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Purchase the Milepost here. Click the image for more information.
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Three major pipelines have been built through the Delta area -
and a pipe section' display will be found in front of the Visitors
Information Center. Shown below is the sign found at
Alyeska's Pump Station 9. The pipeline begins in Prudhoe Bay
and ends in Valdez.
The first pipeline was the three-incher built as part of the
famous Canol project during World War II. It delivered refined
petroleum products from Whitehorse to the emergency airfields on
the Canadian side and to Northway, Tanacross, Big Delta, and Ladd
Field, now Fort Wainwright, in Alaska. During the September 1942 -
September 1945 period, 7,943 aircraft were delivered to the
Russian Air Forces under the Lend-Lease program utilizing these
airfields. At war's end, the line fell into disuse, and most the
pipe has been salvaged out in recent years.
The second line is the eight-inch Haines pipeline, which was
built in 1954 to transport petroleum products from the port of
Haines to military installations in Interior Alaska. This line is
still in place and, though the line and its pumping stations [one
of which is located about 12 miles north of Delta on the
Richardson Highway] have been inactivated, the line was used as
recently as 1980 when some surplus military fuel was moved out of
the Tok area.
The third is the 48-inch trans Alaska
pipeline, which was completed in June of 1977, twenty-seven
months after the first length of pipe was laid. This line was
built by private contractors working for Alyeska Pipeline Service
Company, the agent for the eight major oil companies who own the
oil being transported. The total construction cost was over 9.5
billion dollars. The trans Alaska pipeline transports crude oil
from the oil fields on Alaska's North Slope to the Port of Valdez.
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