I've seen these pipes stored in the port of Mussalo in Kotka, Finland. You wouldn't believe how many there were. They were stacked about 6 high and the rows just went on forever.
@@MrHungrySimon I drove by the Coors facility and saw their outdoor keg storage. Never imagined what an acre 30 feet tall of kegs would look like but it was impressive
As a German, I am fairly familiar with the political issues surrounding this project. I applaud you for facing the issue head-on, not purely focusing on the engineering but taking a more holistic view by bookending the science with the political and historical background. I think you did an excellent job covering the fascinating engineering while contextualising it to the appropriate degree. I'm a physicist, but I seem to recall that it's very important for engineers to have a working knowledge and skills in ethics as well as the physical sciences. After this video, I would be very excited if you decided to make a series of videos about the ethical challenges engineers face, and best practises for resolving them - even if that's probably pretty far off from what your general audience expects from this channel!
Nice insight, i belive part of being a chartered engineer is adhering to those ethical rules set out by the various bodies you're chartered with. I'd certainly be interested in hearing how those things are dealt with and what options an engineer has to escalate against pushy business requirements that intentionally compromise safety etc.
I mean a lot of engineering is about ethics down the line. Health and safety, proper maintenance and inspection and so on are really about ethics but they're ethics issues that were resolved long ago. Engineering has a lot of ethics which has just been absorbed into the profession not as an ethical question but as a concrete set of methods to mitigate risks and keep everyone safe.
@@sncy5303 well, no! I don't have numbers, but I'm certain a lot of people that worked on this project couldn't have kept Russia out of the Ukraine. Of course, there are rotten apples everywhere, but to put every worker of said project in jail doesn't seem right to me.
One of my final projects before retirement was constructing pipelines at a coal powered thermal power plant complex. The plant was using the waste coal slurry stored in ponds over 50 years of operation as a fuel after cleaning out the dirt from the coal in a cleansing plant then mixing it with newly mined coal from another coal mine. The pipes were 18 inches or 45.72 cm in diameter and some of the lines were close to 10 miles in length. All of this was done to clean up the area around the plant and reclaim the land back to it’s original state before the plant closes in a couple of years. I have a few photos from my time on the pipe crew with the plant off in the background that I should enlarge and make into framed prints.
You know so much about pipelines. I have a tiny contribution: "pig" didn't originally stand for "Pipeline Inspection Gauge", it was originally just a dumb plug they used to push thru long pipes with pressure to clean them from the inside, called "pigs" because of the squealing sound they made as they went thru.
Very cool fact. I worked with a mechanical company, and when they finished welding up the chiller pipe, and pressure checked it for leaks, they would sometimes flush this detergent of some kind, into the pipe to clean the inside. Thins like slag, and carbon deposits from heating the steel during the welding process, had to be scrubbed out of there.
At my work we have to pump a lot of paint coating around and the rubber bungs we push through the pipework with compressed air then solvent at the start of a washdown are known as pigs so 👍👍
There are plenty of areas where live animals are still used. Piglets between 6 months and a year outperform even the fanciest synthetic electronic units, and when greased are much, much faster. The squealing is usually the result of backwards insertion.
9:25 "Germany is planning to shutter the last 3 of its nuclear plants" I don't get why people are closing nuclear plants when the entire point is to transition away from fossil fuels. Using nuclear energy as a bridge from fossil fuels to renewable energy makes way more sense than going back to natural gas for that transition.
Because most of the nuclear power plants are already in the process of shutting them down and just keeping them running is very dangerous. Also most of the fuel for the plants comes from... you guessed it: Russia. There's a great video from Simon Clark about nuclear power and climate change. The tl;dr is: Can be helpful, in about ten to fifteen years.
That is, because decisions are made emotionally, not rationally. Or maybe rationally in regards to the voters, who are afraid of nuclear power, because germans all remember he Chernobyl desaster, which did have effects in large parts of germany. Playgrounds were closed, mushrooms from the woods and game meat were suddenly dangerous, stuff like that. Any ever so minor incident in a nuclear plant gets huge media attetion in germany immediately.
Because as long as there’s fossil fuels in the ground, someone will profit handsomely from their extraction and sale. There will be no widespread renewable power generation as long as the coal, gas, and oil holds out. Think that will cause catastrophic climate change and the deaths of huge numbers of humans? Of course it will! But the fossil fuel tycoons believe they’ll be safe in their bunkers in New Zealand, and that’s all that matters. To them.
Because politics was overreacting to an overreaction by the people here. Noone seems to care that actually producing energy with nuclear reactors is almost free of emissions of any kind while fossil fuels are continuing to be burned, evacuating and destroying whole villages. the NIMBYs are opposing solar and wind everywhere they can. This country is just as unorganized and misguided in modern technology as you can imagine.
Hi! There are some interesting details that may be not fully covered in the video Barge movement The pipe barge is being held in place by several anchors (up to 8 for big ships, this is enough for 230m long barge) and use geopositioning systems to determine exact location where the pipe must be installed. The barge advances forward by slipping anchors at the back and drawing these at the front simultaneously. Pipe stays in place, since it's being held by anchors and buoys, while barge is moving. Thus a space for a new pipe section is freed. Then a small tugboat pick anchors one by one (this is the job for a diver) and put them in new locations according to planned vessel path. So the process repeats. Landfalls These are often most problematical parts for installation. Cranes and bulldozers cannot swim. And a big ship cannot float in low waters too. For these parts special ships that are capable of floating on the very low water levers are used. But they cannot carry the whole pipe or other heavy equipment. So the pipe section that connects terrestrial part of gas pipeline with a marine one is welded on the land. Then a small boat grabs the cable that is attached to the pipe section to the pipe barge, brings it to the barge and the prepared section is dragged onto the welding vessel. Seasons of year In northern seas navigation can stop (because of ice, obviously). The ships cannot wait here. Sometimes the ship has to go to maintenance or must be replaced. So they must leave the pipe. By technology sea water never goes into the pipe. So when the construction pauses for a long period of time the pipe has a cap welded and its ends is attached to anchors and buoys. The whole pipe rests in water. Later on a divers picks its ends, cap is removed and the process resumes. Pipeline deepener / trencher When a pipe lands onto the seafloor there is not enough stability provided by its own weight. To keep it in place and protect from environment they use a pipeline deepener. Which literally represents a remote controlled underwater bulldozer with boers installed on its mechanical arms. It moves several times along the tube (above the tube) digging the trench under it. The removed soil covers the tube. Thank you! I am looking forward to hearing about this or similar subject more
Thank you for this explanation! So unfortunate Russia had to defend it's people and now we will not see this project in action.. Here in UK electricity price went up (for me) from 18 to 26 pence for KW/h this spring and probably will climb higher in autumn.
@@ijustwanttogosailing8248 ...Russia had to kill others, you mean, in the name of defending itself (using this as an excuse). Нечестивец бежит, хотя никто его не преследует...
@@ReflectedMiles Exactly. You-Crane started firing at residential areas of Donetsk city, Russian government had a duty to intervene. Cant write that word in full - it triggers censorship.
Shutting down reactors while also using more Russian gas has to be one of the largest geo-economic/political mistakes I have seen in the energy sector in awhile.
@@paulhaynes8045 I mean, many of us have been screeming this from the rooftops during the entire Energiewende, so it is more like a vindication none of us actually wanted to see come to fruition.
That's not what's happening or was planned. An absolute miniscule amount of gas is used for electricity production. Your shilling for nuclear power is embarrassing.
turning off the reactors was and is correct, they are at EOL anyway,... but with conservatives in charge do you really expect the neccesary money to be put into renewables?
idk why we would shut down nuclear reactors they are realiable and a very efficiant source of power and the coal powerplants we have here alone release more radiation then all nuclear power plants combined did (there is a small ammount of Radiation in coal) and also standing in the reactor room dosnt kill you fast standing near a coal powerplant and your lungs are going to hate you pretty fast .. .
The decision to end nuclear power was a concession the social democrats had to give the green party in order to form a government back in 1998 and end 16 years of the chancellorship of Kohl. Germany was considered back then the weak man of Europe, and to get something done, it couldn't stand with the conservatives longer. The idea was to end nuclear and switch so renewables, with around 20 years time to transition to those. But in 2005, Angela Merkel and her conservative party won the chancellorship back, cancelled the end of nuclear power in Germany and therefore also didn't invest enough into alternative energy sources. After Fukushima, Merkel changed her mind and went back to end nuclear power, but the conservatives still didn't do much to properly replace it, hoping to overturn that decision in the future.
A lot of people making decisions today were flower children in the 60s who honestly believe in the Nuclear Boogeyman without knowing that it is hands down one of the most green friendly power options. Solar and Wind produce tons of greenhouse gasses in their production, solar and battery relies on strip mining limited resources, wind produces tons and tons of waste as the blades crack requiring dedicated landfills that fill up with material that will never biodegrade, and kill off lots of migratory birds. I agree, it's nuts 🤷♂
Wow. I've got some experience with undersea fiber-optic cable, and, this sounds massively more complicated than all of the frustrations involved in fiber. Edit: To clarify, I was extremely far disconnected with the actual physical engineering of laying fiber-optic cable. I only learned enough about the issue to complete my task. But if you are curious about his concept, I cannot recommend enough the 1996 Wired Magazine article, by cyberpunk author Neal Stephenson, titled "Mother Earth Mother Board". He actually went along for the ride, and he really learned his stuff.
@@anteeko Finding where it is broken is not that hard, especially if you have multiple of them and only one of them is damaged (which is most likely scenario). You can then compare echoes from lines and calculate where it is damaged(this all holds for electric ones, not sure about optic, maybe something similar can be used too). Repairing on the other hand is much harder, that is why I imagine those cables are heavily insulated to minimize damage probability.
It is such a shame that such a monumental feat in infrastructure isn't even going to be used. But as a civil engineering student, it is projects like these that inspire me so much
Politics aside, this is a massive undertaking! It's cool to see exactly how they did it, all the steps involved, logicistics, etc. It's incredible this is even possible to build! Pipe segments weight over 24 tons! Wow. And making sure there are zero leaks, that the highly-corosive salt water doesn't do anything; it's incredible this is possible at all!
