"the process of trasnforming the system from the 100+ yr old legacy system to the modern higher pressure distribution system was flawed and not correctly managed". Totally correct.
Nobody is saying that there are no applicable codes and regulations. There are regulations, but they are too inspecific on this topic.
CFR Title 49 Part 192 is the Federal regulation that governs "TRANSPORTATION OF NATURAL AND OTHER GAS BY PIPELINE: MINIMUM FEDERAL SAFETY STANDARDS". In 49 Part 192 Section 195 through 197 you can see exactly what they say about overpressure protection.
Note that in SS 195 there is nothing more required than to provide suitable "pressure relieving or pressure limiting devices". SS 197 is slightly more specific, and in fact actually mention a redundancy requirement. If you are at less than 60 psi[g], all you need is a suitable regulator. If you are over 60 psi[g], you have some options, see Paragraph c1, where two regulators and a "safety device" inbetween, limiting pressure delivered by the upstream regulator, must be provided.
Now the rub there is ...
"This device [inbetween] may be either a relief valve
or an automatic shutoff that shuts, if the pressure on the inlet of the service regulator exceeds the set pressure (60 p.s.i. (414 kPa) gage or less), and remains closed until manually reset."
In paragraph c2, a "service regulator and a monitoring regulator" are allowed. Two very similar devices.
Not until you get to paragraph c3 do you find the last
option,
"A service regulator with a relief valve vented to the outside atmosphere,"
IMO, if you are going to require something, require the safest solution. Why is it the
third option? Order of preference? Not mine!
The last two options in fact, IMO are the better ones of the 4 listed, but I still believe 3 can't be beat.
In the USA, there are only options. A man with two watches never knows the time. The relief valve venting to safe location is not even first on the option list. 1 and 2, not so safe. Option 4 might have worked, but still no venting possible if that valve didn't close. I believe that if the USA requlation was worded exactly as is the Alberta regulation, the Lawrence disaster would have been avoided.
If anyone knows of any specific laws, codes or regulations, international, country specific, US federal, state, city or otherwise, addressing this topic, I would be very pleased if they could post the reference here. Thanks.