View allAll Photos Tagged pipeline,
A pipeline that runs across the sand from near the Baglan Bay Power Station to the River Neath. Pictured at low tide. It is raised on rows of concrete columns, like a kind of industrial centipede.
Best viewed large on black background here:
Hand wheel used to open and close a pipeline between two Cargill salt ponds.
No Dakota Access Pipeline protest at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., Sept. 17, 2016. Photo by Robert Meyers/Greenpeace
A pipeline that runs across the sand from near the Baglan Bay Power Station to the River Neath. Pictured at low tide. It is raised on rows of concrete columns, like a kind of industrial centipede.
Pressure checks are routinely made and recorded. The pipeline inspectors review these files to make sure they are up to date.
Story: Some underground pipeline safety inspections remain state responsibility
Photo by Bill Kelly, NET News
As I was traveling back to Fairbanks, I noticed the Aurora had intensified right over the Pipeline. I was able to capture this shot before the activity faded. The shot ended as the battery froze up. The temperature was 34 degrees below zero.
Fused pipeline strings are staged for pipeline pullback. Strings are about 600 feet long. This pipeline is 30-inch inside diameter. November 2014.
By Richard Serra
On display at Gagosian Gallery (Britannia Street), London
October 2014 to March 2015
This pipeline was once used to carry freshwater from Buntzen Lake to the Burrard Thermal Generating Plant. A new larger underground pipe is now used.
In November 2013 the provincial government announced that BC Hydro will stop generating electricity at Burrard Generating Station by 2016.
A pipe is leading brine through an old salt work in Germany. Pretty crammed place. Best viewed large.