[All] Fw: Fwd: First-Ever Footage of Aging Tar Sands Pipelines Beneath Great Lakes
Louisette Lanteigne
butterflybluelu at rogers.com
Sun Oct 20 02:18:58 EDT 2013
View video here
http://ecowatch.com/2013/10/15/footage-of-tar-sands-pipelines-beneath-great-lakes/
Lulu
First-Ever Footage of Aging Tar Sands Pipelines Beneath Great Lakes
By Beth Wallace
This past July, National Wildlife Federation (NWF) conducted a diving expedition to obtain footage of aging oil pipelines strung across one of the most sensitive locations in the Great Lakes, and possibly the world: the Straits of Mackinac. Footage of these pipelines has never been released to the public until now.
This NWF map simulates a 3, 6 and 12 hour spill from the tar sands oil pipeline based on Enbridge spill response plans, average current speeds and “worse case” discharge estimates.
The Straits of Mackinac pipelines, owned by Enbridge Energy, are
60-years-old and considered one of the greatest threats to the Great Lakes because of their age, location and the hazardous products they transport—including tar sands derived oil.
For nearly two years, NWF has been pressing pipeline regulators
and Enbridge to release information about the integrity of these
pipelines, including inspection videos showing how the pipelines
cross the Straits of Mackinac. These requests have gone largely unanswered from both Enbridge and the Pipeline Hazards Safety Administration (PHMSA), who regulates pipeline operations. Because Enbridge hastily moved forward with plans to increase pressure on the aging pipelines, and has bypassed critical environmental permitting for changes in operation, NWF decided we needed to obtain our own:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qCMfDDcyRb0
The footage shows pipelines suspended over the lakebed, some original supports broken away—indicating the presence of corrosion—and some sections of the suspended pipelines covered in large piles of unknown debris. This visual is evidence that our decision makers need to step in and demand a release of information from Enbridge and PHMSA.
Heightening our concern around this pipeline and the company
that owns it: despite having cleared our dive work with the U.S.
Coast Guard, several Congressional members and Homeland
Security, our staff and the dive crew had uncomfortable
interactions with Enbridge representatives. As soon as our team
set out on the water, we were quickly accompanied by an Enbridge
crew that monitored our every move. This monitoring did not stop
at the surface: Enbridge also placed a Remote Operated Vehicle
(ROV) into the water to watch our team.
These actions and our video have raised our level of concern for
the general operational behavior of this company and their
overall safety culture—including the way they treat the
concerned public living near their pipelines. If these aging pipelines rupture, the resulting oil slick would cause irreversible damage to fish and wildlife, drinking water, Lake Michigan beaches, Mackinac Island and our economy.
To make matters worse, the recent shutdown of our federal government has left communities and wildlife with an increased risk of oil spills and failed response because pipeline safety and responding agencies have been scaled back or closed all together. The recent oil spill in North Dakota, of approximately 800,000 gallons, is living proof.
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