Minor gripe. I'm not sure why the baltic sea is considered "harsh" or somehow seen as more salty than oceans and such (or even close). The Baltic sea is brackish and contains a mixture of fresh and and salt water. The average salinity is only seven grams per kilogram of water. By contrast, in the oceans, it is 35 grams per kilogram. Engineers would absolutely have this amount of salinity in mind though, but compared to other saline bodies of water, the baltic sea should be easy to manage.
Laying a pipeline along the sea floor is pretty amazing, but what about the ship/work deck where it is all welded together. As a 50 year machine designer, that's the most amazing thing to me.
The firing line on the pipelay vessels is an extraordinary process of wash, rinse, and repeat. Every weld, bar none has to be perfect. Constant tension needs to be maintained on the pipe as it is lowered onto the seabed. The anchor lay barges have a support fleet and work in concert as an orchestra would. Pioneering Spirit was used as one of the pipelay vessels - the most advanced of its type in the world and the largest ever built (it has a beam of 124m alone!).
@@Michael-0000 Pioneering Spirit isn't an anchor lay barge, is a DP ship. Most large pipelayers are ships with DP systems now as barges are slow and are no good in deep water.
I'm glad you made this video Grady. It is a fascinating project, and you have a real skill for explaining things clearly. As others have pointed out - engineering is not just about calculations and blueprints, it is a human endeavour subject to human influences, and you covered all aspects of the project well. It is sad to see such an impressive testament to human ingenuity likely mothballed forever, but maybe this could be the catalyst for refactoring our energy supplies. If you see this, would you consider a video on fracking? Because it is an emotive topic most videos tend to bias pro or against it, and it would be good to see the processes explained from an engineering perspective. Plus think of the cool acrylic models you could make!
@@DeadlyNerotoxins Well, here in Oklahoma, the wastewater injection has been linked to a massive increase in earthquakes leading to property damage across the state.
@@TheOnlypancho and so it begins… Fracking does not use waste water, because they have to use special dense mixtures; that said it’s certainly not suitable for drinking. Which is why they drill far under aquifers and create cement barriers; protects aquifers but also ensures they aren’t losing product. If there were leaks they’d know and stop it because that’s lost income. Nor could Ground water exist at the depths they’re drilling to and find it’s way through the rock to an aquifer, otherwise you’d already have the much lighter petroleum products in the aquifer and not water. Not to mention the drilling would have to be massive to have the kind of impact hundreds of feet down that could possibly begin to cause surface disruption and earthquakes. At the depths they go you could set off a nuke and barely notice it on the surface, look up below video of ground nuke testing in Nevada
I’m honestly surprised that it only cost $10 Billion There’s a 26 mile highway construction project underway near my house that is going to cost over a Billion dollars and the most complicated part about it is some elevated flyover ramps at the interchanges. I would have expected 1000+ km of under water pipe to cost a lot more
The biggest difference is this is a private company, vs a project funded by the government (assuming you live in the US) which overpays for everything.
it's cause they have to pay " prevailing wage" for everything which is the maximum union wage in the area. and they have to use all union workers.and if they have to keep traffic lanes open while constructing that causes many problems and delays.
Technically, it's not empty, it must be kept full of gas to maintain pressure. But considering someone blew it up yesterday, billions of cubic meters of methane are pouring into the Baltic as I type this.
Nuclear power isn't the answer. There aren't enough fuel reserves to convert much of electricity generation to nuclear. The waste storage issues are a nightmare. The chances of accidents are massive and they make great targets for terrorists and lunatic leaders of massive military countries (I guess you can work out who might target European nuclear installations!?!?!).
To be fair, those are older types of reactors whose life has been extended previously. Problem is that it takes long time to establish new projects (takes decades to plan) which is not compatible with political climate.
@@davidwebb2318 there are enough fuel reserves...where tf did you get there isn't enough? waste storage is onsite, and would be better if there was some place that would ALLOW offsite storage but thanks to people who don't understand nuclear power much less waste or the risks...who instead go with their feels rather than knowledge you have idiots lobbying for and running on policies of "nukes r dangerous". quite simply, fossil fuels which includes natural gas, has killed more people, caused more environmental damage and CONTINUES to cause deaths and damage than every nuclear plant accident, every general nuclear accident, AND NUCLEAR BOMB ever dropped.
@@davidwebb2318 it was directly because Fukushima. They shut them down due to pressure and protest. So...we went from paying 50-100 Euro a month for heating and electricity to paying 200-300 for the same. Great when you earn minimal wage, but nobody cares about poor people real every day life just ideologies... ...and they restarted the coal plants and still not enough energy. Than Ukraine happened. Crazy how some people (not you in perticular but in general) judge others every day live from thousands of kilometers away. When YOU can buy less because things cost double now, you suddenly stop caring about "small" things and put back the salami to the shelf as you can't afford it any more.
@@Joe-Dead The World Nuclear Association estimate is that the known nuclear fuel reserves will last for 90 years at current consumption. If we doubled nuclear electricity generation from 14% to 28% that would double the rate of consumption and halve the time it would last to 45 years. Nuclear power plants are only economic if they can run for at least 50 years. The maths is pretty simple, they won't be economic to build. The waste storage is a massive problem. we would have to have it under armed guad for 1,000 years. We simply cannot make comittments that far into the future because we have no idea what that will cost. Offshore wind power is cheaper than nuclear power now anyway so the argument is pointless. Nuclear energy had it's time but it is now clear that there are more economic ways of providing electricity that are a lot safer.
"Germany is shuttering its last 3 nuclear power plants using natural gas as a bridge to wind and solar." I don't know how you got through saying that line without exploding in rage. Germany stepping away from the BEST green energy source and shooting itself in the foot is mindboggling to me.
@@Masterrunescapeer not if you include the hidden cost of environmental damage. In which case, it can be cheaper than renewables (at least where such is less abundant).
Including a segment explaining why both NS1 or NS2 should not be repaired. Don't throw good money after the bad and all that... literally a sunk cost fallacy to even dream of it.
I worked on a 42" line for Otis-Eastern, (Spectra) so I have a good idea of the work involved. This under water installation is just unbelievable! Thanks for a great video
I used to work for 3 years as a quality supervisor, just to think that 78,000 concrete coated pipes that i approved are right now laying at the bottom of the sea is just wonderful.
I'm a petroleum engineer by education and when you said PIG stood for "pipeline inspection gauge" I thought you had to be incorrect. Turns out there are two kinds of pigs (and I suspect PIG in that usage is actually a backronym, but I can't find proof of that). The pigs we used were always large rubbery plugs (not sure what the actual material is) and the primary purpose was to clean pipes out because stuff builds up over time. Often that's heavier hydrocarbons forming wax on the inside of pipes but sometimes it's other things as well, or the pipes are being taken apart and need to be as empty as possible (so the pig is sent down the line to push out any remaining liquids). They're a pretty neat and super simple tool. The ones we used were "gas-powered". In other words, you'd put them into a pipe and pressure up the gas behind them to shoot them down the line.
ohh i saw about this in concrete pipes at construction sites, they use compressed air with it in one end to pull out all the remaining concrete at the end of the day
@@noemierollindedebeaumont1130 When you create an acronym for a word that's already being used. (In other words, the suggestion is that they were already calling it a "pig", and created the acronym later.)
@@noemierollindedebeaumont1130 If you know what an acronym is, a backronym is basically formed in reverse. So normally an acronym is a multi-word phrase and they take the letters to make it easier to say. Basically, they abbreviate it. A backronym, as WanJae said, takes an existing word and assigns meaning to each letter. The internet seems to think that early pigs were named that because they make a squealing sound when you send them down the pipe, which means the term "pig" existed first and the "pipeline inspection gauge" meaning came later. . As far as your question about how long wax takes to build up, it depends on a lot on the circumstances. Every oil is different so some will have very little waxy material and some will have a lot. The temperature you transport it at also makes a big difference. Just like with a wax melter at home, the hotter it is the more it wants to stay melted. For natural gas pipelines like the Nordstream 2, wax buildup isn't really a problem. But natural gas does contain some suspended liquid (things like propane, which boil easily) so they might still have to pig the lines if this thing eventually goes online. My guess is that for a line this big, the pig wouldn't be pressure driven but instead would power itself somehow (probably an electric motor?)
@@WheissRS They actually do a similar thing with concrete for drilled oil wells too. You can look up an animation online I'm sure but basically they drill a big hole, then put a steel sleeve down into it. Once the sleeve is in place they pump cement down into it which basically goes down through the steel and then back up around the outside of it (between the rock and the steel sleeve). Once they've pumped enough cement, they push something down to clear the inside of the sleeve and then they drill the next part of the hole. A typical oil well will have several layers of this sleeve (they're called casings) and the primary purpose is to protect against leaks into groundwater.
Shuttering nuke plants is a bad idea unless they have reached the end of their life. These countries are in for a rude awakening if they think they can meet supply with wind and solar alone.
Yeah and also every country individually thinks they can just import energy from their neighbours while they change to renewables, not thinking ahead that everybody else will be trying to import at the same time and so everybody will be left empty-handed. In reality either living standards will take a serious dip or some totally savage country will provide loads of dirty energy, negating everbody else's efforts (such as China building more and more coal plants even today)
@@MrSaemichlaus I think we will have to depend on fossil fuels for at least another 20 years until cold fusion or some other new tech is widely distributed. The ITER project is a good example of what can replace fossil fuels but will take time to implement.
@@ArtisanTony Try another 100 years. Technology is gonna stagnate soon due to labor shortages and not able to get the production of products of newer tech.
What was that I heard about not wanting to disrupt the cultural sites like shipwrecks? Thanks for always making sure to include things like this. I am a practicing archaeologist and life is so much easier when crews and engineers understand what we are there for. Likewise I find your videos, and upcoming book (pre-ordered 2, one for personal and one for the office) an invaluable resource for understanding the built environment around me!
Plus, nearly all of those shipwrecks are graveyards. Especially for the more modern shipwrecks, many of those sites will still have relatively close living descendants who I'm sure wouldn't like the thought of someone laying a massive pipeline over grandpa's final resting place.
It's common to avoid archaeological sites or cultural heritage for onshore pipelines too,stumbling upon an old WW2 or bronze age site in Europe will halt construction, so they survey ahead of time.
Your writing, presentation and production qualities continue to improve dramatically Grady; your programs are a pleasure to watch. Your engineering analysis is always spot-on and insightful but this episode also shows a great segue into the political realm. Well done.
