Showing results 1 to 10 of 1042 for “salisbury compressor station”
Columbia Gulf Transmission, LLC (CGT) promptly activated its emergency response procedures to address a fire at its Corinth Compressor Station in Mississippi resulting from a suspected lightning strike during severe storms occurring early on April 28, 2023. No one was injured in the incident, and the fire has now been extinguished. We appreciate the support and prompt collaboration from local fire and emergency personnel.
NOVA Gas Transmission Ltd. (NGTL) Grand Prairie Mainline Loop No. 4 (Valhalla North Section) and Berland River Compressor Station C3 Unit Addition (Project) Project Notification
This Project, featuring two 30-MW compressor unit additions, is now in service, meeting a request from natural gas producers for an increase in natural gas transportation service on the NGTL System.
On May 31, 1940, more than a year before the U.S. entered World War II, Manufacturers Light and Heat Company purchased nine acres of land along Connoquenessing Creek in Ellwood City, Pa., around 40 miles north of its Pittsburgh headquarters. The plan was to build a 1,000-hp compressor station to support the expansion of two nearby natural gas pipelines. Market demand in the region was growing fast, and the company needed to keep up. As it turned out, the project couldn’t have come at a better time: By the end of 1945, the station’s horsepower had doubled, and a post-war economic boom was on the horizon.
Compressor stations provide energy needed to move natural gas through pipelines to reach our homes and provide everyday comforts, such as heating, cooling and cooking.
Safety is a top priority for the team working at the Enterprise Compressor Station in Kansas, as it is for many teams across the massive ANR Pipeline system. But the Enterprise team’s 65-year record of zero lost time due to safety incidents proves that they walk the safety walk as much as they talk the safety talk.
June 19 was an ordinary day at the Bickers Compressor Station in Virginia. Ordinary in that it marked the station’s 10,000th consecutive day without a recordable injury as defined by the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration. That means there hasn’t been a work-related injury or illness resulting in medical treatment beyond first aid or days away from work since 1993.