Richard
Williams lived in an historic home in Shreveport, Louisiana. The home – and the
cast iron natural gas main supplying the home – were built in 1911. The pipe
cracked in 2016, allowing the gas to accumulate in a storage shed behind the
home. Williams investigated a strong odor of gas in his backyard – with a lit
cigar in his mouth – and the subsequent explosion killed him (Wooten &
Korte, 2018).
An Internet
search will reveal numerous natural gas explosions which have occurred over the
last few decades as a result of ancient and faulty pipes. Since 1990,
approximately 264 people have died due to natural gas accidents (Wooten &
Korte, 2018).
In 1991, the
U.S. Department of Transportation’s Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety
Administration began a program to mandate pipeline operators to replace cast
iron natural gas pipes and to protect existing pipes from excavation. This has
been a slow process because “the work is expensive, often difficult, and
sometimes perilous” (Wooten & Korte, 2018).
Richard
Williams and his neighbors had complained for a year about a terrible gas smell
in the neighborhood. When Centerpoint Energy finally came out and fixed the
service line which was connected to the gas main and the meter, they neglected
to fill in the hole they had dug. The pipe began to leak again, and this was
later attributed to “improper backfill” (Wooten & Korte, 2018) of the hole.
Williams’ brother, a lawyer, contends that Centerpoint Energy and the city of
Shreveport are at fault because they “were negligent in maintaining the gas
pipes . . . [and it was] Centerpoint’s choice not to remove dangerous cast iron
pipes from its system, even though Centerpoint knew just how deadly they were”
(Wooten & Korte, 2018).
According to
the United States Department of Transportation’s Pipeline and Hazardous
Materials Safety Administration, “10% of the incidents occurring on gas
distribution mains involved cast iron mains . . . [even though] only 2% of
distribution mains are cast iron” (U.S. Department of Transportation, 2020).
Why are cast
iron pipes so dangerous? Cast iron is vulnerable to graphitization, which makes
the metal more brittle. Any kind of earth movement can cause the pipe to crack
and start leaking. Furthermore, “cast iron pipelines were linked using bell and
spigot joints with packing material stuffed in the bell to form a gas tight
seal” (U.S. Department of Transportation, 2020). When dry gas replaced wet
manufactured gas, the packing material dried out, causing leakage. Operators
have used clamping and encapsulation to repair these joint leaks, but repairs
do not solve the problem. Cast iron pipes – and other ancient pipes – need to
be replaced altogether (U.S. Department of Transportation, 2020).
According to
Wooten and Korte, “more than 53,000 miles of natural gas mains were built
before 1940 . . . Decades of freezing and thawing, corrosion, vibration, and
shifting soil can eat away at the cast iron and untreated steel pipes that were
once the state of the art in natural gas distribution” (Wooten & Korte,
2018).
Other causes
can include excavations by workers or homeowners; incorrectly installed pipes;
incorrectly jointed pipes – and it can take years for the problem to become
apparent and reach crisis dimensions. Approximately 85,000 miles of cast iron
pipes and bare-steel pipes remain in service, posing a hidden danger to humans
and structures alike (Wooten & Korte, 2018).
U.S.
Department of Transportation. (2020). Cast and wrought iron inventory.
Retrieved from
https://www.phmsa.dot.gov/data-and-statistics/pipeline-replacement/cast-and-wrought-iron-
inventory/
Wooten, N. & Korte, G. (2018, November). Pipeline
peril: Natural gas explosions reveal silent
danger
lurking in old cast iron pipes. Shreveport Times. Retrieved from
https://www.shreveporttimes.com/story/news/2018/11/10/pipeline-peril-natural-gas-
explosions-reveal-silent-danger-lurking-old-cast-iron-pipes/1924228002
Dawn Pisturino, RN
November 17, 2020
Copyright 2020 - 2021 Dawn Pisturino. All Rights Reserved.
Thomas Edison State University
NOTE: This is the kind of national infrastructure that Joe Biden and the Democrats should be concentrating on instead of playing politics with people's lives and spending trillions of dollars on nonsensical wish list projects.
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