You did a great job covering this issue! Engineering isn't just about physics, material science etc (even though that's what we're here for!) It impacts our lives and societies. I would be interested in more of that! (For example highway and traffic engineering has in my opinion devastated many of our cities). But if you want to stay outside of messy political issues I get that! You'd certainly have a nastier comment section.
Indeed there were several politicians in the 1930s responsible for the ugliness and destruction of the US American Cities. And later in the 1960s in West Germany to further car sales many cities & towns abolitioned all their Trams and asphalted over the tracks. It's weird to say we cannot have it any other way when back then without need it was easy peasy for politicians to change all our daily lives so drastically. Many more people were transported using public transport more efficient and faster and cheaper than today in major industrial cities like Berlin. Privatisation and Car & Truck Friendly Policies are the downfall of mankind.
@@snigwithasword1284 Yeah, but Grady's an expert on engineering and hardly an expert on politics or history. He might prefer to stick to topics where he's more confident of his subject mastery.
@snigwithaword at 2:54 Grady says to see more in depth sources before forming a strong opinion. Engineering has no religion or politics, so it isn't a disservice. But he did say it was so interconnected in this he couldn't ignore it, more than fair of him.
The welded area is where it flexes, so it has plastic instead of concrete at the welds. It is not "so much flexibility", there is only a little but it adds up.
That was a really well done video, approaching the logistics and explaining the complexities but also making sure context was understood for the project as a whole. Large projects, and particularly multinational projects always have geopolitical context as to why or how it went the way it did and you did an excellent job incorporating that information!
Indeed as a french engineer i would advise your to not talk about politic neither about climat change and stay in your range of engineering. Thanks for the explanation of how they build it.
I agree; a presenter should stick to what he knows about. It was painful waiting for an engineer to start talking about the engineering after parroting a false narrative.
thx for the nice video. i´m from the area but from the newspapers one never gets such a deep understanding of the costs and complexities involved. fun fact: the pipeline ends exactly next to what should have been the biggest nuclear powerplant of the GDR @8 times 440MW = 3520MW only 5 of the 8 units delivered power to the grid before reunification brought the project to a sudden end
Of all the things we take for granted, these long underwater pipelines have got to take the cake. I wonder if underwater oil pipelines like this are more difficult than, say, trans-atlantic cabling, despite being a fraction of the length. It's one thing to lay cables, but another to lay a pipe that has to contain expensive pollutants for decades or centuries to come. But then again, trans atlantic cables probably have to account for plate tectonics as well (and they certainly can't allow any water intrusion either), so I'm honestly not sure which is more difficult.
It's crazy to me that the pipeline can handle such bending between the ocean floor and the barge, considering it's constructed of rolled steel tubes welded together.
I’d give the unappreciated prize to US nuclear plants. No smoke, no coal trains, no gas pipelines, no vast tracks of land covered by giant wind turbines, so people drive by a couple miles away and never know they are there.
@@Nill757 How are they a thing that people take for granted? Where we get our power from has been a public debate for decades now so it's a bit absurd to say that they are taken for granted because no power source is.
That's the fundamental premise of Star Trek. In a future humans could achieve when the set aside their difference, stop wasting resources on defense and consumption that we may one day explore the galaxy.
What kind of maintenance would the empty pipeline need per year to keep it theoretically usable? How long can it remain unused? Is it suitable for other uses (fill with telecom cables?) -- all the gas infrastructure at each terminal notwithstanding?
@@nicolasdominguez1890 That just switches one type of gas for another, the problem is not the type of gas, it's where the pipeline starts at that causes the issues.
@@nicolasdominguez1890 🤪 hydrogen lol not likely. Hydrogen requires cryogenic storage and transport. EXTREME cold temperatures. Temperatures that make the Arctic feel balmy. Nevermind the question "where you gonna get your hydrogen?" - most of the world's hydrogen production comes from reformed Natural Gas - go figure. People talk about hydrogen like it's a fuel source when it's just a waste of time.
Cool to learn about the engineering aspect of this project. I only ever heard about it's political implications. Shame all these engineers worked for nothing in the end, but nothing can be done about that...
Hydrogen would only be another source of income for Russia, which would be used to fuel its Megalomaniac leadership. Until Russia changes it's political stance, that pipeline will never be used.
As a software engineer, I can say that I'm not that disappointed when my work doesn't get used. I got paid the same as if it were! (Maybe those engineers feel similarly, ha.)
@repatch43 Also the absurdness of the NRC doesn't help. Requiring backups to backups to backups and each needs to be certifiably independent and individually capable makes inspections so much more difficult and overall approval a nightmare
that's what happens if conservatives are in charge for decades,... instead of pumping the money into real Renewables,... the money get's pumped into oil and gas
The fact that you can take an incredibly complicated project and present it, using both photographs and digital imagery, is a true accomplishment. Thank you, Grady, for making engineering subjects like this accessible, even to us lowly geologists 😉🙃
"The fact that you can take an incredibly complicated project and present it, using both photographs and digital imagery, is a true accomplishment." You do realise he didn't take any of the photographs, video footage or CGI footage in this video!?!? He just pasted it together from on line sources.
I am german and I totally agree. The thing is that our green party was born out of an anti nuclear movement right after the chernobyl desaster. Nuclear power is a pretty costly and time consuming investment that a lot of states do not want to risk unless either a green movement pushes forward to invest in this almost caron neutral technology or else to gain access to nuclear weapons. Germany never wanted nuclear weapons and the green party pushes against nuclear power plants, so it is surprising that we have ever invested into this. Germany did absolutely everthing wrong regarding nuclear power: There was a time, when germany had the safest nuclear technology in the world, but instead of exporting it, we stopped various power plant projects that would have been even safer due to NIMBY issues. Then we decided to close nuclear plants down slowly, one after another in a smooth but unneccessary way. One election later, the plotical rival decided not to shut down the nuclear power plants. Of course, due to their run-times being limited, their state of maintenance wasn´t ideal (but certainly still very good copmpared to elsewhere in the world). However, the same chancellor Merkel shut them down over night due to political opportunism. As a result, germany is failing to achieve it´s own climate targets and is utterly dependant on russian oil, gas and coal. People always talk about Nordstream 2, but measured in Euros, oil is the bigger deal.
it IS mostly propaganda. some by the fossil lobby hating nuclear because it's a major competitor. people are guided by the media. the media sell them on the story that it's dangerous and expensive, and downplay the waste and risks of "renewables". meanwhile, neighboring countries (France) have cheap electricity, safe, way lower carbon, ... critical thinking isn't popular these days, especially not if you think critically about the things you're told by big entities like the government, parties, (media) corporations, ...
It is ironic, that Germany will end up buying oil from elsewhere, that is probably marked up barrels originally from Russia, except with a more environmentally unfriendly delivery path, and at some great cost.
I really like your videos. Interesting subjects done very well. I'd like to make a point that is very easy for anyone to verify: There is no such thing as "fossil fuel". Saturn's moon Titan is covered with lakes of petro chemicals. Did Titan's Dinosaurs have space suits? Oil is created deep in the earth under tremendous pressure from gravity, just at Titan as put under tremendous gravity effects by it's location next to giant Saturn. Easy to verify by just looking up descriptions of Titan on the net. It's an important point that should be understood.
@@PracticalEngineeringChannel Thanks for paying attention to my comment! So then the lakes of hydrocarbons on Titan WERE caused by dinosaurs in space suits. That's great! Now we have proof of life on other worlds! This should be celebrated and talked about, it's one of the most important discoveries of all of human history!
@@PracticalEngineeringChannel so, wikipedia is your authoritative source to answer a question, here on the origin of petroleum??? And, as another commenter posted, wow, didn't expect to find Soros propaganda on this channel. My friendly advice, stick to what you know, engineering.
Absolutely fascinating. I love the insight into how this stuff works Grady, thank you. Who'd a thunk you could have 'flexible' steel tubes wrapped in concrete?
This is truly an amazing infrastructure project. I'm surprised the addition of valves in certain areas was not added in order to prevent uncontrolled leakes in the event a line ever breaking. I would understand it would increase the price tremendously but the benefits could possibly be worth it in order to minimize environmental impacts. Great video Mr. Grady!
This is just speculation, but I could easily see that the additional complexity of underwater valve stations that could be remotely operated would actually increase the likelihood of leaks.
@@zrobotics I agree to a certain degree. The whole point of emergency valves is to cut the long segment from start to end into smaller links that can be controlled the flow. Worst case scenario if there was a broken segment in the middle of the pipe system, two valves would prevent from the flow of the gas from two ends. The leakage it self would be bad but having limited to only a section would be a lot better. But what do I know, this is more in the realm of mechanical engineering than civil 🤷🏼♂️
I'd love to see a video looking at the engineering challenges around oil/gas production. I could see a cool experiment being showing how drilling mud composition fights against bore hole pressures. Offshore systems are pretty interesting, with modern production happening in many steps, requiring many different kinds of ship/craft, and involving underwater networks of piping and machinery.
I'd love to see a follow-up video on the Nordstream 2 sabotage, and its engineering implications for other pipeline projects. Any chance you could make one? Even a general video on designing infrastructure to be safe(r) in the face of human malice would be fascinating.
I have worked in CWC ( concrete weight coating) plant in my country & i want to add in that it has anode on it to protect pipe and coating from any corrosion Besides that it's incredible that this kind of coating can be achieved without any high tech machinery.
Totally empty? What does that mean? It's filled with Air? N2? Vacuum? Water? I would imagine compressed N2 to avoid corrosion and to prevent a crush by water pressure...
I would never justify the Russian invasion of Ukraine but I wish people would apply the same standard they have for their geopolitical enemies also for their own nations. The US lecturing anyone on illegal invasions or human rights is like Ted Bundy lecturing about protecting women.
i don't justify any american invasion but let's look for real US trying to build a properly countries when they going in example is south korea or Japan !!! russia/USsR never had this in the mind and cuba , north Korea, Vietnam and ex soviet countries, east europe, all those countries are examples of russian invasions and “success“ !!!! So your friendship and ties with russian it's going to be regrettable for Germany!!!!
@@Matt-Kin In this case it's not "who benifits the most" it's "who gets hurt the most". In this case the goal is to hurt Russia by transitioning away from natural gas (or at least _Russian_ natural gas).
I heard from someone in the oil/gas industry that "Pipeline Inspection Gauges" is a backronym. Originally they were just called "pigs" and it didn't stand for anything, they just had to give it a name and "pig" stick.
