Calgary Herald

Changes made to crude put on trains

North Dakota takes steps to boost safety

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Following a spate of explosive accidents involving North Dakota crude, the state began requiring companies on Wednesday to remove certain liquids and gases from oil before it’s loaded onto rail cars — a move industry and state regulators believe will make for safer shipments.

The rules, developed over the past year, require all crude from the state’s oilpatch to be treated by heat or by pressure to reduce its volatility before being loaded onto train cars.

“North Dakota’s crude oil conditioni­ng order is based on sound science and represents an important step in the ongoing work to ensure that oil- by- rail transporta­tion is as safe as possible,” Gov. Jack Dalrymple said in a statement.

Dozens of mile- long trains loaded with crude leave western North Dakota each week, each of them pulling more than 100 cars laden with about three million gallons of North Dakota crude.

About 60 per cent of the more than 1.1 million barrels of oil produced daily from the Bakken region is being moved by rail.

Oil trains carrying that crude through the U. S. and Canada have been involved in several major accidents in the past two years, including an explosion in LacMeganti­c, Que., that killed 47 people.

And a fiery derailment in Dalrymple’s hometown of Casselton that left an ominous cloud over the city and led some residents to evacuate.

The new rules require North Dakota crude to have vapour pressure below 13.7 pounds per square inch, which is less than the 14.7 psi threshold that is recognized national standards as being stable. Winterblen­d gasoline that contains 10 per cent ethanol is rated at 13.5 psi.

Industry officials initially balked at the new regulation­s, saying the state’s crude was being unfairly singled out and the new standards would slow production and increase costs.

But North Dakota Petroleum Council vice- president Kari Cutting said Wednesday the new rules likely will make crude oil “more stable and safer” for rail transport.

Wayde Schafer, a North Dakota spokesman for the Sierra Club, called the new rules inadequate.

“I have a real concern that we’re still going to have a problem with rail cars exploding when they derail,” Schafer said.

Dalrymple, Cutting and regulators said the treated oil from North Dakota’s Bakken oilfields will not be inflammabl­e, but will be more stable.

State and industry officials also have called for more stringent federal tank car standards, improved rail operations and maintenanc­e, and, according to Dalrymple, “a greater developmen­t of pipelines which provide the safest mode of oil transporta­tion.”

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