vodeni,
Someone has obviously considered water hammer (also known as surge or transient flow) there since you refer to a "surge relief system".
As eadwine states, such conditions occur whenever there are flow rate changes. Normally these are slow enough not to give much problem with pipe anchors, but it is possible to operate valves quickly, have pressure relief valves operate, have pump startups and trips, or flow in partially full lines that can give severe flow rate changes that can generate forces high enough to break supports and even collapse pipe bridges.
The forces produced can be frighteningly high - tens or hundreds of tons on large pipes! Fortunately most transients are brief, and the forces only apply for brief periods such that the pipe hardly moves despite the "bang".
Analysis of pressure surge to ensure your system is protected against overpressure is a specialised topic using modern software. Software like Flowmaster, AFT Hammer, HiTrans and others is good, but complex to use.
If you go to my web site page on this -
you can read about it, and if you go to the downloads page
you can get a Powerpoint presentation and Excel workbook that hopefully will enlighten you!
Regards,
Stuart