There is consensus on the need for in-service buckling analyses to assess the integrity of both flowlines and long distance trunklines subject to HP/HT service condition. The extent of the analyses and supporting survey depends on the severity of the application.
In the last two decades, the pipeline industry has gained significant experience in both the design and operation of pipeline systems exposed to global buckling. Actually, the early 90s have been a watershed: before the phenomenon was just known (theoretically), then it was seen...as soon as pipeline integrity management programmes have been introduced in the offshore pipeline industry practices. Although, limited information have been documented in the open literature, now as then.
Several efforts have been dedicated to develop design methods and procedures suitable for operating pipeline safely as well as protecting the population, environmental resources and assets. At the beginning, there was a gap to be closed as specific mitigation measures were never designed. Nowadays, thanks to computational progress, it seems that the attention is addressed to face the uncertainties affecting the subject matter but, sometime, leading to overdesign.
The scope of the paper is to present aspects of global buckling design analyses that were performed in recent projects with the aim to highlight the challenges and the risks, the accuracy or the limitation of the methods, the feedback and the lesson learnt of real installed pipelines under operating conditions.