The best laid pipes of mice and men can go awry for many reasons. Humans often choose to ignore risks and the people who make money in the short term are usually the best at ignoring them. The engineers and contractors probably got paid so it was mostly a _very_ expensive jobs program.
Germany shutting down all their nuclear plants with no plans for replacements seems like such a crazily ignorant idea. Are the nuclear plants and waste really that unsafe that they need to become so reliant on other countries? And not even for low carbon emission energy either. I thought nuclear energy has come a longs ways in recent years. Why are they doing this?
They are switching to renewable energy - that's the plan for replacement. Nuclear got hit first because it is unpopular, but coal is declining as well. Meanwhile in their energy supply, renewables are already greater than nuclear ever was. [Edit - and as for gas, the bulk of the issue is gas used directly for heating, so it's not related to the nuclear shutdown because the nuclear plants produce electricity.]
Hey, they have nice clean lignite now. You know, the suff people too poor to buy real coal for their stoves used to burn back in the 19th century . I do hope they will go to burning peat when they run out of lignite. That would make the aroma around power plants so lovely, and the people living around it so thirsty. Maybe they could install a malting floor in the chimney or something.
germany closing nuclear plants that have already been built and are able to provide zero carbon electricity is the single most ridiculous thing i have ever seen.
"Russia's Deadlocked Pipeline" - it wasn't Russian, it was 50%:50% Russo-German. When it was criminally blown up, Germany didn't dare to even squeak. This shows how independent it became.
@@markus1351 Gazprom paid half the cost of building Nord Stream 2, with the remainder of the $11 billion pipeline project financed by British oil and gas major Shell (SHEL. L), Austria's OMV (OMVV.VI), France's Engie and Germany's Uniper (UN01.DE) and Wintershall DEA (WINT. UL).
definetly one of the most fascinating videos you've put out in a while, thanks for this one! so cool to see the enormous feats we are capable of when motivated properly.
Your video on the construction of this pipeline brought back memories of working on the environmental impact statement for a gas pipeline from Papua New Guinea to Australia across the Torres Strait. The same environmental impacts applied there. After three EISs, the gas was finally processed in Port Moresby and exported as LNG.
If it’s a free market then Russia should be able to sell its gas and European should be allowed to buy it. More competition we are told will reduce prices for consumers. Guess only if they are approved by the us it seems
A 'pig' (at 7:33) has a part in the 1987 James Bond movie The Living Daylights. One is fitted out for a passenger, who is carried past the iron curtain to be greeted by Secret Service members at the other end.
Norstream 2 is only suspended in theory, but in reality it id dead. It is politically much easier to just pause the certification process forever, instead of making a big fundamental decision that forces a private company do something. It is really hard to imagine to see Nordstream 2 revived.
Europe could resume purchasing Russian petroleum and certify Nordstream 2 in return for every nuke Russia possesses. Short of that "pipe dream", happening, I agree.
Only hard to imagine N2 revival if you don’t know German or Putin’s history. Imagine creating highest residential electric rates in EU, while giving wealthy German industrial Barrons an exemption? Done.
Could you do an episode about industrial boilers? There’s so much mechanical and electrical aspects involved to operate safely. Such a fascinating piece of machinery. So simple yet so effective and efficient
If I ran a RUclips channel I would be scared to cover anything that involved politics, but you dove right in and handled it with tact and insight. Great video!
Who is Victoria Nuland? What are the Minsk Protocols? If you can't answer those questions you probably shouldn't be commenting about the situation in Ukraine.
Likewise, how many thousands of Russian speaking residents of the Donetsk region were murdered by shelling in an ongoing genocide over an eight year period while the Minsk accord was flouted.
It is my understanding that German politicians, like some other Western politicians, thought Vladimir Putin was more interested in becoming part of the "family of nations", so to speak, and was interested in economic modernization more than expanding the Russian empire. Of course, Putin's "first" invasion of Ukraine, in 2014, should have provided a huge red flag in this regard. I can't say for sure, but it seems like German politicians may have ignored the "risk" while focusing on the potential "reward" of cheaper and more accessible gas supplies. In one sense, you can't blame them because energy security is so important for a nation. However, I think everyone will now agree that more caution should have been exercised as Putin began to "flex his muscle".
I've seen these pipes stored in the port of Mussalo in Kotka, Finland. You wouldn't believe how many there were. They were stacked about 6 high and the rows just went on forever.
Same thing with the Rover in Ohio. 700 miles of pipe in a single yard. The truck traffic during construction was insane b
according to Brady, I'd say about 100,000
Joke aside, I see what you're saying, seeing that much of anything in one place is mind boggling.
Finland should keep those pipes lol
@@MrHungrySimon I drove by the Coors facility and saw their outdoor keg storage. Never imagined what an acre 30 feet tall of kegs would look like but it was impressive
@@cmdr1911 What is Rover in Ohio? Why is there 700 miles of pipe? Where is that much pipe stored?
As a German, I am fairly familiar with the political issues surrounding this project. I applaud you for facing the issue head-on, not purely focusing on the engineering but taking a more holistic view by bookending the science with the political and historical background. I think you did an excellent job covering the fascinating engineering while contextualising it to the appropriate degree.
I'm a physicist, but I seem to recall that it's very important for engineers to have a working knowledge and skills in ethics as well as the physical sciences. After this video, I would be very excited if you decided to make a series of videos about the ethical challenges engineers face, and best practises for resolving them - even if that's probably pretty far off from what your general audience expects from this channel!
Nice insight, i belive part of being a chartered engineer is adhering to those ethical rules set out by the various bodies you're chartered with. I'd certainly be interested in hearing how those things are dealt with and what options an engineer has to escalate against pushy business requirements that intentionally compromise safety etc.
I mean a lot of engineering is about ethics down the line. Health and safety, proper maintenance and inspection and so on are really about ethics but they're ethics issues that were resolved long ago. Engineering has a lot of ethics which has just been absorbed into the profession not as an ethical question but as a concrete set of methods to mitigate risks and keep everyone safe.
@@sncy5303 well, no! I don't have numbers, but I'm certain a lot of people that worked on this project couldn't have kept Russia out of the Ukraine. Of course, there are rotten apples everywhere, but to put every worker of said project in jail doesn't seem right to me.
Agreed. Count me in to the Grady teaches engineering ethics series. 👍
Excellent suggestion.
One of my final projects before retirement was constructing pipelines at a coal powered thermal power plant complex. The plant was using the waste coal slurry stored in ponds over 50 years of operation as a fuel after cleaning out the dirt from the coal in a cleansing plant then mixing it with newly mined coal from another coal mine. The pipes were 18 inches or 45.72 cm in diameter and some of the lines were close to 10 miles in length. All of this was done to clean up the area around the plant and reclaim the land back to it’s original state before the plant closes in a couple of years. I have a few photos from my time on the pipe crew with the plant off in the background that I should enlarge and make into framed prints.
Wow! That's really awesome!
Oh lol!
Just a tiny correction is needed - 45.72 CM... Centimeters... Almost half a meter.
Not 45.72 mm, which is 1.8" (inches).
@@kostpoliakov You are correct. Great catch. Damned IPhone.
Just to clarify are you saying the waste slurry had unburnt coal in it?
Brian, what did they do with the flyash?
Where I live they make bricks out of it.
You know so much about pipelines. I have a tiny contribution: "pig" didn't originally stand for "Pipeline Inspection Gauge", it was originally just a dumb plug they used to push thru long pipes with pressure to clean them from the inside, called "pigs" because of the squealing sound they made as they went thru.
Very cool fact. I worked with a mechanical company, and when they finished welding up the chiller pipe, and pressure checked it for leaks, they would sometimes flush this detergent of some kind, into the pipe to clean the inside. Thins like slag, and carbon deposits from heating the steel during the welding process, had to be scrubbed out of there.
Backronyms at their finest.
At my work we have to pump a lot of paint coating around and the rubber bungs we push through the pipework with compressed air then solvent at the start of a washdown are known as pigs so 👍👍
There are plenty of areas where live animals are still used. Piglets between 6 months and a year outperform even the fanciest synthetic electronic units, and when greased are much, much faster. The squealing is usually the result of backwards insertion.
@@amarissimus29 😂🤣😂
9:25 "Germany is planning to shutter the last 3 of its nuclear plants"
I don't get why people are closing nuclear plants when the entire point is to transition away from fossil fuels. Using nuclear energy as a bridge from fossil fuels to renewable energy makes way more sense than going back to natural gas for that transition.
Because most of the nuclear power plants are already in the process of shutting them down and just keeping them running is very dangerous. Also most of the fuel for the plants comes from... you guessed it: Russia.
There's a great video from Simon Clark about nuclear power and climate change. The tl;dr is: Can be helpful, in about ten to fifteen years.
That is, because decisions are made emotionally, not rationally. Or maybe rationally in regards to the voters, who are afraid of nuclear power, because germans all remember he Chernobyl desaster, which did have effects in large parts of germany. Playgrounds were closed, mushrooms from the woods and game meat were suddenly dangerous, stuff like that. Any ever so minor incident in a nuclear plant gets huge media attetion in germany immediately.
@@andreaspeters8602 when colds will came, they became smarter ;)
Because as long as there’s fossil fuels in the ground, someone will profit handsomely from their extraction and sale. There will be no widespread renewable power generation as long as the coal, gas, and oil holds out. Think that will cause catastrophic climate change and the deaths of huge numbers of humans? Of course it will! But the fossil fuel tycoons believe they’ll be safe in their bunkers in New Zealand, and that’s all that matters. To them.
Because politics was overreacting to an overreaction by the people here. Noone seems to care that actually producing energy with nuclear reactors is almost free of emissions of any kind while fossil fuels are continuing to be burned, evacuating and destroying whole villages. the NIMBYs are opposing solar and wind everywhere they can. This country is just as unorganized and misguided in modern technology as you can imagine.
Hi! There are some interesting details that may be not fully covered in the video
Barge movement
The pipe barge is being held in place by several anchors (up to 8 for big ships, this is enough for 230m long barge)
and use geopositioning systems to determine exact location where the pipe must be installed.
The barge advances forward by slipping anchors at the back and drawing these at the front simultaneously.
Pipe stays in place, since it's being held by anchors and buoys, while barge is moving. Thus a space for a new pipe section is freed.
