Title 49 › Subtitle SUBTITLE VIII— PIPELINES › Chapter 601— SAFETY › § 60102
Requires the Secretary of Transportation to write and enforce minimum safety rules for pipelines and related facilities to protect people, property, and the environment. The rules apply to owners and operators and can cover design, construction, testing, inspection, operation, maintenance, replacement, and emergency plans. Operators must make sure workers are qualified and can spot and respond to dangerous or abnormal conditions. The rules must be practical and fit the type of pipeline. The Secretary must use available gas, hazardous liquid, and environmental information, weigh benefits and costs with a written risk assessment, ask for public comment, and get peer review from the appropriate technical committees. Those committees must report within 90 days, and the Secretary must reply to their significant comments within 90 days. The Secretary must decide that the benefits of a rule justify its costs, except in certain limited cases. The Secretary must send Congress a report on how the risk assessment process worked by March 31, 2000. Operators must take part in or provide public safety and damage-prevention programs, and interstate gas pipeline owners must give municipal governments a facility map within 1 year after the Accountable Pipeline Safety and Accountability Act of 1996 and every year after. By June 1, 1998 the Secretary must survey public education and safety programs and start rulemaking within one year after that survey. Operators must keep and, when asked, give the Secretary and appropriate State officials records that include contact info (including emergency phone), accurate maps and descriptions, pipeline characteristics and products, the operations manual, and an emergency response plan with specific actions and communication steps. The Secretary must also require inventories of pipe with material and leak histories. New or replaced transmission and hazardous liquid pipelines must, as practicable, be built to allow internal inspection devices (“smart pigs”), and by October 24, 1995 the Secretary must set any needed inspection rules. Rules generally take effect 30 days after they are issued unless a different effective date is set for good cause. Operators must report hazards or safety-related conditions to the Secretary, the appropriate State authority or Governor, and the Tribe as soon as practicable but no later than 5 business days. The Secretary must survey emergency flow-restricting devices by October 24, 1994 and issue standards within 2 years after that survey. By December 31, 2007 low-stress hazardous liquid pipelines must follow the same rules as other hazardous liquid pipelines, except for specified exceptions; “low-stress” means 20 percent or less of the pipe’s minimum yield strength. The Secretary must update adopted industry standards when appropriate, issue direct-assessment inspection rules within 1 year, and may require automatic or remote shut-off valves on new or fully replaced transmission lines within 2 years if feasible. The Comptroller General must study response ability and submit a report to Congress committees within 1 year after that study is required. The Secretary may collect geospatial data on transportation-related oil flow lines but may not regulate production or onsite flow-line equipment. Documents incorporated by reference must be made free to the public starting 3 years after enactment. Within 1 year the Secretary must require leak detection and repair programs for certain gathering, transmission, and distribution lines using advanced technologies and set repair schedules. The Secretary may not reduce existing survey frequency or extend repair timelines because of those rules. Within 2 years the Secretary must update emergency response plans and operator manuals to include prompt communications with first responders and the public, an opt-in customer alert system, specific overpressure response steps, change-management procedures with qualified reviewers, and requirements for record keeping, pressure monitoring during construction (with at least one qualified agent within 180 days), and assessment and upgrades of district regulator stations within 1 year.
Full Legal Text
Transportation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
49 U.S.C. § 60102
Title 49 — Transportation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60