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Natural
Gas Pipeline Safety is a Myth
atural
gas pipeline safety is a myth. The U.S. Office of Pipeline Safety
records hundreds of incidents involving gas pipelines each year. You
can easily check this by visiting the pipeline statistics page of
their website at http://ops.dot.gov.
But
statistics don’t tell the story of pain and loss that occur when an
accident happens. Last week, I interviewed a registered nurse, one of
the first responders to a natural gas explosion in August 2000 near
Carlsbad, New Mexico. Millyn Dolphin, RN, was working for an air
ambulance company. She was paged at seven a.m. that morning, and
simply told there had been a gas explosion.
The
explosion was discovered when El Paso Natural Gas Company employees
noticed a 25 percent drop in pressure on the line. They sent out a
crew and found flames shooting almost 500 feet into the air. The crew
also found six people dead. They called for emergency response to
air-evacuate the six other members of two families, including
one-year-old twins, who had been camping by the river together. All
but one of them would be dead before day’s end. The remaining family
member survived a month.
Millyn
described how an EMT carried a fully conscious, crying five-year-old
girl, burned over 79 percent of her body, through 300 yards of brush
to reach an ambulance. He told Millyn
he’d just seen a “little Hiroshima.” In Millyn’s care, the
child survived a flight to Lubbock, but died while being flown to the
Shriners Hospital burn unit in Galveston.
Millyn
is now an activist, working to inform the public on pipeline safety
issues so the child she cared for did not die in vain. She told me the
gas pipeline was over-pressurized, causing the pipe to vibrate. The
vibration caused the pipe to knock against a rock where a leak
developed. The families’ campfire turned the leaking gas into an
inferno.
Millyn
said these were prominent, well-known families in Artesia and
Carlsbad, New Mexico, where the deaths shocked the community. “You
could see it in their eyes for weeks,” she said.
How
does this pertain to you? Consider the devastation that accident
caused in a remote area. What might the effect have been in a
populated area?
Tuesday
night there is a public hearing at the Oxnard Performing Arts Center
on BHP Billiton’s LNG Terminal Draft Environmental Impact Report,
part of the application process to site one of two liquid natural gas
(LNG) terminals off the shore of Oxnard. The project calls for a
floating terminal moored 21 miles away from Oxnard and proposes to run
a high volume gas pipe through the biologically sensitive areas of
Ormond Beach, less than a mile from Pt. Hueneme’s densely populated
beach-front condominiums. Crystal Energy’s project plan, the second
one proposed for the area, is to be built on Platform Grace about 10
miles offshore. It calls for a high volume pressurized pipeline to run
through Oxnard’s residential neighborhoods, past churches and
schools. Both proposed pipes would connect into the Southern
California Gas network near Camarillo.
In
an area as seismically active as coastal California, it’s always
just a matter of time before the next major earthquake causes gas
pipelines to break. That is why one of the first things we’re
instructed to do in the event of an earthquake is to turn off our
home’s gas valve. And if you call the gas company telling them you
suspect a leak, they’ll send someone out immediately, day or night.
That should tell you how potentially dangerous even a small amount of
leaking natural gas can be.
If
the plans for these LNG terminals are approved and implemented, the
large pressurized pipes that bring in the gas may be a major disaster
waiting for the right earthquake. The country’s other LNG terminals
are not in earthquake-prone areas. California has had incidents in the
past involving gas pipeline ruptures during earthquakes and this
equation brings a new set of variables—large pressurized natural gas
pipelines crossing areas subject to liquefaction. Oxnard is being
asked to be the guinea pig to test these variables. The companies
building the pipelines will tell you they’ll be safe, but there’s
no way they can absolutely guarantee it (see the pipeline safety
website mentioned above).
If
the safety of your community and its residents is something you care
about, invest the time to go to the Oxnard Center for the Performing
Arts Tuesday night to voice your concern. It beats the prospect of
someday attending a mass funeral knowing you passed on the opportunity
to try to prevent it.
For
information on the Carlsbad explosion, visit www.corrosion-doctors.org/Pipeline/Carlsbad-explosion.htm.
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by Janet
Bridgers
Founder/Director
Earth Alert
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