Then a small tugboat pick anchors one by one (this is the job for a diver) and put them in new locations according to planned vessel path. So the process repeats.
Landfalls
These are often most problematical parts for installation.
Cranes and bulldozers cannot swim. And a big ship cannot float in low waters too.
For these parts special ships that are capable of floating on the very low water levers are used.
But they cannot carry the whole pipe or other heavy equipment.
So the pipe section that connects terrestrial part of gas pipeline with a marine one is welded on the land.
Then a small boat grabs the cable that is attached to the pipe section to the pipe barge, brings it to the barge
and the prepared section is dragged onto the welding vessel.
Seasons of year
In northern seas navigation can stop (because of ice, obviously). The ships cannot wait here. Sometimes the ship has to go to maintenance or must be replaced. So they must leave the pipe.
By technology sea water never goes into the pipe.
So when the construction pauses for a long period of time the pipe has a cap welded and its ends is attached to anchors and buoys.
The whole pipe rests in water.
Later on a divers picks its ends, cap is removed and the process resumes.
Pipeline deepener / trencher
When a pipe lands onto the seafloor there is not enough stability provided by its own weight.
To keep it in place and protect from environment they use a pipeline deepener.
Which literally represents a remote controlled underwater bulldozer with boers installed on its mechanical arms.
It moves several times along the tube (above the tube) digging the trench under it.
The removed soil covers the tube.
Thank you! I am looking forward to hearing about this or similar subject more
Thank you for this explanation!
So unfortunate Russia had to defend it's people and now we will not see this project in action..
Here in UK electricity price went up (for me) from 18 to 26 pence for KW/h this spring and probably will climb higher in autumn.
@@ijustwanttogosailing8248 ...Russia had to kill others, you mean, in the name of defending itself (using this as an excuse). Нечестивец бежит, хотя никто его не преследует...
@@ReflectedMiles Exactly. You-Crane started firing at residential areas of Donetsk city, Russian government had a duty to intervene.
Cant write that word in full - it triggers censorship.
@@ijustwanttogosailing8248 Okay comrade. Sure thing.
hope Grady will put this explanation in the next video
Shutting down reactors while also using more Russian gas has to be one of the largest geo-economic/political mistakes I have seen in the energy sector in awhile.
The only true 20-20 vision is hindsight.
@@paulhaynes8045 I mean, many of us have been screeming this from the rooftops during the entire Energiewende, so it is more like a vindication none of us actually wanted to see come to fruition.
That's not what's happening or was planned.
An absolute miniscule amount of gas is used for electricity production.
Your shilling for nuclear power is embarrassing.
German eco-virtue posturing plus German amnesia about the fundamentals of rotten to the core dictatorships. Not 20/20 hindsight.
turning off the reactors was and is correct, they are at EOL anyway,... but with conservatives in charge do you really expect the neccesary money to be put into renewables?
Imagine switching FROM nuclear TO gas. Germany, you're insane.
They even exported the not fully processed uranium ore(0.20% of U-235) to Russia with a pay above.
From nuclear to gas to unreliable solar and wind. It's all by design. Your suffering is their gain.
idk why we would shut down nuclear reactors they are realiable and a very efficiant source of power and the coal powerplants we have here alone release more radiation then all nuclear power plants combined did (there is a small ammount of Radiation in coal) and also standing in the reactor room dosnt kill you fast standing near a coal powerplant and your lungs are going to hate you pretty fast .. .
The decision to end nuclear power was a concession the social democrats had to give the green party in order to form a government back in 1998 and end 16 years of the chancellorship of Kohl. Germany was considered back then the weak man of Europe, and to get something done, it couldn't stand with the conservatives longer. The idea was to end nuclear and switch so renewables, with around 20 years time to transition to those. But in 2005, Angela Merkel and her conservative party won the chancellorship back, cancelled the end of nuclear power in Germany and therefore also didn't invest enough into alternative energy sources. After Fukushima, Merkel changed her mind and went back to end nuclear power, but the conservatives still didn't do much to properly replace it, hoping to overturn that decision in the future.
A lot of people making decisions today were flower children in the 60s who honestly believe in the Nuclear Boogeyman without knowing that it is hands down one of the most green friendly power options. Solar and Wind produce tons of greenhouse gasses in their production, solar and battery relies on strip mining limited resources, wind produces tons and tons of waste as the blades crack requiring dedicated landfills that fill up with material that will never biodegrade, and kill off lots of migratory birds. I agree, it's nuts 🤷♂
Correction: they blocked certification of NS2 BEFORE the invasion.
Wow. I've got some experience with undersea fiber-optic cable, and, this sounds massively more complicated than all of the frustrations involved in fiber.
Edit: To clarify, I was extremely far disconnected with the actual physical engineering of laying fiber-optic cable. I only learned enough about the issue to complete my task. But if you are curious about his concept, I cannot recommend enough the 1996 Wired Magazine article, by cyberpunk author Neal Stephenson, titled "Mother Earth Mother Board". He actually went along for the ride, and he really learned his stuff.
That's amazing, cool and really important work that you do.
I can only think of some of the complications related to underwater fiber.
The pipe is probably a bit more robust than fiber but yeah the headaches are probably the same.
Fiber most be a challenge too.. I cannot even imagine how to repair? how to find where it is broken? nuts
@@anteeko Finding where it is broken is not that hard, especially if you have multiple of them and only one of them is damaged (which is most likely scenario). You can then compare echoes from lines and calculate where it is damaged(this all holds for electric ones, not sure about optic, maybe something similar can be used too). Repairing on the other hand is much harder, that is why I imagine those cables are heavily insulated to minimize damage probability.
@@belisarian6429 Very interesting thanks!
I am a 50 years old electronic engineer. Thanks to your amazing videos, I'm starting a civil engineering undergraduate course and i am delighted!
Wow may I ask why?
Wow. How are you going about that? I’ve been thinking of switching careers.
@@NoahSpurrier Same. I been thinking of switching away from engineering. My salary cause me to lose passion in engineering.
@Ex troll Now living clean life “ex” troll? I think you may need to examine how many biases you’ve still retained…
@Ex troll Now living clean life Username incorrect.
It is such a shame that such a monumental feat in infrastructure isn't even going to be used. But as a civil engineering student, it is projects like these that inspire me so much
And now its leaking gas..
Yeah, good foresight
@@mikamajlund3622 it's not "leaking"...it was blown up
@@mikamajlund3622 was leaking gas, they've turned the gas valves off now the pipes are just full of sea water.
@@garyr7027 Its holes in them, watch news 👍 some one has blown a bomb.
Politics aside, this is a massive undertaking! It's cool to see exactly how they did it, all the steps involved, logicistics, etc. It's incredible this is even possible to build! Pipe segments weight over 24 tons! Wow. And making sure there are zero leaks, that the highly-corosive salt water doesn't do anything; it's incredible this is possible at all!
24 tons! 4:57
@@ironcito1101 Edited thanks!
I'm certain Russia didn't fudge the specs or use below par materials or cut corners at all.
Ok, calm down there, it's not that exciting you simpleton
Minor gripe. I'm not sure why the baltic sea is considered "harsh" or somehow seen as more salty than oceans and such (or even close). The Baltic sea is brackish and contains a mixture of fresh and and salt water. The average salinity is only seven grams per kilogram of water. By contrast, in the oceans, it is 35 grams per kilogram. Engineers would absolutely have this amount of salinity in mind though, but compared to other saline bodies of water, the baltic sea should be easy to manage.
I've done plenty of "regular", below ground oil and natural gas pipelining here in the USA, but under sea pipelining super interesting to me.
@@GarrishChristopherRobin777 See now that's something I'd find highly interesting too.
@@thatrealba that and cross alentic fiber lines and just how fragile it all xan be. Just takes a ship dropping it's Anker and that line is dead.
@@iwinrar5207 I've been around a couple of fiber strikes. Luckily it wasn't me operating at the time. 😅
10 Billion $ full of salt water. I wonder what kind of corrosion is happening now inside the pipelines because of the now saltwater exposure?
Laying a pipeline along the sea floor is pretty amazing, but what about the ship/work deck where it is all welded together. As a 50 year machine designer, that's the most amazing thing to me.
The firing line on the pipelay vessels is an extraordinary process of wash, rinse, and repeat. Every weld, bar none has to be perfect. Constant tension needs to be maintained on the pipe as it is lowered onto the seabed. The anchor lay barges have a support fleet and work in concert as an orchestra would. Pioneering Spirit was used as one of the pipelay vessels - the most advanced of its type in the world and the largest ever built (it has a beam of 124m alone!).
@@Michael-0000 Pioneering Spirit isn't an anchor lay barge, is a DP ship. Most large pipelayers are ships with DP systems now as barges are slow and are no good in deep water.
@@markchisholm2657 Correct - Pioneering Spirit is DP. Anchor lay barges were also used to lay sections of the pipeline but the majority was DP.
I'm glad you made this video Grady. It is a fascinating project, and you have a real skill for explaining things clearly. As others have pointed out - engineering is not just about calculations and blueprints, it is a human endeavour subject to human influences, and you covered all aspects of the project well.
It is sad to see such an impressive testament to human ingenuity likely mothballed forever, but maybe this could be the catalyst for refactoring our energy supplies.
If you see this, would you consider a video on fracking? Because it is an emotive topic most videos tend to bias pro or against it, and it would be good to see the processes explained from an engineering perspective. Plus think of the cool acrylic models you could make!
I second this! Would like to learn just what all the fuss is about with fracking.
@@DeadlyNerotoxins Well, here in Oklahoma, the wastewater injection has been linked to a massive increase in earthquakes leading to property damage across the state.
Yes Please! Please do a fracking video Grady!
@@TheOnlypancho and so it begins… Fracking does not use waste water, because they have to use special dense mixtures; that said it’s certainly not suitable for drinking. Which is why they drill far under aquifers and create cement barriers; protects aquifers but also ensures they aren’t losing product. If there were leaks they’d know and stop it because that’s lost income. Nor could Ground water exist at the depths they’re drilling to and find it’s way through the rock to an aquifer, otherwise you’d already have the much lighter petroleum products in the aquifer and not water. Not to mention the drilling would have to be massive to have the kind of impact hundreds of feet down that could possibly begin to cause surface disruption and earthquakes. At the depths they go you could set off a nuke and barely notice it on the surface, look up below video of ground nuke testing in Nevada
@@Billsbob Ummm, so the videos I've seen of tapwater catching fire are just a scam?
