Connecticut Post

Pipeline anchor strike may have occurred months before spill

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HUNTINGTON BEACH, Calif. — A Southern California underwater oil pipeline was likely struck by an anchor several months to a year before a leak spilled tens of thousands of gallons of crude, the U.S. Coast Guard announced Friday.

A large vessel of some kind may have struck the massive pipeline, shattering the concrete casing but not necessaril­y causing the slender crack from which oil spewed last weekend, said Capt. Jason Neubauer, chief of the Coast Guard’s office of investigat­ion and analysis.

The longer timeline was partly based on marine growth that was spotted on the pipe in an underwater survey.

The pipe, which was found to be intact last October, may also have been struck several other times by other ships’ anchors over the course of the period, he added.

No ships have been identified, however.

“We’re going to be looking at every vessel movement over that pipeline, and every close encroachme­nt from the anchor just for the entire course of the year,” the captain said.

The pipeline was dragged along the sea floor as much as 105 feet (32 meters), Neubauer said.

That indicates a large vessel was involved, he said. Cargo ships with multiton anchors routinely move through the area from the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach.

The leak fouled beaches and killed seabirds.

At least 17 accidents on pipelines carrying crude oil or other hazardous liquids have been linked to anchor strikes or suspected anchor strikes since 1986, according to an Associated Press review of more than 10,000 reports

submitted to federal regulators.

According to federal records, in some cases an anchor strike is never conclusive­ly proven, such as 2012 leak from an ExxonMobil pipeline in Louisiana’s shallow Barataria Bay, where a direct strike by a barge or other boat also were considered possibilit­ies.

In others the evidence of an anchor strike was obvious. During 1992’s Hurricane Andrew, a 30,000-pound anchor was dragged by a drifting drilling rig over a Texaco pipeline in the Gulf of Mexico, causing a dent that broke open when the line was later re-started.

In 2003, a 7,000 pound anchor was found about 10 feet from a small spill on a Shell Oil pipeline in the Gulf.

A Coast Guard video released Thursday appears to show a trench in the sandy seafloor leading to a bend in the submerged line, but experts offered varied opinions of the significan­ce of the brief, grainy shots. An earlier video showcased a thin, 13-inch (33-centimeter) long rupture in the line.

Robert Bea, an engineerin­g professor at the University of California, Berkeley and former Shell Oil engineer, said the second video appears to show a furrow in the seabed created by a dragging anchor leading to the damaged pipeline.

Investigat­ors, however, are expected to consider other forces that could have moved and damaged the pipe, including water currents of movement in the seabed.

It will take time. “The results from the analyses need to be validated — corroborat­ed. This process can bring even more questions,” Bea said. “The shape of the crack indicates that it was caused by internal pressures in the pipeline. But, if that is true, why didn’t the pipeline leak“earlier?

Frank G. Adams, president of Houston-based Interface Consulting Internatio­nal, said in an email that the slight bow in the line displayed in one video “doesn’t necessaril­y look like anchor damage.”

When a pipeline is hit by an anchor or other heavy object “that typically results in physical damage that may lead to a fracture,” he said.

Reports of a possible spill off Huntington Beach

were first coming out Friday evening but the leak wasn’t discovered until Saturday morning. While the size of the spill isn’t known, the Coast Guard on Thursday slightly revised the parameters of the estimates to at least about 25,000 gallons (95,000 liters) and no more than 132,000 gallons (500,000 liters).

The Coast Guard said about 5,500 gallons (20,819 liters) of crude have been recovered from the ocean. The oil has spread southeast along the coast with reports of small amounts coming ashore in San Diego County, some 50 miles (80.47 kilometers) from the original site.

Local health officials said Friday that air samples from areas where oil potentiall­y spread are within background levels — in other words, similar to air quality on a typical day — and below California health standards for the pollutants that were measured.

So far the impact on wildlife has been minimal — 10 dead birds and another 25 recovered alive and treated — but environmen­talists caution the long-term impacts could be much greater. As cleanup continued on the shore, some beaches in Laguna Beach reopened Friday, though the public still can’t go in the water.

Investigat­ors are trying to determine what happened in the crucial early hours after reports of a possible oil spill first came in.

The narrow gash seen in one video could explain why signs of an oil slick were seen Friday night, but the spill eluded detection by the pipeline operator for more than 12 hours.

“My experience suggests this would be a darned hard leak to remotely determine quickly,” said Richard Kuprewicz, a private pipeline accident investigat­or and consultant. “An opening of this type, on a 17-mile-long (27-kilometer) underwater pipe is very hard to spot by remote indication­s. These crack-type releases are lower rate and can go for quite a while.”

When pipes experience a catastroph­ic failure, the breach typically is much bigger, what’s referred to in the industry as a “fish mouth” rupture because it gapes wide like the mouth of a fish, he said.

Amplify Energy, a Houston-based company that owns and operates three offshore oil platforms and the pipeline south of Los Angeles, said it didn’t know there had been a spill until its workers detected an oil sheen on the water Saturday at 8:09 a.m.

 ?? Paul Bersebach / Associated Press ?? Workers with Patriot Environmen­tal Services pick through the sand looking for pieces of oil south of the pier in Huntington Beach, Calif. on Friday. Investigat­ors searching for the cause of an undersea oil pipeline break off the Southern California coast have pointed to the possibilit­y that a ship anchor dragged the line across the seabed and cracked it, but two videos released so far provide only tantalizin­g clues about what might have happened below the ocean surface.
Paul Bersebach / Associated Press Workers with Patriot Environmen­tal Services pick through the sand looking for pieces of oil south of the pier in Huntington Beach, Calif. on Friday. Investigat­ors searching for the cause of an undersea oil pipeline break off the Southern California coast have pointed to the possibilit­y that a ship anchor dragged the line across the seabed and cracked it, but two videos released so far provide only tantalizin­g clues about what might have happened below the ocean surface.

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