Lethbridge Herald

Pipeline safety ongoing issue in Colorado

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — DENVER

State records show Colorado has only three people assigned to check on the safety of pipelines running from about 54,000 active oil and gas wells, a task that came under scrutiny after a leaking pipeline was blamed for a fatal house explosion.

The Denver Post reported Sunday that since 2016, an inspector has checked about 400 of those pipelines and an engineer has audited company records for inspection­s of lines at about 2,800 wells.

The April 17 explosion in the town of Firestone killed two people. Investigat­ors have said unrefined, odourless gas was leaking into the home from a pipeline that was thought to be out of service but was still connected to a nearby well.

The pipeline, called a flow line, is one of thousands in the state installed to carry oil and gas from wells to storage tanks or other collection points.

After investigat­ors announced their findings in the Firestone explosion, the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservati­on Commission ordered energy companies to inspect and test all flow lines within 1,000 feet of occupied buildings.

A 2014 report by the Oil and Gas Conservati­on Commission requested by the Legislatur­e said pipelines were the source of half of the equipment failures that cause industry spills in Colorado.

The report said the state did not have a formal program to monitor whether energy companies were conducting required tests on pipelines.

In 2016, the commission­er assigned an inspector, and engineer and a supervisor to monitor compliance.

The engineer has audited 24 oil and gas companies to see if they are keeping records on required annual pipeline tests.

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