I’m honestly surprised that it only cost $10 Billion
There’s a 26 mile highway construction project underway near my house that is going to cost over a Billion dollars and the most complicated part about it is some elevated flyover ramps at the interchanges.
I would have expected 1000+ km of under water pipe to cost a lot more
The biggest difference is this is a private company, vs a project funded by the government (assuming you live in the US) which overpays for everything.
it's cause they have to pay " prevailing wage" for everything which is the maximum union wage in the area. and they have to use all union workers.and if they have to keep traffic lanes open while constructing that causes many problems and delays.
@@ronblack7870 do you have data that backs this up, or is this hearsay?
A government run pipeline through the mountains in Canada is now over $32 billion.
A lot of that cost likely went into environmental studies.
The curious thing it's that You could post a single video for each production's phase! The complexity of this project it's very huge.
Very nice work!
I love this channel so much, I have no Engineering background at all, but the way everything is explained is fantastic and easy to understand.
Ditto, dito!
ikr same
Excellent presentation in an easy to understand manner. No "talking above" your audience. That's respectful!
Technically, it's not empty, it must be kept full of gas to maintain pressure. But considering someone blew it up yesterday, billions of cubic meters of methane are pouring into the Baltic as I type this.
it's crazy to me that Germany is shutting down nuclear plants.
Nuclear power isn't the answer. There aren't enough fuel reserves to convert much of electricity generation to nuclear. The waste storage issues are a nightmare. The chances of accidents are massive and they make great targets for terrorists and lunatic leaders of massive military countries (I guess you can work out who might target European nuclear installations!?!?!).
To be fair, those are older types of reactors whose life has been extended previously. Problem is that it takes long time to establish new projects (takes decades to plan) which is not compatible with political climate.
@@davidwebb2318 there are enough fuel reserves...where tf did you get there isn't enough? waste storage is onsite, and would be better if there was some place that would ALLOW offsite storage but thanks to people who don't understand nuclear power much less waste or the risks...who instead go with their feels rather than knowledge you have idiots lobbying for and running on policies of "nukes r dangerous". quite simply, fossil fuels which includes natural gas, has killed more people, caused more environmental damage and CONTINUES to cause deaths and damage than every nuclear plant accident, every general nuclear accident, AND NUCLEAR BOMB ever dropped.
@@davidwebb2318 it was directly because Fukushima. They shut them down due to pressure and protest.
So...we went from paying 50-100 Euro a month for heating and electricity to paying 200-300 for the same. Great when you earn minimal wage, but nobody cares about poor people real every day life just ideologies...
...and they restarted the coal plants and still not enough energy.
Than Ukraine happened.
Crazy how some people (not you in perticular but in general) judge others every day live from thousands of kilometers away.
When YOU can buy less because things cost double now, you suddenly stop caring about "small" things and put back the salami to the shelf as you can't afford it any more.
@@Joe-Dead The World Nuclear Association estimate is that the known nuclear fuel reserves will last for 90 years at current consumption.
If we doubled nuclear electricity generation from 14% to 28% that would double the rate of consumption and halve the time it would last to 45 years. Nuclear power plants are only economic if they can run for at least 50 years. The maths is pretty simple, they won't be economic to build.
The waste storage is a massive problem. we would have to have it under armed guad for 1,000 years. We simply cannot make comittments that far into the future because we have no idea what that will cost.
Offshore wind power is cheaper than nuclear power now anyway so the argument is pointless. Nuclear energy had it's time but it is now clear that there are more economic ways of providing electricity that are a lot safer.
"Germany is shuttering its last 3 nuclear power plants using natural gas as a bridge to wind and solar." I don't know how you got through saying that line without exploding in rage. Germany stepping away from the BEST green energy source and shooting itself in the foot is mindboggling to me.
Nuclear energy is scary to environment alarmists, because they saw a movie one time.
Far from the best, it's the most expensive source of power.
@@Masterrunescapeer initially. Taking longer to break even doesn't make the total cost of power more
@@Masterrunescapeer not if you include the hidden cost of environmental damage. In which case, it can be cheaper than renewables (at least where such is less abundant).
@@AJ-ln4sm it is scary to Europeans who lived through chernobyl.
A movie didn't do it okay, maybe for 15 year olds ...
Grady, we need a short on how the sabotaged sections could be repaired!!
Including a segment explaining why both NS1 or NS2 should not be repaired. Don't throw good money after the bad and all that... literally a sunk cost fallacy to even dream of it.
@@sietuuba only should not be if you want Germany to freeze
It can't be repaired realistically... It's füll of corrosive seawater
I worked on a 42" line for Otis-Eastern, (Spectra) so I have a good idea of the work involved. This under water installation is just unbelievable!
Thanks for a great video
I used to work for 3 years as a quality supervisor, just to think that 78,000 concrete coated pipes that i approved are right now laying at the bottom of the sea is just wonderful.
77,997
Now it got blown up 💀
@@marthafakker 💀💀💀💀😂 I was literally just scrolling comments after I found this video following the news of it blowing up
Building up infrastructure for terrorists - must feel amazing
@@marthafakker Biden blew it up
It's sad to see how this marvel of engineering and this monstruous amount of work and materials have ended up destroyed.
I am glad. USA USA USA
@@MrAk474life USA gas pipelines too, hope you enjoy living in a world with no respect for international law.
it is very good that it was destroyed
I'm a petroleum engineer by education and when you said PIG stood for "pipeline inspection gauge" I thought you had to be incorrect. Turns out there are two kinds of pigs (and I suspect PIG in that usage is actually a backronym, but I can't find proof of that).
The pigs we used were always large rubbery plugs (not sure what the actual material is) and the primary purpose was to clean pipes out because stuff builds up over time. Often that's heavier hydrocarbons forming wax on the inside of pipes but sometimes it's other things as well, or the pipes are being taken apart and need to be as empty as possible (so the pig is sent down the line to push out any remaining liquids). They're a pretty neat and super simple tool. The ones we used were "gas-powered". In other words, you'd put them into a pipe and pressure up the gas behind them to shoot them down the line.
ohh i saw about this in concrete pipes at construction sites, they use compressed air with it in one end to pull out all the remaining concrete at the end of the day
Wow that's super interesting !
How long goes it take for the wax to build up 🤔
What's a backcronym ?
@@noemierollindedebeaumont1130 When you create an acronym for a word that's already being used. (In other words, the suggestion is that they were already calling it a "pig", and created the acronym later.)
@@noemierollindedebeaumont1130 If you know what an acronym is, a backronym is basically formed in reverse. So normally an acronym is a multi-word phrase and they take the letters to make it easier to say. Basically, they abbreviate it. A backronym, as WanJae said, takes an existing word and assigns meaning to each letter.
The internet seems to think that early pigs were named that because they make a squealing sound when you send them down the pipe, which means the term "pig" existed first and the "pipeline inspection gauge" meaning came later.
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As far as your question about how long wax takes to build up, it depends on a lot on the circumstances. Every oil is different so some will have very little waxy material and some will have a lot. The temperature you transport it at also makes a big difference. Just like with a wax melter at home, the hotter it is the more it wants to stay melted.
For natural gas pipelines like the Nordstream 2, wax buildup isn't really a problem. But natural gas does contain some suspended liquid (things like propane, which boil easily) so they might still have to pig the lines if this thing eventually goes online. My guess is that for a line this big, the pig wouldn't be pressure driven but instead would power itself somehow (probably an electric motor?)
@@WheissRS They actually do a similar thing with concrete for drilled oil wells too. You can look up an animation online I'm sure but basically they drill a big hole, then put a steel sleeve down into it.
Once the sleeve is in place they pump cement down into it which basically goes down through the steel and then back up around the outside of it (between the rock and the steel sleeve).
Once they've pumped enough cement, they push something down to clear the inside of the sleeve and then they drill the next part of the hole. A typical oil well will have several layers of this sleeve (they're called casings) and the primary purpose is to protect against leaks into groundwater.
You missed the perfect opportunity to call Nordstream 2 a pipe dream.
The part of the video that dealt with the mechanical, technical, and engineering, was fantastic.
Shuttering nuke plants is a bad idea unless they have reached the end of their life. These countries are in for a rude awakening if they think they can meet supply with wind and solar alone.
Easy they are lighting up gas plants instead, choochoo CO2
Yeah and also every country individually thinks they can just import energy from their neighbours while they change to renewables, not thinking ahead that everybody else will be trying to import at the same time and so everybody will be left empty-handed. In reality either living standards will take a serious dip or some totally savage country will provide loads of dirty energy, negating everbody else's efforts (such as China building more and more coal plants even today)
@@MrSaemichlaus I think we will have to depend on fossil fuels for at least another 20 years until cold fusion or some other new tech is widely distributed. The ITER project is a good example of what can replace fossil fuels but will take time to implement.
@@ArtisanTony Try another 100 years. Technology is gonna stagnate soon due to labor shortages and not able to get the production of products of newer tech.
@@fasddfadfgasdgs no, technology will keep pushing ahead. There will always be those who push it forward.
What was that I heard about not wanting to disrupt the cultural sites like shipwrecks? Thanks for always making sure to include things like this. I am a practicing archaeologist and life is so much easier when crews and engineers understand what we are there for. Likewise I find your videos, and upcoming book (pre-ordered 2, one for personal and one for the office) an invaluable resource for understanding the built environment around me!
Plus, nearly all of those shipwrecks are graveyards. Especially for the more modern shipwrecks, many of those sites will still have relatively close living descendants who I'm sure wouldn't like the thought of someone laying a massive pipeline over grandpa's final resting place.
It's common to avoid archaeological sites or cultural heritage for onshore pipelines too,stumbling upon an old WW2 or bronze age site in Europe will halt construction, so they survey ahead of time.
Shipwrecks are sanctuaries for marine wildlife.
They wanted to avoid German chemical weapons buried under the sea.
@zrobotics You do realize the Earth is a graveyard for all it's inhabitants. It's just a matter of time
With ocean water inside, these pipes will soon be useless.
Your writing, presentation and production qualities continue to improve dramatically Grady; your programs are a pleasure to watch. Your engineering analysis is always spot-on and insightful but this episode also shows a great segue into the political realm. Well done.
