On January 30, 600,000 gallonsย (14,285 barrels) of oilย spewed out of Enbridge’s Seaway Pipeline in Blue Ridge, Texas, the second spill since the pipeline opened for business inย mid-2016.
Seaway is half owned by Enbridge and serves as the final leg of a pipeline system DeSmog has called the โKeystone XL Clone,โ which carries mostly tar sands extracted from Alberta, Canada, across the U.S. at a rate of 400,000 barrels per dayย down to the Gulf of Mexico. Enbridge is an equity co-owner of the Dakota Access pipeline, which received itsย final permit needed from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on February 7 to construct the pipeline across the Missouri River and construction has resumed.
The alignment of Native American tribes, environmentalists, and others involved in the fight against Dakota Access have called themselves โwater protectors,โ rather than โactivists,โ out of concern that a pipeline spill could contaminate their drinking water source, the Missouriย River.ย
โJustย Spewingโ
Brittany Clayton, who works at a nearby gas station in Blue Ridge, which isย 50 miles from Dallas, Texas,ย was close to the scene of the spillย when itย occurred.
โYou could just smell this oil smell. A customer walks in and says โnobody smoke.’ย You could see it just spewing,โ Clayton told KDFW–TV, the local Fox News affiliate in the area. โIt was just super huge. It was like a big cloud. The fire marshal said, ‘This is like a danger zone. You guys have to evacuate immediately.’ย I was totally freaked out. I kept texting the bossย man.โ
Enbridge and co-owner Enterprise Products Partners said in press release that theย spill had been containedย and it resumed service on February 5.ย
โThe incident โฆ resulted in no fire or injuries and the pipeline has been shut down and isolated,โ the companiesย said. โSeaway has mobilized personnel and equipment to the site and is working closely with emergency responders, law enforcement and regulatory authorities to conduct clean-up operations and develop a plan to resume operations as quickly and safely asย possible.โ
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Governmentย Reaction
According to KDFW,ย the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) intend to do water and environmental testing in the coming days.ย TxDOT also told the local National Public Radio affiliate, KETR–FM, that it would take โseveral weeksโ to complete a fullย cleanup.
โIt remains too early in the investigation to know where final blame lies for the accident,โ wrote KETR, also noting that โit is also too early to tell how much the cleanup and loss of product willย cost.โ
TxDOT referred DeSmog to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) for details on the spill, cleanup, and related issues. We have reached out to TCEQ and will update the article as details come in and have also filed open records requests to learn more about theย spill.
Chris Havey, Lieutenant Sheriff for the Collin County Sheriff’s Office, confirmed with DeSmog thatย a spillย investigation is ongoing under the umbrella ofย the EPA and the Texas Railroad Commission,ย which is the state’s oil and gas regulatoryย agency.
โThe Sheriff’s office is not conducting any parallel investigation,โ said Havey. โAs to whether or not the line has been shut off/capped,ย it’s my understanding that within an hour after the line ruptured it was successfully shutย off.โ
Neither the EPA Region 6 Office nor the Texas Railroad Commissionย responded to a request for comment. EPA, though, has been ordered not to speak to media by President Donald Trump‘s White House until the agency has a new administrator, likely nominee Scott Pruitt, and senior-level staff inย place.ย
As momentum and tensions alike mount surrounding oil and gas pipeline projectsย around the country, this oil spill is a reminder of the risks and consequences that come withย them.
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Image Credit: Screenshot fromย KXII News Foxย 12
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