The Keystone Pipeline Network Could Soon Be Completed Under Trump, But Will It Be Safe?

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In the coming months, TransCanada will likely receive a green light to build the final legย ofย its Keystone pipeline network, which would carry Canadian tar sands to Gulf of Mexico refineries.ย President-electย Trumpย hasย said that, during his first 100 days in office, he willย reverse President Obamaโ€™s decision to block the Keystone XLย Pipeline.

If built, TransCanada maintains that the Keystone pipeline will be the safest pipeline ever built. But an ongoing DeSmogย investigation into the Keystone networkโ€™s safety record continues to raise questionsย about the veracity ofย TransCanadaโ€™sย claim.

The existing Keystone network has been marred by spills and probable code violations.ย The most recent spill was in April 2016 when a landowner in South Dakota discoveredย what turned out to be a 16,800 gallon spill from the Keystone 1 pipeline onย hisย land.

A Pipeline Network Marked by Spills andย Secrecy

The Keystone pipeline networkย starts with theย Keystone 1ย line in Hardisty, Alberta, connecting with the Cushing Gulf Coast Extension pipeline in Steele City, Nebraska, whichย ends in Cushing, Oklahoma. There, the network meetsย the Keystone XL Gulf Coast pipeline, ending at refineries in coastalย Texas.ย 

The Keystone 1 pipeline went online in June 2010. In the first two years of operation,ย that pipeline had more than a dozen spills. In October 2012, it was shut down whenย areas ofย extreme external corrosionย were detectedย duringย a mandatory safety test with anย in-line inspectionย tool.

When the pipeline shutdown was made public, TransCanada and the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) told the press that the shutdown was due toย โ€œpossible safety issues.โ€ And although PHMSA sent representatives to the site where TransCanada was digging up the pipeline in Missouri, no further information was made availableย to theย public.

Evan Vokes, a former TransCanada employee-turned-whistleblower, advised reporters to look into whatย happenedย because he suspected thatย something very serious had gone wrong. โ€œYou donโ€™t shut a pipe down that earns millions of dollars a day over aย small anomaly,โ€ he said. Yet that is howย TransCanada described the incident to reporters inย 2012.

DeSmog took Vokes’ advice, and asked TransCanada and PHMSAย if the cathodic protection system, which protects the pipelineโ€™s coating, played aย role in the shutdown or not. Neither entity would answer the question, so DeSmogย filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request in August 2103 for all documents related to theย shutdown.ย 

More than two years later, PHMSA partially filled the request. The partial release of information revealed that sections of the pipeline’s wall had corroded drastically, leaving those areas dangerously thin, and leading TransCanada to shut it downย immediately.ย 

The corrosion which the in-line inspection tool detected was so extreme that TransCanada had an oil spill cleanup crew onย hand when it dug up theย pipe in areas where corrosion was detected. One spot had lostย 96.8 percent of its thickness by the time itย wasย unearthed.

Waiting for Moreย Information

The FOIA request has yet to be fully filled. DeSmog has received piecemeal information since PHMSA sent its firstย response.ย 

Documents TransCanada marked confidential originally were not released to DeSmog. When DeSmog inquired about documents mentioned in emails that werenโ€™t part of the released information,ย Madeline Vanย Nostrand, FOIA officer with PHMSA, explained that before she could give them to DeSmog, she would have to give TransCanada a chance to make the case for why they shouldnโ€™t beย released.ย 

Vanย Nostrand assured DeSmog that just because the company marked the documents confidential didnโ€™t mean she wouldnโ€™t turn them over. โ€œWe will make our own review determination, but only after consulting with TransCanada,โ€ย she wrote in Decemberย 2015.ย 

Though PHSMA released some of the documents, TransCanada argued to keep private a 30-pageย operational and maintenance (O&M) report. Though Vanย Nostrand had previously communicated that DeSmog should expect this matter to be settled before the end of last year, before Christmas she explained that she is giving the company more time to argue why the document should be excluded from release under an exemption, whichย protects โ€œtrade secrets and commercial or financial information obtained from a person [that is] privilegedย orย confidentialโ€ย 

Vokes said that there should be nothing top-secret in anย O&M report. This was confirmed by another pipeline industryย insider who said that most of what is found in an O&M report is โ€œpretty much standard throughout the industry, and shouldnโ€™tย give any financial edge to aย competitor.โ€

Whether and when DeSmog will receive this last documentย isย unknown.ย 

The Keystone XL-Gulf Coastย Pipeline

In light of the Keystone 1 pipelineโ€™s cathodic system failing to protect its coating from corrosion, DeSmog asked PHMSA and TransCanada in November 2016 if there were any issues with the Gulf Coast pipelineโ€™s cathodicย protectionย system.ย 

The Gulf Coast pipeline has been operational for more than two years. Because its cathodic protection has to beย checked every six months, that data should be available to the company and theย regulator.

