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Pipeline damage/failure root cause 1

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Mahmoud Khalaf

Petroleum
Aug 7, 2021
26
Hello everyone,

I work in an upstream oil and gas site in Egypt.
Recently, 18 months ago, we introduced into service a new 2 phase crude oil 12" subsea carbon steel pipeline run from a gathering platform of nearly 40 meter water depth to the onshore oil terminal process.
The pipeline designed to the DNV-F101-OS offshore standard and the subsea installation carried out through the S lay barge.
Unfortunately, Three weeks ago, we have an oil spell over the line, we got forced with unplanned shutdown and switch over the production stream to another 3phase 20" pipeline.

The divers did finally catch four leakage points / ruptures observed sequentially after repetitive hydrotests.
The ruptures located at different distances apart from each others, the initial investigation showed nearly a same configuration for the rupture defects @ weld HAZ area.
The welding process at the barge got strictly controlled through three fully supervised welding inspectors that followed the DNV code instructions, hence we fairly exclude a sharp welding defect that emerges repeatidely nearly at the same locations relative to the girth welds, both axially (@the HAZ) and circumferentially (nearly the same O'clock side)

By the way, after completing the successful hydrotest and geometry pig, the pipeline got preserved about 6 months before introducing into operation with a doubt in the efficiency and control of the presevation process.

On the other hand, few months ago, the onshore section connected to this subsea pipeline has suffered a lateral movement of about 1.5 meter over the resting concrete supports that caused a damage observed for the pig trap supports.
We,here, guess that operation surges might cause the damage shown at the onshore section and hidden at the offshore subsea one. I guess that the heavy concrete coating the subsea section preclude its lateral movement, and initiate a huge fatigue stresses that released in a rupture form.

At the same time, the line convey two phase crude of %70 water cut with a relatively low flow speed, and the corrosion of the internal surface might accelerate heavily but how we could believe that corrosion leads quickly to this catastrophic failure.

We are planning to call an experienced third party to present an engineering failure root cause analysis to stand on the most likely failure reason and help support Safe future operation.

Also, we have to garantee all the following conditions together:
- Assure the pipeline integrity via confirming no other severe cracks left in the line after doing pigging using the compo tethered solution including both crack detection (TOFD technique) and corrosion detection technique.
- Confirm the failure root cause analysis to assure future Safe and reliable operation without the repeat of this catastrophic failure.

Finally, I would be grateful if someone advise the potential failure root causes that might be relevant to this kind of catastrophic failure.
 
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First two questions:

1. Is there corrosion inhibitor injection into the line?
2. What work was done to select a welding consumable chemical composition?

Steve Jones
Corrosion Management Consultant


All answers are personal opinions only and are in no way connected with any employer.
 
I would also suspect corrosion, especially if the leaks are remote to the displacements.

Whats the chemical composition, salt content, of the oils, gases, water and temperature?

 
With all the data you have, you can run an engineering critical assessment (ECA) of the failure to identify the most likely cause(s) leading to this early failure.
Got this run fir a couple of pipeline failures onshore and offshore, great tool to provide evidence for insurance and law case.
Please only use ECA specialists, otherwise you may end up with bad surprise. Garbage in, garbage out!
 
Mahmoud,
Lots of questions arises after the physical evidence of failures you have listed.
1. Leak at HAZ - Obviously, those are the highest stress point to cause the crack and hence a leak. Investigate the following:
a. Correctness of WPS including PWHT.
b. The technique of application of internal coating was after the welding. Coating failure can lead to stress-corrosion failure.
c. If a free-spanning occurred? Usually, caused by scouring of the sea bed the pipeline rest on that lead to high bending stresses.

2. How was the 6 month preservation done after the hydrotest? Dryout process, purging/interting etc.

3. The 1.5 meter onshore displacement, indicates presence of slugs. Obviously appears that the onshore risers are not modelled/designed correctly that the loads are getting transferred to onshore supports including the pig receiver.

Two-phase flow regimes in subsea pipelines are complex and designers uses different mathematical models to best guess it but again depends on many parameters like flow rate, pipe diameter, hydrodynamic behavior at horizontal and vertical sections. Do you have a slug catcher?

Many offshore pipeline failures are attributed to Flow Induced Vibration (FIV) by multiphase flow that leads to fatigue failures.

Nonetheless, the HAZ seems to be the weakest points (high stress points) that has led to cracks and consequent leaks. It could be the summation of all or either of residual stresses after welding, stress corrosion and fatigue.

GDD
Canada
 
Maybe I missed something : Why isn't the first question "Is this sour service "?
 
Supposedly H2S content would be included in the response to this question.
"Whats the chemical composition, ..."

 
What position is the leak in circumference?

HAZ gets some odd effects. If there is a high acid no in the Crude you can get preferential corrosion.

Was the pipeline internally coated?

