Latest News

Keystone Operator given order to corrective action after North Dakota oil spill

U.S. regulators have said that there may be structural problems with the Keystone Pipeline. They issued a corrective order to its operator South Bow Corp. after an oil spill occurred in North Dakota earlier this week. This shut down the main conduit for Canadian oil flowing to the U.S. South Bow must receive written approval from U.S. According to an order published on Friday, the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration must approve the restart of the pipeline before it can proceed. The order states that even after Keystone restarts, it will still have to operate at a reduced rate until PHMSA permits it to ramp-up.

PHMSA has not provided a timetable for the restart. South Bow did respond immediately to a comment request. Keystone was pumping 17,844 barrels per hour of oil when a ruptured part of the pipeline occurred near Fort Ransom in North Dakota on Tuesday. An estimated 3,500 barrels were spilled onto agricultural land.

According to PHMSA, as of 1 am CDT April 11, approximately 1,170 barrels had been recovered. Cleanup operations are still ongoing.

The number of incidents that cause largerSchäden has increased.

Spills

PHMSA reported that there had been 22 spills from the Keystone pipeline between 2010 and 2020. The U.S. Government Accountability Office's 2021 report found 22 spills between 2010 and 2020.

This week's rupture was compared to another on the same pipe in North Dakota, in 2019 when over 4,000 barrels were leaked. The initial findings of PHMSA’s investigation indicate that the pipe involved in both incidents were manufactured by Berg Steel Pipe.

Berg Steel has not responded to our request for comment. (Reporting and editing by Shariq KHan in Bengaluru, Devika Nair at the Associated Press)

(source: Reuters)