Interesting perspective. Can you cite any gov. building or industrial code that supports that? Reason I ask is that before I retired, I worked for USPS in a medium sized mail processing facility. They use a *lot* of air for all sorts of stuff in those facilities. About 15 years ago, they replaced the compressor (new one was, IIRC, a 50 HP screw compressor) and all the corroding black iron in the building with copper; all the 'trunk' lines were 2". All the copper in the building used sweated joints. The only one that ever let go was when one of the mechanics forgot to completely depressurize the system before putting a torch to a joint to open the system to add a drop.
There was a time when USPS was exempt from things like OSHA regs, but that's long gone (I bought at auction a bunch of power tools they had to replace when the rules kicked in). I'd be amazed if the (very expensive) complete rebuild of the air system in that facility didn't comply with the most strict of industrial codes.