Are you ever going to bother to log back in to see the replies (last login on 21st Aug)?

Remember - More details = better answers
Also: If you get a response it's polite to respond to it.
 
Execuse me, every one, nearly all times I login, the website, i get server error/access denied.
Thanks for all your invaluable technical discussions.
Iam going to reply to all.

 
First, Mr. SJones
- Yes, there was a tight corrosion inhibitor management program during the pipeline operation.
- The Welding process WPS was qualified through approved PQR record including the qualification of weld consumable chemical composition.
 
If you are having trouble logging in it may be due to the time difference - I think the server shuts down for maintenance operations during the nightime in North America, so mid-day in Egypt is probably around that same time. It's a guess, but I have gotten that same message late at night in North America.
 
Reply to 1503-44 (Petroleum)

Regarding your question, i still wait a response from my colleague in Chemical and corrosion department.
But these the information I get till now.
The produced heavy crude has %70 WC.
The gas phase nearly separated at the production platform upstream the pipeline and the transferred crude has very little gas content.
The salt has 8603 P.T.B.
The temperature is around 40°C.
Attached is the formation water analysis report.
 
 https://files.engineering.com/getfile.aspx?folder=a69a0c16-54a8-4ba3-9c54-ba7c0de81026&file=IMG-20210827-WA0001.jpg
Mr. BenMacier
Thanks for your advice. We have already called for a threat assessment via a third party.
But we hope thatvthe third party experts are well aware with ECA procedure. I think the British standard 7910 presents a guide for crack management program.
 
Reply to Mr. GD2 (Mechanical

1. Leak at HAZ - Obviously, those are the highest stress point to cause the crack and hence a leak. Investigate the following:
a. Correctness of WPS including PWHT.
- The WPS was tightly reviewed and the PWHT was not a requirement as the this carbon steel line pipe grade;API5LX53 (P no. 1 & grade no. 1) has its heaviest wall thickness of (0.6") that doesn't exceed the required threshold for such PWHT.
b. The technique of application of internal coating was after the welding. Coating failure can lead to stress-corrosion failure.
- No internal coat was applied neither for the line pipe nor for the weld joint, as it wasn't stated in the pipeline design specs sheet.
c. If a free-spanning occurred? Usually, caused by scouring of the sea bed the pipeline rest on that lead to high bending stresses.
- No free spanning observed as informed by the divers.
2. How was the 6 month preservation done after the hydrotest? Dryout process, purging/interting etc.
- I think it was well applied through a properly designed preservation programin at the first time after hydrotest, but they probably displaced the preserved media while applying the Geometry pig run, i could not assure the integrity of such 2nd process, may it was not applied at all.


3. The 1.5 meter onshore displacement, indicates presence of slugs. Obviously appears that the onshore risers are not modelled/designed correctly that the loads are getting transferred to onshore supports including the pig receiver.

Shurely, We should think about the slug operation, but anyway, the onshore pig trap is the old one that installed nearly 40 years ago and already left without replacement as it was seen in a fair condition.

- There is no slug catcher, as the associated gas phase nearly separated at the production platform upstream the pipeline and the transferred crude has very little gas content.

Finally, I highly appreciate your invaluable discussion. Thanks alot 👍
 
Reply to Mr. Black Smith 37 (material) and 1503-44 (Petroleum).

The produced crude is not sour one, the H2S content doesn't exceed 200ppm.
On the other hand the pipeline design specs had referencd the NACE 0175 for any future sour service operation.
 
Depending on total pressure , 200 ppm H2S can cause sulfide SCC of hard weld HAZ; that would be the first place I looked.
 
Did the "corrosion inhibitor management" include assessment of the propensity for the inhibitor to cause preferential weld corrosion? The weld metal composition is also an interlinked parameter.

Steve Jones
Corrosion Management Consultant


All answers are personal opinions only and are in no way connected with any employer.
 
Did any else look at that water report?

Looks pretty corrosive stuff to me.
Was there any corrosion inhibitor?
Some wells quite low pH.

HAZ gets some strange effects at times which are difficult to predict.

I suspect you will find lots more corrosion.

Remember - More details = better answers
Also: If you get a response it's polite to respond to it.
 
So, we have given some potential failure causes, but there is no way that we can advise on the root cause. That is a specialist process that lends itself even less than the failure cause to crowd sourcing on an internet forum. Let us know what failure cause is finally ascribed once a proper failure analysis has been performed.

Steve Jones
Corrosion Management Consultant


All answers are personal opinions only and are in no way connected with any employer.
 
Reply to Mr. LittleInch (petroleum):
Also: If you get a response it's polite to respond to it.

- Here I present my apology to all esteemed participants repeating my previous status:
Execuse me, every one, nearly all times I login, the website, i get server error/access denied.
Thanks for all your invaluable technical discussions.
Iam going to reply to all.
 
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