Pipeline Safety

About the Pipeline Safety Program

The commission develops and enforces safety standards for natural gas and hazardous liquid pipelines around Washington state. The commission also inspects sections of interstate natural gas and hazardous liquid pipelines in our state. Standards and enforcement actions are the responsibility of the U.S. Department of Transportation, Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA).

Our Mission

The mission of the Pipeline Safety Program is to ensure public health, safety, and environmental quality by striving to:

  • Conduct quality inspections of hazardous liquid and natural gas pipeline companies.
  • Improve safety laws and regulations.
  • Educate local communities on pipeline safety issues.
  • Provide technical assistance to pipeline operators, local governments, and communities.
  • Enforce laws and regulations in a fair and equitable manner.

Program History

The pipeline safety program began inspecting natural gas systems operating in the Washington state in 1955. Intrastate hazardous liquid pipelines were added to the commission's authority in 1996.

In 2000, the Legislature approved the Pipeline Safety Act - HB 2420, directing the program to seek federal approval to include inspections for all interstate pipelines. In 2001, the Legislature adopted the Pipeline Safety Funding Bill - SB 5182.

After working closely with PHMSA for two years, the pipeline safety program became the lead inspector for all interstate pipeline inspections and incidents in Washington state in 2003. The program can make recommendations to PHMSA, but does not have enforcement authority over interstate pipelines.

Program Funding

Support for the program comes from federal grants and pipeline fees. Pipeline fees are set every year before Sept. 1.

Per WAC 480-75-240 and WAC 480-93-240, company fees are allotted for gas and hazardous liquid pipeline companies based on the total pipeline miles reported to the commission each year. The remaining program overhead costs are assigned to the company using an effort-based allocation system. The program requires staff to track all hours spent directly with the specific pipeline company and allocates fees based on each company’s percentage of hours worked.

Washington State Pipelines

As of 2024, there are 41 pipeline operators in Washington operating over 47,000 miles of pipelines. 31 of the pipelines carry natural gas, and 10 carry hazardous liquids such as gasoline and jet fuel. There are 12 interstate pipelines in Washington - six carry liquid, and the other six carry natural gas. Interstate lines typically are large-diameter lines operating at very high pressure.

The commission also regulates a liquefied natural gas facility, propane storage sites, and natural gas master meters. Master meters are small natural gas distribution systems operated by schools, hospitals, or residential complexes such as apartment buildings and mobile home parks.

Pipelines are not only for oil or natural gas transportation. Pipelines may also be used to transport other commodities. More recently, there has been an increase in “emerging" pipeline commodities such as carbon dioxide, hydrogen, and hydrogen blends, renewable natural gas, ammonia, and sustainable aviation fuel. As of 2025, there are two biogas pipeline systems with 1.65 miles of pipelines and three hydrogen systems with 2.96 miles operating in Washington state.

Program Operations

From expert engineers to inspectors with years of experience, the Pipeline Safety Program includes a diverse mix of professionals. All of the program's inspectors are federally certified. They have received all federal and state pipeline safety regulation training, as well as advanced investigator training.

Three key roles manage the program's daily operations to make sure operations run safely:

  • Pipeline Safety Director manages the pipeline safety program.
  • Chief Pipeline Safety Engineer directs all compliance activities for the program’s eight pipeline inspectors.
  • Operations Manager oversees administrative support, budget needs, policy creation and management, and damage prevention efforts.

Main Contacts

Dennis Ritter, Acting Director and Chief Engineer
Email: Dennis.Ritter@utc.wa.gov
Call: 360-402-0066

Marina Rathbun, Operations Manager
Email: Marina.Rathbun@utc.wa.gov
Call: 360-664-1135

Pipeline Safety Program

Call: 360-664-1160
Email: PipelineSafety@utc.wa.gov
Office: 621 Woodland Square Loop, Lacey, Wash

For news and updates, follow @WAUTC on Facebook, Bluesky, LinkedIn, and YouTube.

Videos

Reports and Studies

Pipeline Siting in Washington

Citizens Committee on Pipeline Safety