Tuesday, October 9, 2018

List of pipeline accidents in the United States in 2017

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List of pipeline accidents in the United States in 2017

Jax 0677: split from List of pipeline accidents in the United States in the 21st century


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The following is a '''list of pipeline accidents in the United States in 2017'''. It is one of several [[list of pipeline accidents in the United States|lists of U.S. pipeline accidents]]. See also [[list of natural gas and oil production accidents in the United States]].
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== Incidents ==

This is not a complete list of all pipeline accidents. '''For natural gas alone''', the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA), a United States Department of Transportation agency, has collected data on more than 3,200 accidents deemed serious or significant since 1987.

A "significant incident" results in any of the following consequences:
* fatality or injury requiring in-patient hospitalization
* $50,000 or more in total costs, measured in 1984 dollars
* liquid releases of five or more barrels (42 US gal/barrel)
* releases resulting in an unintentional fire or explosion

PHMSA and the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) post incident data and results of investigations into accidents involving pipelines that carry a variety of products, including natural gas, oil, diesel fuel, gasoline, kerosene, jet fuel, carbon dioxide, and other substances. Occasionally pipelines are repurposed to carry different products.<ref>Data sets of PHMSA Pipeline Safety-Flagged Incidents for 1986-2001, 2002-2009, and 2010-2017 can be downloaded from the tab by that name on the PHMSA's Pipeline Incident Flagged Files page at https://ift.tt/2Od1zMU, accessed 2018.01.10. PHMSA Corrective Action Orders are at https://ift.tt/2yr64ZF. PHMSA Pipeline Failure Investigation Reports are at https://ift.tt/2OcgTcK. NTSB Pipeline Accident Reports are at https://ift.tt/2yrjV2b>

