Subsequent to my post above I attended the 2005 ASCE Pipeline Division Specialty Conference that was held several weeks ago in Houston, Texas. Mr. Doug Nyman was chosen as the recipient of the 2005 Stephen D. Bechtel Pipeline Engineering award, and as is customary with this award he delivered the "Bechtel Lecture" associated with this award. Mr. Nyman chose as the subject of this lecture fault crossings etc. of energy pipelines, with which he appeared very familiar. His cover slide and some other slides in his presentation I attended were interestingly of an aboveground fault crossing design area for the Alaska Pipeline, that was I think was designed/constructed now more than three decades ago. He let us know in his lecture that an area of this pipeline where it was exposed crossing the Denali fault reasonably endured, if I understood him correctly, several meters of ground displacement in a rather recent extreme (sesqui “hundred year"?) earthquake event a quarter of a century later, in the magnitude 7.9 2002 Denali earthquake (see some more information at
that indicates this earthquake is the largest earthquake to hit North America in 150 years). I believe this fault crossing area incorporated some specially designed, quite wide “Vertical Support Member structures (VSM’s), as well as some intentional pipeline zig-zags or bends to accommodate thermal expansion/contraction and future movement. It appears a detailed account of this design and performance is also now at
This site appears to indicate some pipeline “damage” noted in the first site I referenced above apparently consisted of some cross-beams being dislodged, bracket bolts broken, and VSM’s bent some laterally etc. by the reported “violent” ground movement in the event etc. Reportedly, the pipeline was shut down for only 66 hours as a precautionary measure and to accomplish support etc. repairs!
While I don’t think noted in Mr. Nyman's lecture, at the time this was perhaps one of the greatest if not the greatest pipeline project in history, and perhaps most significantly as noted in multiple recent publications, "More than 14 billion barrels of oil have moved" through this pipeline. I think the carrier pipe for this project was produced in Japan and American Steel Pipe (a division of ACIPCO) furnished significant other piping material for some 78,000 (most if not all) of the VSM’s for this massive pipeline project.
I believe Mr. Nyman also mentioned in his presentation that some other contemporary fault crossings at least of some more recent buried energy pipelines are now being designed buried in special wide and rather shallow trapezoidal cross-section trenches, apparently with some special (uncompacted) backfill.