Company receives corrective action order for pipeline explosion
Published 10:03 pm Wednesday, May 27, 2020
The company responsible for a Lincoln County pipeline that exploded last year, killing one person and injuring several, has been ordered to begin making immediate corrections to the pipeline.
Enbridge, Inc. has received an amended corrective action order in regards to a pipeline that exploded last year. In addition to the personal injury that resulted from the explosion, many homes in the area were also damaged or destroyed.
On Aug. 1, a section of Line 15 near the Indian Camp subdivision in northern Lincoln County erupted and released about 66 million cubic feet of natural gas and ejected about a 30-foot long section of the pipeline, which landed about 481 feet away.
It also created a 43-foot long, 30-foot wide and 10-foot deep crater at the site.
The natural gas ignited and sent a plumb of fire hundreds of feet up in the sky that could be seen from miles away.
About 75 residents fled their homes as the fire scorched the neighborhood and burned about 30 acres. One woman lost her life at the scene.
The intense heat from the fire also damaged nearby railroad tracks, melted paint off of cars, and turned vinyl siding into globs of goo.
Firefighters and first responders from Lincoln, Casey and Boyle counties worked together to put out the blaze.
Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, Office of Pipeline Safety, initiated an investigation of the accident. The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) is now continuing to lead the investigation.
On April 28, the U.S. Department of Transportation Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration sent the order for immediate additional corrective actions for Enbridge to take regarding its subsidiary’s, Texas Eastern Transmission LP Line 15, which “failed” on Aug. 1, 2019, about six miles south of the Boyle County line near Junction City, according to the letter sent by Alan K. Mayberry, associate administrator for pipeline safety.
Mayberry wrote in the order, “After evaluating the foregoing preliminary findings of fact, I find that continued operation of the affected segment without corrective measures is or would be hazardous to life, property, or the environment. In addition, having considered the uncertainties of the cause of the failure, the pressure at which gas is transported, the vintage and type of pipe, the risk of fire to the environment and populated areas in the vicinity of the affected segment, I find that a failure to issue this order expeditiously to require immediate corrective action would result in the likelihood of serious harm to life, property, or the environment.”
Line 15 is an approximately 775-mile long, 30-inch diameter pipeline that transports natural gas between Kosciusko, Mississippi and Uniontown, Pennsylvania.
Mayberry wrote that Line 15 failed in late fall of 2003 near Morehead between the Danville and Owingsville compressor stations. The pipeline was manufactured by the same company and was about the same age of the one that exploded in Lincoln County last year. It was found that the failure resulted from interactions between hard spots and midwall lamination.
According to the Pipeline Safety Trust, hard spots are “local changes in hardness of the steel in the pipe resulting from nonuniform quenching procedures during the manufacture or changes in chemistry of the steel. Hard spots, when stressed, are subject to failure from mechanisms, such as hydrogen-stress cracking.”
In 2011, TETLP conducted an in-line inspection to detect hard spots in Line 15, and none were found.
The same inspection was performed on the line after the explosion in 2019 and data revealed 10 hard spots in the failed pipe joint. “Further analysis revealed the location of the Line 15 failure origin coincided with the locations of two newly discovered hard spot indications,” the amended order read.
Some of the required corrective actions for TETLP to conduct include:
- The isolated section of Line 15, which is about 19 miles of the pipeline between the Danville Compressor Station and valve 15-382 must remain shut down until authorized by the Director of the Southern Region, Office of Pipeline Safety.
- Line 15 must operate at 80% of the actual operating pressure allowed.
- Submit a restart plan for approval from the director, which was submitted and approved on March 20, 2020.
- Perform an aerial or ground instrumental leakage survey of the pipeline within 180 days of the amended order.
- Re-evaluate in-line inspection results of Line 15 for the past 20 years.
- Incorporate the NTSB findings of the root cause of the pipeline failure into its integrity management plan and operations and maintenance manual.
- Review and assess the effectiveness of its emergency response plan.
- Submit monthly reports on testing, data and remedial actions being undertaken to the regional director.
- Include a detailed documentation report with lessons learned while completing the report.
On Aug. 1, a section of Line 15 near the Indian Camp subdivision in northern Lincoln County errupted and released about 66 million cubic feet of natural gas and ejected about a 30-foot long section of the pipeline, which landed about 481 feet away.
It also created a 43-foot long, 30-foot wide and 10-foot deep crater at the site.
The natural gas ignited and sent a plumb of fire hundreds of feet up in the sky that could be seen from miles away.
About 75 residents fled their homes as the fire scorched the neighborhood and burned about 30 acres. One woman lost her life at the scene.
The intense heat from the fire also damaged nearby railroad tracks, melted paint off of cars, and turned vinyl siding into globs of goo.
Firefighters and first responders from Lincoln, Casey and Boyle counties worked together to put out the blaze.
Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, Office of Pipeline Safety, initiated an investigation of the accident. The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) is now continuing to lead the investigation.