* On January 7, a [[Colonial Pipeline]] stubline leaked gasoline into Shoal Creek, in [[Chattanooga, Tennessee]].<ref></ref>
* On January 14, the Ozark Pipeline, an [[Enbridge]], now Marathon, division, spilled about 18,900 gallons of light oil, at the Lawrence Pump Station, near [[Halltown, Missouri]].<ref></ref>
* On January 16, a gas pipeline exploded and burned, near [[Spearman, Texas]]. There were no injuries.<ref></ref>
* On January 19, a [[Tallgrass Energy Partners|Tallgrass]] Pony Express Pipeline failed in [[Logan County, Colorado]], spilling about 420,300 gallons of crude oil. The cause of the failure was unknown.<ref name="auto7"></ref>
* On January 25, a [[Magellan Midstream Partners|Magellan]] pipeline leaked 46,830 gallons (1,115 barrels) of diesel fuel onto private agricultural land, in Worth County, Iowa, near [[Hanlontown, Iowa|Hanlontown]].<ref></ref><ref></ref>
* On January 30, a Texas Department of Transportation crew dug into the 30-inch-diameter [[Seaway Pipeline]], near [[Blue Ridge, Texas]], spraying crude oil across road. About 210,000 gallons of crude were spilled. There were no injuries.<ref></ref><ref name="dot.gov"></ref>
* On January 31, a DCP pipeline exploded under a runway, at Panola County Airport-Sharpe Field in [[Texas]]. There were no injuries, but the airport shut that runway down for an extended amount of time.<ref></ref>
* On February 9, a [[Phillips 66]] [[natural gas liquids]] pipeline (TENDS pipeline Sorrento system)<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref> near the Williams-Discovery natural gas plant on [[US Route 90]] near [[Paradis, Louisiana]] exploded while being cleaned, killing one worker, and sending another worker to a burn unit. Traffic on US 90 and La 631 was shut down and residents in the area evacuated.<ref> The pipeline can be traced with the [https://ift.tt/2OfGr92 Phillips 66 pipeline finder] and viewed via [https://ift.tt/2yrdsV3 satellite map]</ref><ref></ref><ref></ref>
* On February 15, 2017, a 36-inch-diameter [[Kinder Morgan]] natural gas pipeline exploded and burned in [[Refugio County, Texas]]. There were no injuries.<ref></ref> The flames were visible 50 miles away. Refugio County Chief Deputy Sheriff Gary Wright said the explosion occurred at an apparent weak point in the pipeline that must have required maintenance, but KM disputed the issue.<ref>Jordan Blum, "Investigation into Kinder Morgan pipeline explosion is underway," ''Houston Chronicle'', February 15, 2017.</ref> Residents as far as 60 miles away thought it was an earthquake, while others described it as "a thunder roll that wouldn't end."<ref>Reuters staff, "Kinder Morgan gas pipeline explodes in Texas, no injuries," Reuters, February 15, 2017, https://ift.tt/2yrktoL, accessed 2018.01.07.</ref> According to the PHMSA incident listing, "the incident was most likely caused by some combination of stress factors on the pipeline." The explosion and resulting fire cost $525,197 in property damage. The pipe was installed in 1964.<ref name="primis">Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration operator data, https://ift.tt/2ObvPYy. , Retrieved April 1, 2016.</ref>
* On February 27, a crude oil pipeline ruptured in [[Falls City, Texas]], spilling about 42,630 gallons of crude oil. The cause was from internal corrosion.<ref name="dot.gov"/>
* On March 29, a natural-gas leak of a high-pressure pipeline, in [[Providence, Rhode Island]], owned by [[Spectra Energy]], released about 19 million cubic feet of natural gas, or enough natural gas to heat and keep the lights on for 190,000 homes for a single day. Approximately two gallons of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) were also released, in the form of contaminated natural gas condensate.<ref></ref>
* On April 4, a pump on the [[Dakota Access Pipeline]] spilled about 84 gallons of oil, at a pump station in [[Tulare, South Dakota|Tulare]], [[South Dakota]]. The leak was not noticed until May 9.<ref></ref>
* On April 13 and 14, it was discovered that [[Energy Transfer Partners]] spilled drilling fluid into two separate wetlands in rural Ohio while constructing the Rover Pipeline. The spills occurred in wetlands near [[Richland County, Ohio]]. The spill on the 13th released 2 million gallons of drilling fluid and the spill on the 14th released approximately 50,000 gallons of drilling fluid.<ref></ref><ref></ref>
* On April 21, a [[Plains All American Pipeline]], experienced a crude oil release on the Buffalo Pipeline, near [[Loyal, Oklahoma]]. About 19,000 gallons of crude oil were spilled.<ref></ref>
* On April 22, a 1,050-gallon oil pipeline spill near [[Bismarck, North Dakota]] polluted a tributary of the Little Missouri River, but was prevented from flowing into the larger waterway.<ref></ref>
* On May 8, a Wood River Pipelines (part of [[Koch Industries]]) line broke in [[Warrensburg, Illinois]], spill 250 gallons of crude oil.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (2 for 1)</ref>
* On May 25, workers were installing a replacement pipeline at a tank battery, near [[Mead, Colorado]], when there was an explosion and fire. One worker was killed, and, 3 others injured.<ref></ref><ref></ref>
* On July 13, a contractor doing maintenance on Magellan's Longhorn Pipeline hit that pipeline, in [[Bastrop County, Texas]]. About 87,000 gallons of crude oil were spilled, resulting in evacuations of nearby residents.<ref></ref><ref></ref>