Jennalee Colpitts, a representative from TransCanada, wroteย to DeSmog,ย โ€œThe Gulf Coast Pipeline has been safely operating since 2014, and there have been no issues with the cathodic protectionย system.โ€

But PHMSA would only confirm that there were no issues with the cathodic protection system through 2015. โ€œPHMSAโ€™s year 2015 and prior inspections of TransCanadaโ€™s Gulf Coast Pipeline did not identify instances of non-complianceย with pipeline safety regulations related to cathodic protection,โ€ Damon Hill, a PHMSA representative, wrote to DeSmog. โ€œHowever, PHMSA did issue enforcement documents to outline possible inadequacies found in the operatorโ€™s procedures forย determining the adequacy of its cathodic protection systems for its pipeline and certain aboveground breakoutย tanks.โ€

Landowners Let Down byย TransCanadaย 

Landowner Michael Bishop stands on his property next to an upside-down American flag
Michael Bishop flew his American flag upside-down to show his property was under distress while TransCanada installed the Keystone Gulf Coast Pipeline on his Texas land in February 2013. ยฉ Juileย Dermansky

The fact that DeSmog did not get complete answers from PHMSA didnโ€™t surprise Michael Bishop, a Texas landowner who has the pipelineย on his land. Bishop said he found the federal regulators to be useless, and the only way he expects to get a response fromย PHMSA is if he were to report a spill. None of the concerns he had about the pipelineโ€™s safety that he brought to PHSMAโ€™s attentionย were everย addressed.

Bishop hasย filedย multiple lawsuits against TransCanada, acting as his own lawyer. His last legal battle is set to be waged in front ofย a jury in the Nacogdochesย County District Courtย on April 25,ย 2017.ย 

Bishop is suing TransCanada for โ€œfraud, misrepresentation, perjury, theft, bribery, and violating plaintiffโ€™s rights as delineatedย under the Constitution of the State of Texas.โ€ According to Bishop, TransCanada has not fulfilledย its contractual obligation toย restore his property to pre-constructionย conditions.

Texas landowner Eleanor Fairchild stands in a deeply eroded cut on her land.
Eleanor Fairchild standing in a cut on her land caused by erosion connected to the Keystone Gulf Coast pipeline. TransCanadaย has agreed to fix the damage. ยฉ2016 Julieย Dermanskyย 

Eleanor Fairchild, a property owner in Winnsboro, Texas, also questionsย the safety of the southern route of the Keystone XLย pipeline and TransCanadaโ€™s ability to restore her property to its original condition.ย She plansย to testify on Bishopโ€™sย behalf.

Soon after the pipeline was installed on her land, erosion began. Holes opened up so deep she could stand inside them. Afterย years of complaining to TransCanada and every government agencyย that might be able to help her, theย U.S.ย Army Corps ofย Engineersย paid her a visit to check on the problems along her creek that the Corpsย governs.ย 

This January, Neil Lebsock, aย memberย of the Corpsโ€™ Compliance Department, told Fairchild that theย Corps sent TransCanada a non-compliance letter with instructions to submit a planย to fix the problems the company created on herย land.ย 

Fairchild asked Lebsock for a copy of the letter. She told DeSmog that he declined,ย and told her she needed toย put in an FOIAย requestย to get it, or ask TransCanada for aย copy.

DeSmog left a message with the public relations department at the Corps’ Fort Worth office where Lebsock works to find out if landowners are entitled to a copy of a letter relating to their own land, but did not hear back beforeย publication.

Fairchild, who is 82, jokesย that if it takes her as long to get an answer to a FOIA request as it has takenย DeSmog, she might not be alive when the informationย arrives.ย 

Trump insisted during his campaign that people can get richย using eminentย domain claims. Fairchild and Bishop believeย that Trump isย mistaken. Both of them feel betrayedย by theย government, which has made it possible for a foreign corporation toย profitย fromย theirย land.ย 

Both warn anyone faced with a situation in which the government allows a company to use eminentย domain to take their land, if something goes wrong, landownersย have to deal with the fall-out on theirย own.ย 

Bishop hopes thatย thoseย fighting to prevent Trump from allowing TransCanada to build the rest of the Keystone XL pipeline will support hisย court challenge. If Bishopโ€™s challenge against TransCanada is successful, his case has the potential toย shut down theย entireย project.

Main image: The Keystone Gulf Coast pipeline being installed on Michael Bishop’s Texas property on February 9, 2013. ยฉ Julieย Dermansky

Julie-Dermansky-022
Julie Dermansky is a multimedia reporter and artist based in New Orleans. She is an affiliate scholar at Rutgers Universityโ€™s Center for the Study of Genocide and Human Rights. Visit her website at www.jsdart.com.

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