated gathering lines carrying, inter alia, natural gas and petroleum products.

Key changes for transmission pipelines include: establishing new materials verification requirements, modifying maximum allowable operating pressure requirements (MAOP), and imposing requirements for verifying MAOP.  PHMSA is also proposing a new classification area, a Moderate Consequence area, which would impose corrosion control, integrity management and assessment, and repair requirements on pipelines outside of High Consequence Areas.  The NPRM also subjects certain in-service natural gas pipelines built prior to 1970 to pressure testing.

All gathering pipelines (determined per a new definition that no longer references American Petroleum Institute Standards) will now face reporting requirements per 49 CFR Part 191 with certain limited reporting process exceptions.  PHMSA has also significantly expanded “regulated gathering lines” to include lines with 8 inch or greater nominal diameter in Class 1 areas (areas with 10 or fewer buildings meant for human occupancy) that have an MAOP that produces a hoop stress of 20 percent or more of specified minimum yield strength (SMYS) for metallic lines, or more than 125 psig for non-metallic lines.  These lines will be classified as Type A, Area 2 lines and regulations will include design and construction specifications for new lines and safety standards and emergency response requirements in Part 192, and drug and alcohol requirements in Part 199 for new and existing lines.  To put the scope of this regulation in perspective, PHMSA officials have stated that an additional 68,749 miles of gathering lines would be “regulated gathering lines” per the new Type A, Area 2 classification, and an additional 275,337 miles of gathering lines would be subject to additional reporting requirements.  See PHMSA Proposes Expanding Regulatory Scope of Gathering Lines, Natural Gas Intelligence, March 21, 2016.

The NPRM is in response to the Pipeline Safety, Regulatory Certainty, and Job Creation Act of 2011.  Section 21 of the Act requires PHMSA to conduct a study of the existing gathering line regulations, report to Congress, and recommend whether any additional laws are needed, analyzing economic impacts, risks, and whether the current exemption from regulation for certain gathering lines should be revoked.  PHMSA completed this study in May of 2015.

In 2011 PHMSA issued an advanced notice of proposed rulemaking with many of the same features regarding regulation of transmission and gathering lines, which did not result in a final rule.  PHMSA has responded to comments on the 2011 ANPRM in the NPRM.  The increased regulation of the NPRM was spurred by the congressional mandates in the Act in response to the San Bruno pipeline explosion in 2011 and the increased use of higher pressure and size gathering lines due to hydraulic fracturing and increased shale production, especially in the Marcellus Shale region.

In Pennsylvania, the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission regulates PHMSA regulated lines and has incorporated 49 CFR Parts 191-193 and 199, including any future amendments at 52 Pa. Code Chapter 59.

Once the NPRM is published in the Federal Register, interested parties will have 60 days to submit comments.