Third-Party Damage Events
Excavation strikes by contractors, construction equipment impact, vehicle collisions with above-ground pipe. Operators must determine whether the pipe can remain in service and document the decision for regulatory filing.
A third-party strike. A dent discovered during a routine patrol. A coating defect that exposed bare pipe. A ground movement event that subjected a segment to loads it was never designed for. When damage occurs on an operating pipeline, operators need more than an inspector's report. They need engineering judgment on whether the asset remains fit for service, how to remediate if it does not, and how to defend that decision to regulators, insurers, and public stakeholders. Qualitech delivers that investigation.
Pipeline Damage Investigation is a structured engineering engagement that combines field assessment, dimensional measurement, material evaluation, code-based analysis, and fitness-for-service decision-making. It produces a technical report that operators use to decide whether to continue operation, reduce pressure, monitor under conditions, execute a repair, or replace the affected segment.
This solution is distinct from our partner-delivered MMM Pipeline Inspection, which is a proactive survey technique used to detect stress concentration zones across long pipeline segments. Damage Investigation is reactive: a known event has occurred, and we are engaged to understand it, quantify it, and engineer the response.
Not every anomaly requires formal investigation. But some events clearly do. When they occur, a documented engineering investigation is the defense against regulatory, contractual, and operational risk.
Excavation strikes by contractors, construction equipment impact, vehicle collisions with above-ground pipe. Operators must determine whether the pipe can remain in service and document the decision for regulatory filing.
Slope movement, soil settlement, river-crossing migration, or other geotechnical events that subject pipeline segments to loads outside design assumptions. Requires bending-stress analysis and fitness evaluation.
Inline inspection tools or above-ground MMM surveys flag indications. Engineering investigation confirms, quantifies, and classifies the anomaly, and recommends disposition.
Following any reportable pipeline incident, regulatory bodies often require an engineering-led investigation as part of the response. Our reports are prepared to stand up to that review.
Mobilization of qualified engineers to the damage site. Direct observation, photographic documentation, and field measurements under controlled conditions. First-hand evidence collection that remote assessment cannot provide.
Precise dimensional measurement of the damage using calibrated digital equipment: pit depth, dent geometry, crack length and orientation, wall thickness at affected zones. Measurements suitable for fitness-for-service calculations.
Coordination with accredited laboratories for metallurgical analysis where required: hardness testing, microstructure examination, material identification, or fracture analysis. Evidence chain preserved for regulatory review.
Engineering calculations per API 579 / ASME FFS-1, CSA Z662 Annexes, or equivalent. Determination of whether the damaged segment can continue in service, at what pressure, under what monitoring, and for what duration.
Structured investigation of what caused the damage event. Mechanical, environmental, operational, or third-party factors identified and documented. Recommendations to prevent recurrence on similar segments.
Formal investigation report with photo-registration, measurement records, analysis calculations, root cause findings, and engineering recommendations (repair, monitoring, pressure derate, replacement). Delivered in the format operators use for regulatory submission.
Qualitech delivered a formal pipeline damage investigation in northern British Columbia for FortisBC gas infrastructure. The scope included on-site field investigation with photographic documentation, dimensional assessment using calibrated digital measuring equipment, damage analysis covering stress assessment, deformation measurement, and material evaluation, and engineering evaluation against applicable pipeline codes and integrity requirements.
The final deliverable was a detailed technical report with engineering recommendations for repair, monitoring, or replacement. The report format was structured to support FortisBC's internal review and any regulatory reporting obligations arising from the event.
Proactive detection of stress concentration zones. Often precedes or follows a damage investigation as part of a broader integrity program.
ExplorePartner-delivered NDT provides quantitative sizing at damage sites: UT thickness, MT surface cracking, PT crack verification.
ExploreOur full pipeline and LNG capability, from construction quality to operational integrity assessment.
ExploreOur engineers mobilize fast for damage investigations. Formal reports, defensible conclusions, actionable recommendations.