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by Sanjeev Saraf Leave a Comment

How Likely Will A Natural Gas Leak Ignite?

How Likely Will A Natural Gas Leak Ignite?

Following the release of natural gas, it can be ignited resulting in fire which in turn can potentially result in an explosion. So how likely will a gas release ignite?If you are interested in the major failure modes for natural gas transmission pipelines reported, please refer to an earlier post – External Damage: Number One Cause Natural Gas Pipeline Releases.The ignition probability is related to leak size. Let us consider three hole sizes consistent with European Gas Pipeline Incident Data Group (EGIG) database – small (pin-hole leak, 2-cm or less), medium (2-cm < Leak < pipe diameter) and large (full bore rupture, FBR). The table below summarizes ignition probabilities from EGIG report.

Ignition Probabilities following Natural Gas Release

Leak SizeIgnition Probabilities
Pin-hole leak (<2-cm)3%
Medium Leak (2-cm < Leak < Pipe Dia.)2%
Rupture (Pipe Dia. < 16-in)10%
Rupture (Pipe Dia. > 16-in)25%
Source: EGIG Pipeline Incident Database. Failure data collected from six European gas distributors for the period 1970-2001.

For leaks resulting from guillotine-rupture of a natural gas pipelines 16″ or higher, every fourth release will ignite. Surprisingly, ignition probability for medium releases is lower than that for small releases based on this data. There is a wide variation in ignition probabilities depending on pipe size. So to say that the average ignition probability for natural gas release is 4% (average of ignition probabilities in the above table) is significantly under-predicting ignition probability for releases from larger pipelines.

Filed Under: Articles, on Risk & Safety, Operational Risk Process Safety

About Sanjeev Saraf

Reduce risks, Increase Uptime, Reduce costs

I did my first litigation support work in 2000.

Since then I have been obsessed with preventing future failures. Some of these failures can have catastrophic consequences.

Having tried various techniques, learning / unlearning “latest” paradigms, it is clear we have a long way to go!

But instead of thoughtful work, what I mostly see are platitudes and oversimplifications. No keen practical insights!

I want to change that.

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