A gas delay usually shows up at the worst possible point in a project. The building shell is done. Equipment is in place. Inspectors, trades, tenants, and owners all expect handoff to happen on schedule. Then the permanent gas service slips, or a utility outage...
A familiar jobsite problem goes like this. The building is nearly done, inspections are lining up, tenants are asking for move-in dates, and one missing piece stops everything. The permanent natural gas line isn't live yet. At that moment, many teams start...
A gas delay rarely shows up on your schedule the way it hits in real life. One week you’re lining up final trades, startup checks, and inspections. The next week the permanent gas service still isn’t live, the generator can’t be commissioned, temporary heat is in...
A job can be 95% done and still be dead in the water. That usually happens when the building is ready, the equipment is installed, the schedule is tight, and the permanent gas service still isn’t live. The utility trench may be delayed. Permitting may be dragging. A...
You’re on a job that can’t wait for the utility timeline. The generators need fuel, the building needs heat for drying or freeze protection, and someone on the team asks whether hydrogen should be part of the plan. That question comes up more often now because...
A lot of teams first search for a co2 pipeline map when a project is already under pressure. A site plan is moving. Utility coordination is underway. Then a survey note, county comment, or environmental review mentions an existing or proposed CO2 corridor near the...