* On July 27, while installing a water pipeline by horizontal drilling, a contractor hit a ONEOK Natural Gas Liquids pipeline, spilling about 126,000 gallons of NGL's, near [[Watford City, North Dakota]].<ref></ref>
* On August 2, a pipeline leaked up to 1,000 gallons of oil, in [[Signal Hill, California]].<ref></ref>
* On August 2, a contractor ruptured a jet fuel pipeline, in [[Parkland, Washington]].<ref></ref>
* On August 2, 2017, a natural gas explosion and fire struck the [[Minnehaha Academy]] in [[Minneapolis, Minnesota]]. Workers may have been moving a gas meter when the explosion hit, killing two people and injuring at least nine others, according to investigators.<ref></ref><ref>NTSB accident file preliminary report DCA17MP007, https://ift.tt/2OdGq5f>
* On September 22, a gas pipeline exploded and burned in [[Welda, Kansas]]. There were no injuries.<ref></ref>
* On September 22, fire broke out at a substation of the [[Iroquois Pipeline]], causing homes to be evacuated and about two miles of Route 37 to be shut down for several hours, near [[Waddington, New York]]. The cause of the failure was never found.<ref></ref><ref></ref>
* On October 18, Louisiana-based oil company LLOG Exploration had a crude oil spill of about 672,000 gallons, 40 miles southeast of [[Venice, Louisiana]], citing the cause as a cracked pipeline under the [[Gulf of Mexico]].<ref></ref>
* On October 23, 2017, at a facility owned by EDC-Timken, operated and maintained by [[Columbia Gas Transmission]] in [[Navarre, Ohio]], an unintended natural gas release was noted by the onsite company personnel. While investigating the sound, the single bolt hinged closure, that appeared to be the source of the release, failed. The closure failure fatally injured one technician. The equipment was installed in 1989.<ref name="primis"/> The leak just south of [[Canton, Ohio]], forced authorities to evacuate a neighborhood.<ref></ref>
* On November 16, the [[Keystone Pipeline]] leaked about 408,500 gallons of crude oil, near [[Amherst, South Dakota]]. The pipeline was shut down within 15 minutes of the leak's discovery. Later, the NTSB found a metal tracked vehicle had run over this section of pipeline, causing the damage.<ref></ref> During cleanup activities, state officials say a semi-trailer driver hauling hazardous material to and from the Keystone oil pipeline leak site purposely dumped soil contaminated with crude oil on the side of a northeastern South Dakota road.<ref></ref> The original estimate was doubled to in April 2018.<ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref>
* On November 16, three men were injured in a gas pipeline fire in northeastern [[Weld County, Colorado]]. One later died of his injuries.<ref></ref><ref></ref>
* On November 20, 2017, [[Kinder Morgan]]'s Connecticut Expansion Project's pipeline test at the [[Agawam, Massachusetts]] compressor station discharged 16,500 gallons of hazardous wastewater onto the soil of the compressor station yard; the wastewater contained heavy metals, lead, and carcinogens such as tetrachloroethylene and phthalate. Kinder Morgan blamed subcontractor Henkels & McCoy for an operator error.<ref name="auto9">Heather Bellow, "Senators renew pipeline worries," ''Berkshire Eagle'', January 4, 2018, p. A1.</ref>
* On November 20, a [[Consumers Energy]] 22-inch-diameter gas transmission pipeline carrying gas at 600 psi exploded and burned, in [[Orion Township, Michigan]], knocking out the county 911 system, and causing some evacuations. There were no injuries.<ref></ref>
* On November 29, 2017, in [[Richmond, Massachusetts]], a [[Kinder Morgan]] pipeline overpressure triggered a relief valve to open, releasing natural gas for a blowdown that lasted 40 minutes and sounded like a jet engine. The gas escaped into a nearby residential neighborhood. Firefighters responded to the leak and closed the road. When contacted, pipeline personnel had no idea that there was a problem, and offered no reason for their equipment malfunction.<ref>Heather Bellow, "Release of gas in pipeline 'unusual'," ''Berkshire Eagle'', December 28, 2017, pp. A1, A3.</ref>
* On December 5, a father and his adult son were killed when a stuck tractor they were trying to free ruptured and ignited a 20-inch-diameter gas pipeline in [[Lee County, Illinois]]. Two others were seriously injured.<ref></ref> The explosion was on [[Kinder Morgan]]'s [[Natural Gas Pipeline Company of America]], a 9,200-mile long system that transports natural gas from Texas and Louisiana to Chicago; Kinder Morgan issued a force majeure notice on the pipeline indicating a "third-party strike" as the reason for taking part of the Illinois Lateral out of service.<ref>Paul Ausick, "Kinder Morgan Illinois Pipeline Explodes, Kills 2," 24/7 Wall St, Dec. 6, 2017, https://ift.tt/2nyfzUD, accessed 2018.01.07.</ref>
* On December 6, a gas pipeline exploded and burned, in [[Eddy County, New Mexico]]. Residents within 2 miles of the site were evacuated, and, several roads in the area were closed. There were no injuries.<ref></ref>
* On December 13, an [[Energy Transfer Partners]] gas pipeline exploded and burned, in [[Burleson County, Texas]]. There were no injuries reported.<ref></ref>
* On December 31, 4 workers were injured, while working on a 10-inch gas main, in [[Boston, Massachusetts]], when the gas ignited. Gas had to burn a number of hours, due to cold conditions prevented shutting down gas in the area.<ref></ref>

== References ==


[[Category:Lists of pipeline accidents in the United States]]

October 09, 2018 at 11:22PM

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