Modeling Pipe to Soil Potentials From Geomagnetic Storms in Gas Pipelines in New Zealand

Author:

Divett Tim1ORCID,Ingham Malcolm1ORCID,Richardson Gemma2ORCID,Sigley Mark3,Rodger Craig J.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Chemical and Physical Sciences Victoria University of Wellington Wellington New Zealand

2. British Geological Survey Edinburgh UK

3. First Gas Ltd. New Plymouth New Zealand

4. Department of Physics University of Otago Dunedin New Zealand

Abstract

AbstractGas pipelines can experience elevated pipe to soil potentials (PSPs) during geomagnetic disturbances due to the induced geoelectric field. Gas pipeline operators use cathodic protection to keep PSPs between −0.85 and −1.2 V to prevent corrosion of the steel pipes and disbondment of the protective coating from the pipes. We have developed a model of the gas pipelines in the North Island of New Zealand to identify whether a hazard exists to these pipelines and how big this hazard is. We used a transmission line representation to model the pipelines and a nodal admittance matrix method to calculate the PSPs at nodes up to 5 km apart along the pipelines. We used this model to calculate PSPs resulting from an idealized 100 mVkm−1 electric field, initially to the north and east. The calculated PSPs are highest are at the ends of the pipelines in the direction of the applied electric field vector. The calculated PSP follows a characteristic curve along the length of the pipelines that matches theory, with deviations due to branchlines and changes in pipeline direction. The modeling shows that the PSP magnitudes are sensitive to the branchline coating conductance with higher coating conductances decreasing the PSPs at most locations. Enhanced PSPs produce the highest risk of disbondment and corrosion occurring, and hence this modeling provides insights into the network locations most at risk.

Funder

Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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