This guest blog post is part of a series written by Edward J. Farmer, PE, author of the new ISA book Detecting Leaks in Pipelines. To read all the posts in this series, scroll to the bottom of this post for the link archive.
Once upon a time I accompanied a home office technical team from the headquarters of a major oil company to investigate some problems and opportunities with an old pipeline running across a southwest desert. This installation had been doing a stellar job for decades with very little investment. It was well-designed and operated in accordance with its original purpose by people who had worked there most of their lives. The home office was interested because of some custody transfer measurement issues that were hard to resolve and some energy consumption data that suggested incredible pumping efficiency.
The first plant we visited was equipped with Foxboro pneumatic chart recorder-controllers and some pressure-actuated switches that controlled valve positions. Everything seemed to be operating in a stable and acceptable manner, and we were assured this was “normal”. One of the guys on the team was a very experienced instrument technician who was intimately familiar with the Foxboro 43-series circular chart recorder-controller. The one he was looking at obviously bothered him, and he noticed the control mechanism was not moving even though the linkage from the sensor was.
He saw something (subsequently described as rust) obstructing the linkage, and he reached in with the tip of a pen and flicked it off. The mechanism quickly adjusted to the match the sensor position, probably for the first time in years. Operators came running out of control room to try to determine why they had just lost flow into about a quarter of the system this equipment supplied. When it was explained that the instrument was mechanically hung up, so it showed a pressure that wasn’t really there, the operators were confused – mostly because that instrument always reported that same pressure.
As it turned out, there were a few similar instrument problems that pointed toward easy resolution of most of the known technical issues, and also suggested some improvements in “observability”. With some investment in maintenance and some new equipment this facility continued to provide the dependable service it always had, but the numbers it produced were different – more believable.
I was a young 20-something instrument and automation consultant at the time and from my time in college I could directly link what we could analyze and control to what we could observe, and as the recorder-controller worked so hard to point out to us, all that depended on the accuracy with which we observed it. That takes us directly into what we need to observe.
Clearly, there must be a measurement, and it must be relevant to the subject process condition. It must be close enough to the point-of-interest so that delays in the measurement process do not introduce first order lags in the flow of control-essential data. Another common issue was the location of pressure or flow instruments in the process associated with a control scheme. When a valve moved, for example, the pressure or flow instrument that observed the change might not see the process change for a considerable amount of time while the process completed re-adjustment. This delay introduced a lag that the control equipment of the day interpreted as “no effect” from the last control input – so the equipment would automatically make another correction, and another, and another. Such control schemes didn’t produce stability, they produced continuous, cyclic adjustment of a period related to the inherent process delay between action and observation.
All this says that to understand something or control something you really have to be able to see it, and usually measure it, in a way that provides enough resolution to enable the underlying picture to be seen – a view of Mona Lisa, not just a blurry sea of blue and cream pixels. Knowing what you need to do starts with knowing where you are. Some indication of how you got there can be useful, and the rapid observability of the effect of changes you make to gain order and optimization can go a long way for providing control and stability.
How to Optimize Pipeline Leak Detection: Focus on Design, Equipment and Insightful Operating Practices
What You Can Learn About Pipeline Leaks From Government Statistics
Is Theft the New Frontier for Process Control Equipment?
What Is the Impact of Theft, Accidents, and Natural Losses From Pipelines?
Can Risk Analysis Really Be Reduced to a Simple Procedure?
Do Government Pipeline Regulations Improve Safety?
What Are the Performance Measures for Pipeline Leak Detection?
What Observations Improve Specificity in Pipeline Leak Detection?
Three Decades of Life with Pipeline Leak Detection
How to Test and Validate a Pipeline Leak Detection System
Does Instrument Placement Matter in Dynamic Process Control?
Condition-Dependent Conundrum: How to Obtain Accurate Measurement in the Process Industries
Are Pipeline Leaks Deterministic or Stochastic?
How Differing Conditions Impact the Validity of Industrial Pipeline Monitoring and Leak Detection Assumptions
How Does Heat Transfer Affect Operation of Your Natural Gas or Crude Oil Pipeline?
Why You Must Factor Maintenance Into the Cost of Any Industrial System
Raw Beginnings: The Evolution of Offshore Oil Industry Pipeline Safety
How Long Does It Take to Detect a Leak on an Oil or Gas Pipeline?
Book Excerpt + Author Q&A: Detecting Leaks in Pipelines
About the Author
Edward Farmer has more than 40 years of experience in the “high tech” part of the oil industry. He originally graduated with a bachelor of science degree in electrical engineering from California State University, Chico, where he also completed the master’s program in physical science. Over the years, Edward has designed SCADA hardware and software, practiced and written extensively about process control technology, and has worked extensively in pipeline leak detection. He is the inventor of the Pressure Point Analysis® leak detection system as well as the Locator® high-accuracy, low-bandwidth leak location system. He is a Registered Professional Engineer in five states and has worked on a broad scope of projects worldwide. His work has produced three books, numerous articles, and four patents. Edward has also worked extensively in military communications where he has authored many papers for military publications and participated in the development and evaluation of two radio antennas currently in U.S. inventory. He is a graduate of the U.S. Marine Corps Command and Staff College. He is the owner and president of EFA Technologies, Inc., manufacturer of the LeakNet family of pipeline leak detection products.