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| Built: |
1974-1977 |
| Cost: |
US$8,000,000,000.00
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| Type: |
Transportation
facility |
Built
over, under, and through some of the harshest climates
on Earth, the Trans Alaska Pipeline is evidence of
man's desire to overcome natural obstacles in pursuit
of his own interests. The structure runs 800 miles
from Prudhoe Bay on the Arctic Ocean to Prince William
Sound in the Pacific Ocean's Gulf of Alaska. It was
built by a consortium of petroleum companies in order
to tap the riches of the state's North Slope. Because
of permafrost, much of the pipeline -- about 420 miles
of it -- runs above ground, supported by a collection
of 78,000 supports. The above-ground sections are
built along a zig-zag path designed to minimize the
effects of a strong earthquake, and temperature fluctuations.
There are some areas where it was buried, including
mountain crossings, and four miles of the pipeline
that is actually refrigerated underground. Some of
those underground segments are installed where the
pipeline crosses rivers and streams. There are more
than 800 such crossings, and some are buried beneath
the river bed, while others soar above the water on
massive suspension bridges. Today the pipeline is
managed by Alyeska Pipeline Services Company. It transmits
2,136,000 barrels of oil per day and holds 9,065,065
barrels of oil at any one time.
-
The pipeline is 48 inches in diameter.
-
It half an inch thick, and wrapped in four inches
of insulation.
- It
is designed to survive earthquakes up to 8.5 on
the Richter scale.
- The
pipeline crosses three major fault lines.
- The
oil inside the pipeline moves at 5.4 miles per hour.
- The
oil comes out of the Earth too hot to transport.
It has to be cooled to 120 degrees before entering
the main pipeline.
- It
takes almost six days for oil to make the trip from
one end of the pipeline to the other.
- Construction
required 1,347 state and federal permits.
- 70,000
contractors and Alyeska employees were used to build
the pipeline.
- Electrical
currents in the Earth called "telluric currents"
are conducted by the pipeline. They are returned
to the ground through zinc anodes.
- December,
1999 - A man is arrested for plotting to blow up
the Trans Alaska Pipeline. Alfred Heinz Reumayr
planned to plant 14 bombs along the length of the
pipeline. They were supposed to explode 1 January,
2000. Reumayr was going to purchase oil futures
in order to cash in on his mayhem.
- 3
November, 2002 - The pipeline is shut down for a
few days for a safety check after part of it was
rocked by a 7.9 earthquake that damaged part of
it about 100 miles southwest of Fairbanks.
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