You did a great job covering this issue! Engineering isn't just about physics, material science etc (even though that's what we're here for!) It impacts our lives and societies. I would be interested in more of that! (For example highway and traffic engineering has in my opinion devastated many of our cities). But if you want to stay outside of messy political issues I get that! You'd certainly have a nastier comment section.
Indeed there were several politicians in the 1930s responsible for the ugliness and destruction of the US American Cities. And later in the 1960s in West Germany to further car sales many cities & towns abolitioned all their Trams and asphalted over the tracks. It's weird to say we cannot have it any other way when back then without need it was easy peasy for politicians to change all our daily lives so drastically. Many more people were transported using public transport more efficient and faster and cheaper than today in major industrial cities like Berlin. Privatisation and Car & Truck Friendly Policies are the downfall of mankind.
Presenting engineering neutrally with no context does everyone a disservice.
@@snigwithasword1284 Yeah, but Grady's an expert on engineering and hardly an expert on politics or history. He might prefer to stick to topics where he's more confident of his subject mastery.
@snigwithaword at 2:54 Grady says to see more in depth sources before forming a strong opinion. Engineering has no religion or politics, so it isn't a disservice. But he did say it was so interconnected in this he couldn't ignore it, more than fair of him.
@@RAD6150 He could have ignored it. He chose not to. I don't come here for his political and climate change agenda. So far I tolerate it.
Hi, I'm from the future. There's a interesting news about both pipes...
Would really love a video that covers how the pipe can retain so much flexibility despite being welded together!
Yes, especially since it has two dissimilar materials, metal and concrete. What does the flexing do to the bonding at their points of contact?
The welded area is where it flexes, so it has plastic instead of concrete at the welds. It is not "so much flexibility", there is only a little but it adds up.
@@tsamuel6224 Ahh, thanks for that explanation.
That was a really well done video, approaching the logistics and explaining the complexities but also making sure context was understood for the project as a whole. Large projects, and particularly multinational projects always have geopolitical context as to why or how it went the way it did and you did an excellent job incorporating that information!
Here before this blows up Again...
Indeed as a french engineer i would advise your to not talk about politic neither about climat change and stay in your range of engineering.
Thanks for the explanation of how they build it.
I agree; a presenter should stick to what he knows about. It was painful waiting for an engineer to start talking about the engineering after parroting a false narrative.
thx for the nice video. i´m from the area but from the newspapers one never gets such a deep understanding of the costs and complexities involved. fun fact: the pipeline ends exactly next to what should have been the biggest nuclear powerplant of the GDR @8 times 440MW = 3520MW
only 5 of the 8 units delivered power to the grid before reunification brought the project to a sudden end
If it were totally empty it wouldn't be blowing big bubbles in the ocean, Grady.
Yup, Bond used a PIG once to smuggle out a person from the iron block to Vienna!
pretty sure elon could do it as well.
Of all the things we take for granted, these long underwater pipelines have got to take the cake. I wonder if underwater oil pipelines like this are more difficult than, say, trans-atlantic cabling, despite being a fraction of the length. It's one thing to lay cables, but another to lay a pipe that has to contain expensive pollutants for decades or centuries to come. But then again, trans atlantic cables probably have to account for plate tectonics as well (and they certainly can't allow any water intrusion either), so I'm honestly not sure which is more difficult.
With under water cabling you also know immediately if there is a break when in service
It's crazy to me that the pipeline can handle such bending between the ocean floor and the barge, considering it's constructed of rolled steel tubes welded together.
I’d give the unappreciated prize to US nuclear plants. No smoke, no coal trains, no gas pipelines, no vast tracks of land covered by giant wind turbines, so people drive by a couple miles away and never know they are there.
@@Nill757 But... Bu-t nuclear plants are extremely dangerous because nuclear waste says the simpletons.
@@Nill757 How are they a thing that people take for granted? Where we get our power from has been a public debate for decades now so it's a bit absurd to say that they are taken for granted because no power source is.
0:45 to 1:12 You got a very important issue the wrong way round. Germany FIRST cancelled certification, and then 2 days LATER Russia invaded Ukraine.
10 billion. Pffft BlackRock manages 10 trillion in assets…
just imagine what crazy projects world would get to see if everyone would live in peace..
Ever watch the movie, "Contact?" 🤔
just imagine what crazy projects world would get to see if muslims, Israel and America didnt exist
That was the Europe only a little while back
@@czechgop7631 but then Putin thought to himself: hmm we have a pandemic what could i add? oh right lets just invade another country
That's the fundamental premise of Star Trek. In a future humans could achieve when the set aside their difference, stop wasting resources on defense and consumption that we may one day explore the galaxy.
I'm a beginning technical translator and your videos help me visualize everything I read about. thanks, Grady!
What kind of maintenance would the empty pipeline need per year to keep it theoretically usable? How long can it remain unused? Is it suitable for other uses (fill with telecom cables?) -- all the gas infrastructure at each terminal notwithstanding?
I googled the probable repurposing, and it could be used for hydrogen potentially
@@nicolasdominguez1890 That just switches one type of gas for another, the problem is not the type of gas, it's where the pipeline starts at that causes the issues.
@@nicolasdominguez1890 🤪 hydrogen lol not likely. Hydrogen requires cryogenic storage and transport. EXTREME cold temperatures. Temperatures that make the Arctic feel balmy. Nevermind the question "where you gonna get your hydrogen?" - most of the world's hydrogen production comes from reformed Natural Gas - go figure.
People talk about hydrogen like it's a fuel source when it's just a waste of time.
I kinda doubt they're going to bother. Nobody is going to want to deal with Russia for years, possibly decades.
@@pufthemajicdragon Also likes to leak through pretty much anything.
Cool to learn about the engineering aspect of this project. I only ever heard about it's political implications. Shame all these engineers worked for nothing in the end, but nothing can be done about that...
They advanced human engineering.
Maybe it can be reused for something else? Is it sealed enough for hydrogen?
Hydrogen would only be another source of income for Russia, which would be used to fuel its Megalomaniac leadership.
Until Russia changes it's political stance, that pipeline will never be used.
As a software engineer, I can say that I'm not that disappointed when my work doesn't get used. I got paid the same as if it were!
(Maybe those engineers feel similarly, ha.)
@BeWater Yeah lets just keep going crazy huh ? No reason to turn back to practicalities and boot these garbage leaders out to the curb, is there.
Would be intersting to see an update from you now that they were possibly sabotaged
Not possibly sabotaged, absolutely sabotaged, Biden came out in media telling the world that ‘Nordstream will be no longer’ a long time ago
America 🙃
“Possibly sabotaged”? Biden said it would never be allowed to be used.
Thanks for stepping into deep water to cover this huge project!
So the blown pipeline can easily be fixed.
9:32 wait, they're using natural gas as a bridge away from nuclear? shouldn't it be the other way around??
There was a huge anti-nuclear craze after fukushima. Its idiotic and wrong, but germany already shut down most of its nuclear plants. Its just sad.
Yup, but the idiocy of the anti nuclear lobby knows no bounds
@repatch43 Also the absurdness of the NRC doesn't help. Requiring backups to backups to backups and each needs to be certifiably independent and individually capable makes inspections so much more difficult and overall approval a nightmare
that's what happens if conservatives are in charge for decades,... instead of pumping the money into real Renewables,... the money get's pumped into oil and gas
@@itzdylandude what got the nrc to do with energy in Germany?
The fact that you can take an incredibly complicated project and present it, using both photographs and digital imagery, is a true accomplishment. Thank you, Grady, for making engineering subjects like this accessible, even to us lowly geologists 😉🙃
"The fact that you can take an incredibly complicated project and present it, using both photographs and digital imagery, is a true accomplishment."
You do realise he didn't take any of the photographs, video footage or CGI footage in this video!?!? He just pasted it together from on line sources.
Looks like RUclips is recommending this again after the recent pipeline explosions lol
Pipelines can transport any fluid. PIGs can also be used to separate fluids of different types as they inspect the pipeline.
Can’t economically transport any fluid. H2 for instance would carry 1/3 the energy of methane, and would leak.
Germany actually closing their nuclear power plants is perhaps the stupidest thing I've ever heard of...
Yeah. I wonder if they are older water core reactors or if there’s just a lot of “nuclear is bad” public pressure.
I am german and I totally agree. The thing is that our green party was born out of an anti nuclear movement right after the chernobyl desaster.
Nuclear power is a pretty costly and time consuming investment that a lot of states do not want to risk unless either a green movement pushes forward to invest in this almost caron neutral technology or else to gain access to nuclear weapons. Germany never wanted nuclear weapons and the green party pushes against nuclear power plants, so it is surprising that we have ever invested into this.
Germany did absolutely everthing wrong regarding nuclear power: There was a time, when germany had the safest nuclear technology in the world, but instead of exporting it, we stopped various power plant projects that would have been even safer due to NIMBY issues. Then we decided to close nuclear plants down slowly, one after another in a smooth but unneccessary way. One election later, the plotical rival decided not to shut down the nuclear power plants. Of course, due to their run-times being limited, their state of maintenance wasn´t ideal (but certainly still very good copmpared to elsewhere in the world). However, the same chancellor Merkel shut them down over night due to political opportunism. As a result, germany is failing to achieve it´s own climate targets and is utterly dependant on russian oil, gas and coal. People always talk about Nordstream 2, but measured in Euros, oil is the bigger deal.
It is more like „ecology pressure” thing, than techonogy issues. There is some document made by EU that they can still use this nuclear plants
it IS mostly propaganda. some by the fossil lobby hating nuclear because it's a major competitor.
people are guided by the media. the media sell them on the story that it's dangerous and expensive, and downplay the waste and risks of "renewables".
meanwhile, neighboring countries (France) have cheap electricity, safe, way lower carbon, ...
critical thinking isn't popular these days, especially not if you think critically about the things you're told by big entities like the government, parties, (media) corporations, ...
they are just too expensive to run
It is ironic, that Germany will end up buying oil from elsewhere, that is probably marked up barrels originally from Russia,
except with a more environmentally unfriendly delivery path, and at some great cost.
I really like your videos. Interesting subjects done very well.
I'd like to make a point that is very easy for anyone to verify:
There is no such thing as "fossil fuel". Saturn's moon Titan is covered with lakes of petro chemicals. Did Titan's Dinosaurs have space suits? Oil is created deep in the earth under tremendous pressure from gravity, just at Titan as put under tremendous gravity effects by it's location next to giant Saturn. Easy to verify by just looking up descriptions of Titan on the net. It's an important point that should be understood.
