Onshore stability typically evaluates risk in specific areas along the RoW and may include quite a number of things.
liquifaction,
swamp,
river bed conditions and currents,
sediment transport over pipe,
rip rap, matting, gabion effectiveness,
river bank conditions at low and high water,
cut and banking stability,
fill and compaction stability,
lake bed,
flooding,
high & low ground water tables,
freeze thaw cycle & ice lensing,
permafrost effects,
landslides,
karst and other geologic formation dangers,
faulting,
snowmelt,
soil type, formation and slope stability as it effects its susceptibility to erosion
pipe ditch washout at upslope/downslopes
thermal expansion,
wide operating temperature differentials,
wide ambient temperature differentials,
degrees of bend vs burial depth,
weight of overburdens vs upward expansion tendency,
estimated length to virtual anchors near equipment,
electrical current potentials
stray current potentials,
electric rail lines,
potentials of other utilities in the area,
nearby high voltage transmission lines,
wind erosion of sand (in some areas of the world)
chemical nature of soils encountered.
Not bad. I'll think I'll keep that list myself.
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"Pumping accounts for 20% of the world’s energy used by electric motors and 25-50% of the total electrical energy usage in certain industrial facilities."-DOE statistic (Note: Make that
99% for pipeline companies)