TDW isolates burning natural gas liquids pipeline for repair following third-party strike
T.D. Williamson (TDW) crews isolated a ruptured 14-inch natural gas liquids (NGL) pipeline while product
continued to flare off, enabling repair while the system remained in service and creating the
conditions for the fire to extinguish itself.
The west Texas pipeline exploded after it was hit by a third-party contractor excavating the right-of-way
nearby. The explosion and massive fire that followed, which shot flames 300 feet into the air, injured
four people, one critically, and destroyed the trencher and all other equipment within a 300-yard radius.
It was said at the time of explosion the concussion was felt (10) miles away. The responding fire department
registered a temperature in excess of 1500°F.
The operator moved quickly to reroute product at a drastically lower flow rate. Within hours of the line
strike, TDW had begun mobilizing equipment and personnel to the site, including eight hot tapping and
plugging (HT&P) technicians who arrived from
multiple TDW service centers in Texas, Oklahoma and California to provide around-the-clock coverage.
The team performed a double STOPPLE®operation to isolate the affected section. Sweeping the hot tap holes —
a process that removes any metal chips or debris that could prevent the STOPPLE head from sealing securely —
created a partial seal that caused the fire to bellow; when the STOPPLE heads were fully set, they robbed
the fire of the NGL fumes
fueling it, and the blaze extinguished itself.
STOPPLE plugging machines have safely and
reliably isolated pressurized sections of pipeline
without shutdown or interruption of service for more than 60 years. They are part of a total TDW
advanced isolation and intervention solution that includes hot tapping machines, fittings, valves
and plugging heads.
Charles Parrish, TDW technical sales representative, West Region, Texas & New Mexico, said the
company’s response included 40 individuals, seven operations centers and six departments from across
the U.S. Parrish said that full COVID-19 precautions were followed at every step.
“Everyone came together so efficiently that in less than six hours after the operator’s initial call the
fittings were out the door,” Parrish said. “And it took less than one day on the job site to solve our
customer’s problem, safely and successfully.”