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Assessment of permafrost disturbances caused by two parallel buried warm-oil pipelines: A case study at a high-latitude wetland site in Northeast China.

Authors :
Wang, Fei
Li, Guoyu
Ma, Wei
Chen, Dun
Wu, Gang
Cao, Yapeng
Mu, Yanhu
Mao, Yuncheng
Zhang, Jun
Gao, Kai
Wang, Xinbin
Jing, Hongyuan
Che, Fuqiang
Source :
Cold Regions Science & Technology. Feb2023, Vol. 206, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Multiple studies demonstrate that narrow-linear strong disturbances triggered by pipeline engineering activities have resulted in rapid permafrost degradation. However, the extent, duration, and severity of permafrost disturbances induced by two parallel buried warm-oil pipelines remain unclear. Here, we examine the thermal disturbances of the China-Russia crude oil pipelines (CRCOPs I and II) on the surrounding permafrost. Ground temperature measurements on and off the right-of-way of the CRCOPs and an electrical resistivity tomography survey were conducted at a selected high-latitude wetland site in northeastern China. The observations showed that warm oil flow in pipelines dissipated heat to the surrounding soil, resulting in the thawing of underlying permafrost accompanied by the formation and development of thaw bulbs around the pipes. Currently, the thaw bulb of CRCOP-I was about four times as large as that of CRCOP-II, mainly due to the longer 7-year working duration of CRCOP-I. To quantify the permafrost disturbances around the pipeline, a conductive heat transfer model was established. A numerical simulation of the soil thermal regime around the pipeline suggested the initial growth of the thaw bulb was quite fast but gradually slowed with time, of which the shape was modified to ellipse from a semicircle. The existence of CRCOP-II would accelerate the warming of permafrost on the CRCOP-I right-of-way due to the small separation distance between them. We expect that the thaw bulbs of the two pipelines will expand larger than previously estimated due to the adverse effects of pipeline settlement and surface water flow, sparking a wider permafrost disturbance. • Thermal permafrost disturbances caused by two parallel buried warm-oil pipelines in a high-latitude wetland were analyzed. • Initial growth of thaw bulb around the warm-oil pipeline was fast but gradually slowed with time. • Thaw bulbs will expand and eventually overlap partially as the operational period of the two pipelines proceeds, sparking a wider permafrost disturbance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0165232X
Volume :
206
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cold Regions Science & Technology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
161079631
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.coldregions.2022.103753