Prime Radiant/Machine Cards
MMDayCANONclass card

National Gas Pipeline Network (US, 1920s–ongoing)

infrastructure pace layer · 1929–ongoing

lifespan: 400 yrs · motor: push

Class card for the US national natural gas pipeline network — the push-infrastructure machine that moves natural gas from wellhead to industrial and residential end-users at continental scale. The modern long-distance gas pipeline class was inaugurated by Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line in 1929 (980-mile Texas-to-Indianapolis transmission line), establishing the template of the interstate transmission pipeline: high-pressure compressor-station-driven steel trunk lines feeding local distribution companies (LDCs). The Natural Gas Act of 1938 placed interstate gas pipelines under Federal Power Commission (FPC) regulation, cementing the natural-monopoly rate-of-return framework that governed the class through the post-WWII build-out era. During World War II the Big Inch (crude oil) and Little Inch (refined products) pipelines (1942–1943) demonstrated wartime emergency-build capability; both were converted to natural gas service post-war, constituting the Tennessee Gas Pipeline network (1944) and accelerating the build-out. The post-WWII suburban heating boom drove rapid expansion: ~200,000 miles of gas transmission and distribution pipe by 1960. FERC (successor to FPC, 1977) continued natural-monopoly regulation until FERC Order 436 (1985) mandated open-access transportation and deregulated pipeline merchant functions — the most consequential restructuring since 1938. The fracking revolution (2008+) flooded domestic supply, drove down gas prices, and repositioned the US as the world's largest gas producer; the network expanded to serve LNG export terminals (Sabine Pass first cargo February 24, 2016). The Russia-EU gas crisis (2022) validated US LNG export infrastructure as a geopolitical asset. In 2026 the network is an energetic zombie: enormous throughput (~30 trillion cubic feet/yr), ~40% of US electricity generation served, LNG exports at record levels, but methane leakage (1–3% upstream, ~33% US energy CO2), and energy-transition pressure from climate policy render the machine simultaneously indispensable and targeted. Sources: Tussing + Tippee (1995); Yergin, The Quest (2011); IEA annual reports.

Machine type

corporeal

Plasticity

rigid

Substrate

corporeal social semiotic

Wave source

wave9-atlas-mm28-cluster-f-logistics-infrastructure

Inputs

  • Pipeline capital (equity and debt for interstate transmission buildout)
  • Raw natural gas (wellhead supply from producing basins)
  • FERC/FPC regulatory framework (certificate authority and rate-of-return authorization)
  • Compressor station network (electric-driven centrifugal compressors)

Outputs

  • US residential and commercial gas heating (heating and cooking)
  • Industrial process heat (chemical, steel, cement, food manufacturing)
  • Electricity generation feedstock (~40% US electricity generation 2024)
  • LNG export capacity (Sabine Pass 2016+; ~12 bcf/d export capacity 2024)

Landscape pressures

  • Energy transition and climate policy targeting methane leakage and gas combustion CO2 (75% intensity)
  • Fracking supply revolution 2008+ — price collapse disrupting long-term pipeline contracts (65% intensity)
  • LNG export infrastructure connecting US network to global gas market post-2016 (60% intensity)

Intra-era couplings

Cross-era couplings

State variables

legibility_coverage
0.97
CANON
fiat_progress_credibility
0.30
CANON
mm_byproduct_load
0.82
CANON
zombie_persistence_index
0.80
CANON
narrative_coherence
0.25
CANON
opp_strength
0.85
CANON
gravitational_weight
0.88
CANON
delanda_territorialization
0.88
CANON
delanda_coding
0.60
CANON
pace_layer_mismatch_stress
true
CANON

Phase snapshots

MM-Day1929–1980complicated
MM-Day1980–2026complicated

Notable instances

  • Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line (1929) (1929) — First modern long-distance interstate gas pipeline; 980 miles Texas Panhandle to Indianapolis. Founded 1929 by Frank Par…
  • Tennessee Gas Pipeline (1944) (1944) — Incorporated 1944 from WWII Little Inch pipeline conversion; 1,265-mile system. Subsidiary of Kinder Morgan. Major north…
  • Big Inch + Little Inch Pipelines (WWII, 1942–1943) (1942) — Wartime emergency construction: Big Inch crude oil pipeline (1,254 miles Texas-to-NJ; completed August 1943); Little Inc…
  • Natural Gas Act 1938 / FPC Regulation (1938) — Regulatory framework-as-instance: Natural Gas Act 1938 (FPC jurisdiction) + Phillips decision 1954 (wellhead price contr…
  • Sabine Pass LNG Terminal (2016) (2016) — First US LNG export terminal of the modern era; Cheniere Energy; first cargo February 24, 2016. Repositioned US gas netw…
  • Hope Natural Gas Company (1898) (1898) — Appalachian gas distribution pioneer; Standard Oil of Ohio subsidiary (1898); West Virginia and Ohio distribution. Hope …

Sources

  • Tussing, Arlon R. and Tippee, Bob (1995). The Natural Gas Industry: Evolution, Structure, and Economics · 88%
  • Yergin, Daniel (2011). The Quest: Energy, Security, and the Remaking of the Modern World · 90%
  • Smil, Vaclav (2017). Energy and Civilization: A History · 88%
  • IEA (2023). World Energy Outlook (annual) · 85%
  • EPA (2023). Inventory of U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks (annual) · 85%