The nation's oil pipelines transport crude oil from oilfields to refineries where the oil is turned into dozens of useful products such as gasoline, home heating oil, jet fuel, diesel, lubricants and the raw materials for fertilizer, chemicals and pharmaceuticals. They then transport refined products to depots that distribute them to the companies and consumers that daily rely on a steady and cheaply transported supply of these products.
"Sometimes batches are separated by metal "pigs" or plugs that keep batches from touching. Pigs are also used for cleaning the interior surfaces of pipelines to help prevent corrosion. Specially developed "smart" pigs containing instrumentation packages are used to double check pipeline integrity. Tell me more about the safety role played by pipeline pigs.
- Consumer demand for petroleum in the prosperity of the Fifties.
- The growth of American industry that took place during the war.
- Increasing awareness of the importance of petroleum to the nation's security interests following wartime gasoline rationing. (More than 100 military bases and other facilities have their own direct connections with oil pipelines.)
Nearly all of the vast volume of petroleum now transported by pipeline moves through highly automated systems - automation that has been a major factor in reducing the number and volume of pipeline spills. These computer-aided systems allow highly trained operators working in sophisticated central control rooms to monitor rates of flow, pressures and fluid characteristics. Fluctuations can be detected quickly, alerting operators to potential leaks and allowing them to shut down lines and dispatch crews to investigate.