iOne
REGISTERED
Oh my, it seemed like a simple topic but it's not.
In my area for multifamily a seismic shutoff valve must be installed on the customer side of each gas meter, during certain retrofits, or when an insurance company "asks politely". One per unit, plus common gas.
I have an owner who would prefer the shutoff valve be on the distribution pipe: after the shutoff but before any meter. They want to inspect the whole building after a quake prior to turning gas back on to any unit, and want to centralize and perhaps lock the shutoff restoration control. And install one valve, rather than dozens.
LA code SEC. 94.1217.0. SEISMIC GAS SHUTOFF VALVES provides that "A single seismic gas shutoff valve or excess flow shutoff valve may be installed upstream of the gas utility meter at the discretion of the gas utility."
Yet: CPUC decision 01-11-068 November 29, 2001 allowed Southern California Gas Company to prohibit "upstream of the meter" emergency shutoffs, on what seemed like cost grounds. SCGC did not want the cost or liability of a valve they owned, nor did they want the liability or cost of inspecting such vavles. A protest by a startup company making inexpensive shutoffs was denied. (See https://docs.cpuc.ca.gov/published/Graphics/11562.pdf )
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So where does this stand now?
Are there utilities and cities allowing EFV's or SSV's on the common gas pipe?
Have you installed one?
Are any utilities using pre-shake "USGS ShakeAlert®" type systems to halt gas flow, or create a negative pressure in gas lines to eliminate the need for millions of individual shutoffs? Earthquake Early Warning systems are operational in Mexico, Japan, Turkey, Romania, China, Italy, Taiwan, etc.... is there any code movement regarding switching to utility scale shutoffs?
In my area for multifamily a seismic shutoff valve must be installed on the customer side of each gas meter, during certain retrofits, or when an insurance company "asks politely". One per unit, plus common gas.
I have an owner who would prefer the shutoff valve be on the distribution pipe: after the shutoff but before any meter. They want to inspect the whole building after a quake prior to turning gas back on to any unit, and want to centralize and perhaps lock the shutoff restoration control. And install one valve, rather than dozens.
LA code SEC. 94.1217.0. SEISMIC GAS SHUTOFF VALVES provides that "A single seismic gas shutoff valve or excess flow shutoff valve may be installed upstream of the gas utility meter at the discretion of the gas utility."
Yet: CPUC decision 01-11-068 November 29, 2001 allowed Southern California Gas Company to prohibit "upstream of the meter" emergency shutoffs, on what seemed like cost grounds. SCGC did not want the cost or liability of a valve they owned, nor did they want the liability or cost of inspecting such vavles. A protest by a startup company making inexpensive shutoffs was denied. (See https://docs.cpuc.ca.gov/published/Graphics/11562.pdf )
---
So where does this stand now?
Are there utilities and cities allowing EFV's or SSV's on the common gas pipe?
Have you installed one?
Are any utilities using pre-shake "USGS ShakeAlert®" type systems to halt gas flow, or create a negative pressure in gas lines to eliminate the need for millions of individual shutoffs? Earthquake Early Warning systems are operational in Mexico, Japan, Turkey, Romania, China, Italy, Taiwan, etc.... is there any code movement regarding switching to utility scale shutoffs?