Tennessee Gas Pipeline


Tennessee Gas Pipeline is a set of natural gas pipelines that run from the Texas and Louisiana coast through Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio, and Pennsylvania to deliver natural gas in West Virginia, New Jersey, New York, and New England. The long system is operated by the Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company, a subsidiary of Kinder Morgan. It is one of the largest pipeline systems in the United States. Its FERC code is 9. TGP's PHMSA pipeline operator i.d. is 19160.

History

The first pipeline was constructed by Tennessee Gas Transmission Company beginning in 1943. TGT-owner Tenneco eventually sold off this pipeline to El Paso Corporation which held it until 2012, when Kinder Morgan bought El Paso Corporation.

Expansion projects

In 2014, Kinder Morgan proposed Northeast Energy Direct Project, a new branch of of greenfield pipeline to move natural gas from Pennsylvania to Wright, New York and of greenfield pipeline to Dracut, Massachusetts.
The Kinder Morgan proposal met with immediate resistance from local and state officials, conservation organizations, and more than twenty Massachusetts towns that the proposed pipeline would cross. Public and environmental safety was the primary concern, due to TGP's history of pipeline accidents. The pipeline route was heavily debated amid complaints about eminent domain and widespread refusal of Kinder Morgan's requests to survey the route. The proposed route would cross land that is heavily wooded with sensitive eco-systems, conservation lands, wildlife reserves, state parks, farmland, towns, and the Connecticut River.
KM proposed that "approximately 91% of the NED Market Path Component would be co-located along existing utility corridors/adjacent to TGP mainline. The total project would be 82% co-located." An alternative would be to follow the Massachusetts Turnpike highway system from western Massachusetts into Boston.
Supporters claimed that the pipeline would have positive impacts. "The pipeline is not only a pipeline for natural gas, but it is a pipeline for new construction and jobs." KM claimed, "NED helps sustain electric grids, reduce emissions, lower energy costs and spur economic growth region-wide." The new pipeline would "bring up to of natural gas from the Marcellus shale fields to New England and Canadian markets." The planned pipeline was roughly long and would be in diameter. The design would include "large, powerful compressor stations."
Detractors pointed out the safety issues involved with locating a high-volume, high-pressure gas transmission pipeline through towns and near neighborhoods that would be within the explosion blast zone of a leak. In the Duckworth - Eiber Report, researchers showed that many gas transmission pipelines are dangerously close to homes and schools.
Ultimately the NED project was shelved due to a shortage of enough customers to justify an increased natural gas supply in New England.

Significant Incidents Reported

From 2006 to 2017, according to Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration failure reports, TGP had 111 "significant incidents" with their pipelines, resulting in $89,815,380 in property damage and 19 federal enforcement actions.
A "significant incident" results in any of the following consequences:
From 2006 to 2017, 27 federal enforcement actions were initiated against TGP, with $422,500 in penalties. Federal inspectors were onsite at TGP locations for 661 days plus 187 days of accident investigations.
From 2006 to 2017, faulty infrastructure caused most of TGP's onshore gas transmission pipeline accidents. Corrosion, equipment malfunctions, manufacturing defects, faulty welds, and incorrect installation together accounted for 56% of leaks and more than $90 million in property damage.
Failures may be escalating as pipelines age. In the listings below, note the age of pipes that failed.

Accidents

According to PHMSA, Tennessee Gas Pipeline had at least 257 significant failures from 1986 to 2017. This number does not include the less notable accidents that did not meet the criteria for reporting. The incidents below are merely a representative sample.