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fossil_fuel
@@PracticalEngineeringChannel Thanks for paying attention to my comment! So then the lakes of hydrocarbons on Titan WERE caused by dinosaurs in space suits. That's great! Now we have proof of life on other worlds! This should be celebrated and talked about, it's one of the most important discoveries of all of human history!
@@PracticalEngineeringChannel so, wikipedia is your authoritative source to answer a question, here on the origin of petroleum??? And, as another commenter posted, wow, didn't expect to find Soros propaganda on this channel. My friendly advice, stick to what you know, engineering.
This aged like milk, the pipeline was blown up today, in 3 places.
4
Absolutely fascinating. I love the insight into how this stuff works Grady, thank you. Who'd a thunk you could have 'flexible' steel tubes wrapped in concrete?
This is truly an amazing infrastructure project. I'm surprised the addition of valves in certain areas was not added in order to prevent uncontrolled leakes in the event a line ever breaking. I would understand it would increase the price tremendously but the benefits could possibly be worth it in order to minimize environmental impacts.
Great video Mr. Grady!
This is just speculation, but I could easily see that the additional complexity of underwater valve stations that could be remotely operated would actually increase the likelihood of leaks.
@@zrobotics I agree to a certain degree. The whole point of emergency valves is to cut the long segment from start to end into smaller links that can be controlled the flow. Worst case scenario if there was a broken segment in the middle of the pipe system, two valves would prevent from the flow of the gas from two ends. The leakage it self would be bad but having limited to only a section would be a lot better. But what do I know, this is more in the realm of mechanical engineering than civil 🤷🏼♂️
I'd love to see a video looking at the engineering challenges around oil/gas production. I could see a cool experiment being showing how drilling mud composition fights against bore hole pressures. Offshore systems are pretty interesting, with modern production happening in many steps, requiring many different kinds of ship/craft, and involving underwater networks of piping and machinery.
7/9/22..Nordstream pipeline vid was very good Grady! 👍 All your videos are top notch! Carry on Sir!👍👍👍💪👏🇺🇲⚙🛠😊
Love your Practical Engineering videos, Grady! Keep up the good work!
I'd love to see a follow-up video on the Nordstream 2 sabotage, and its engineering implications for other pipeline projects. Any chance you could make one?
Even a general video on designing infrastructure to be safe(r) in the face of human malice would be fascinating.
The problem with that sort of "sabotage proofing" is that the attackers will research the target and find the weakest points in the design.
I have worked in CWC ( concrete weight coating) plant in my country & i want to add in that it has anode on it to protect pipe and coating from any corrosion Besides that it's incredible that this kind of coating can be achieved without any high tech machinery.
Totally empty? What does that mean? It's filled with Air? N2? Vacuum? Water?
I would imagine compressed N2 to avoid corrosion and to prevent a crush by water pressure...
I would never justify the Russian invasion of Ukraine but I wish people would apply the same standard they have for their geopolitical enemies also for their own nations.
The US lecturing anyone on illegal invasions or human rights is like Ted Bundy lecturing about protecting women.
i don't justify any american invasion but let's look for real US trying to build a properly countries when they going in example is south korea or Japan !!! russia/USsR never had this in the mind and cuba , north Korea, Vietnam and ex soviet countries, east europe, all those countries are examples of russian invasions and “success“ !!!! So your friendship and ties with russian it's going to be regrettable for Germany!!!!
Russia had no choice. You really need to get your info from somewhere other than “mainstream” media.
Your knowledge, research and delivery is phenomenal! Thank You Grady
Still a marvel tech build regardless of the geo-policial and country origin impacts. The engineering and skills by the groups involved are incredible.
It's not deadlocked, it's just dead.
who benefits from this the most... the US of A as usual....
And Germans will pay the price for it....as usual.
A country very used to losing.
@@Matt-Kin Main beneficiaries of weaker Russia is of ALL of Eastern Europe. USA main concern is China.
@@Matt-Kin In this case it's not "who benifits the most" it's "who gets hurt the most". In this case the goal is to hurt Russia by transitioning away from natural gas (or at least _Russian_ natural gas).
@@Matt-Kin One could argue Qatar benefits more, at least financially.
Awesome video!
I heard from someone in the oil/gas industry that "Pipeline Inspection Gauges" is a backronym. Originally they were just called "pigs" and it didn't stand for anything, they just had to give it a name and "pig" stick.
According to some other commenters, it's because they make a squealing noise.
The best laid pipes of mice and men can go awry for many reasons. Humans often choose to ignore risks and the people who make money in the short term are usually the best at ignoring them. The engineers and contractors probably got paid so it was mostly a _very_ expensive jobs program.
While others are applauding the politics, I wish you had left it out. Not that I necessarily disagree, but I'm here for the engineering.
Leave politics out of it.
Europe sanctioned itself into oblivion.
I am an offshore pipe engineer and the data presented is much more detailed for beginners. Thanks
Germany shutting down all their nuclear plants with no plans for replacements seems like such a crazily ignorant idea. Are the nuclear plants and waste really that unsafe that they need to become so reliant on other countries? And not even for low carbon emission energy either. I thought nuclear energy has come a longs ways in recent years. Why are they doing this?
They are switching to renewable energy - that's the plan for replacement. Nuclear got hit first because it is unpopular, but coal is declining as well. Meanwhile in their energy supply, renewables are already greater than nuclear ever was.
[Edit - and as for gas, the bulk of the issue is gas used directly for heating, so it's not related to the nuclear shutdown because the nuclear plants produce electricity.]
Hey, they have nice clean lignite now. You know, the suff people too poor to buy real coal for their stoves used to burn back in the 19th century . I do hope they will go to burning peat when they run out of lignite. That would make the aroma around power plants so lovely, and the people living around it so thirsty. Maybe they could install a malting floor in the chimney or something.
germany closing nuclear plants that have already been built and are able to provide zero carbon electricity is the single most ridiculous thing i have ever seen.
indeed
Not really. They are old, expensive, and Fuel is hard to get
Amazing. Fascinating video.
"Russia's Deadlocked Pipeline" - it wasn't Russian, it was 50%:50% Russo-German. When it was criminally blown up, Germany didn't dare to even squeak. This shows how independent it became.
It's owned by a russian company...
@@markus1351 Gazprom paid half the cost of building Nord Stream 2, with the remainder of the $11 billion pipeline project financed by British oil and gas major Shell (SHEL. L), Austria's OMV (OMVV.VI), France's Engie and Germany's Uniper (UN01.DE) and Wintershall DEA (WINT. UL).
@@chavdarnaidenov2661 still No 50:50 russo-german
Squeak at whom? Nobody knows who did it.
@@SnabbKassa On the contrary, it is known TOO well, who did it, to speak about it openly, without losing your job in Europe.
definetly one of the most fascinating videos you've put out in a while, thanks for this one! so cool to see the enormous feats we are capable of when motivated properly.
Sobering to go back to this video weeks after it was reportedly sabotaged.
Your video on the construction of this pipeline brought back memories of working on the environmental impact statement for a gas pipeline from Papua New Guinea to Australia across the Torres Strait. The same environmental impacts applied there. After three EISs, the gas was finally processed in Port Moresby and exported as LNG.
If it’s a free market then Russia should be able to sell its gas and European should be allowed to buy it. More competition we are told will reduce prices for consumers. Guess only if they are approved by the us it seems
A 'pig' (at 7:33) has a part in the 1987 James Bond movie The Living Daylights. One is fitted out for a passenger, who is carried past the iron curtain to be greeted by Secret Service members at the other end.
Exactly what I was thinking. :)
Norstream 2 is only suspended in theory, but in reality it id dead. It is politically much easier to just pause the certification process forever, instead of making a big fundamental decision that forces a private company do something. It is really hard to imagine to see Nordstream 2 revived.
Europe could resume purchasing Russian petroleum and certify Nordstream 2 in return for every nuke Russia possesses. Short of that "pipe dream", happening, I agree.
Only hard to imagine N2 revival if you don’t know German or Putin’s history. Imagine creating highest residential electric rates in EU, while giving wealthy German industrial Barrons an exemption? Done.
Maybe Elon Musk would be interested in a miniature Hyperloop? No?
@@Nill757 Germany already has the highest rates in the EU. I do not get your point?
@@vsiegel That person is trolling.
Could you do an episode about industrial boilers? There’s so much mechanical and electrical aspects involved to operate safely. Such a fascinating piece of machinery. So simple yet so effective and efficient
As always very impressive videos! Only small thing to point out now is that that the pipeline is no longer "billions and totally empty". :p
If I ran a RUclips channel I would be scared to cover anything that involved politics, but you dove right in and handled it with tact and insight. Great video!
Time for the followup video, After The Explosions!
And who blew them up? FJB did.
It wasn't empty afterall...
It's obvious, you need to keep a constant pressure in there because of the sea pressure on it, otherwise the pipe line would implode.
Who is Victoria Nuland? What are the Minsk Protocols?
If you can't answer those questions you probably shouldn't be commenting about the situation in Ukraine.
Likewise, how many thousands of Russian speaking residents of the Donetsk region were murdered by shelling in an ongoing genocide over an eight year period while the Minsk accord was flouted.
Also, what was the involvement of Mitch McConnell and John McStain?
Great job! I think that you handled all of the issues well.
I thoroughly enjoy your knowledge regarding the engineering aspect of this project, but your political opinion about it is naive.
This project blew my mind from the beginning. Like how did Germany see this going?
Obviously those with $$ own the enough politicians that profit is more interesting that national security.
It is my understanding that German politicians, like some other Western politicians, thought Vladimir Putin was more interested in becoming part of the "family of nations", so to speak, and was interested in economic modernization more than expanding the Russian empire. Of course, Putin's "first" invasion of Ukraine, in 2014, should have provided a huge red flag in this regard. I can't say for sure, but it seems like German politicians may have ignored the "risk" while focusing on the potential "reward" of cheaper and more accessible gas supplies. In one sense, you can't blame them because energy security is so important for a nation. However, I think everyone will now agree that more caution should have been exercised as Putin began to "flex his muscle".
Now days there has to be 24/7 security management. Plus shut off valves in place and sensors in place. As you build.