Paul W. Parfomak
Specialist in Energy and Infrastructure Policy
Nearly half a million
miles of pipeline transporting natural gas, oil, and other hazardous liquids crisscross
the United States. While an efficient and fundamentally safe means of
transport, many pipelines carry materials with the potential to cause
public injury and environmental damage. The nation’s pipeline networks are
also widespread and vulnerable to accidents and terrorist attack. Recent
pipeline accidents in Marshall, MI, San Bruno, CA, Allentown, PA, and Laurel,
MT, have heightened congressional concern about pipeline risks and drawn
criticism from the National Transportation Safety Board. Both government
and industry have taken numerous steps to improve pipeline safety and
security over the last 10 years. Nonetheless, while many stakeholders agree
that federal pipeline safety programs have been on the right track, the spate
of recent pipeline incidents suggest there continues to be significant
room for improvement. Likewise, the threat of terrorist attack remains a
concern.
The federal pipeline safety program is authorized through the fiscal year
ending September 30, 2015, under the Pipeline Safety, Regulatory
Certainty, and Job Creation Act of 2011 (P.L. 112-90) which was signed by
President Obama on January 3, 2012. The act contains a broad range of provisions
addressing pipeline safety and security. Among the most significant are
provisions that could increase the number of federal pipeline safety
inspectors, require automatic shutoff valves for transmission pipelines,
mandate verification of maximum allowable operating pressure for gas transmission
pipelines, increase civil penalties for pipeline safety violations, and mandate
reviews of diluted bitumen pipeline regulation. The Transportation
Security Administration Authorization Act of 2011 (H.R. 3011) would
mandate a study regarding the relative roles and responsibilities of the
Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Transportation with
respect to pipeline security.
As it oversees the
federal pipeline safety program and the federal role in pipeline security, Congress
may wish to assess how the various elements of U.S. pipeline safety and
security fit together in the nation’s overall strategy to protect
transportation infrastructure. Pipeline safety and security necessarily
involve many groups: federal agencies, oil and gas pipeline associations, large
and small pipeline operators, and local communities. Reviewing how these groups
work together to achieve common goals could be an oversight challenge for
Congress.
Date of Report: March 13, 2012
Number of Pages: 36
Order Number: R41536
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