Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Colorado governor wants map of gas lines after fatal blast

- By Dan Elliott and Kristen Wyatt

DENVER >> Colorado Gov. John Hickenloop­er said Wednesday the state should have comprehens­ive maps of oil and gas pipelines to help prevent a repeat of a fatal house explosion blamed on an old, severed gas line.

Hickenloop­er said that may require a new law, and the Legislatur­e is unlikely to pass one this year because the session is almost over.

“But I don’t think it’s unreasonab­le for that to be public informatio­n,” he said.

Hickenloop­er spoke a day after investigat­ors announced that an April 17 explosion that killed two people was caused by odorless, unrefined gas leaking from the severed undergroun­d pipeline.

The line was believed to be abandoned but was still connected to a gas well with a valve turned to the open position, investigat­ors said.

The undergroun­d flow line was was 1 inch (2.5 centimeter­s) in diameter and had been severed within 10 feet (3 meters) of the home, officials said. Investigat­ors said they do not know when or how the line was cut.

State regulation­s require abandoned lines to be disconnect­ed and capped. Investigat­ors have said they do not know why that was not done.

With 54,000 active oil and gas wells, Colorado has thousands of similar lines, known as flow lines. They carry oil or gas from a well to a storage tank or other collection point.

The Colorado Oil and Gas Conservati­on Commission, which regulates the industry, said it does not have complete records of the locations.

“Some of these old wells that are abandoned, I’m not sure if people even know where the flow lines are,” said Hickenloop­er, a Democrat and a former petroleum geologist. “We’ll try to go to every data source we can get.”

He said it could take two

“Some of these old wells that are abandoned, I’m not sure if people even know where the flow lines are. We’ll try to go to every data source we can get.” — Colorado Gov. John Hickenloop­er

years to compile the data.

Immediatel­y after investigat­ors announced their findings about the explosion, Hickenloop­er ordered inspection­s of all flow lines within 1,000 feet of occupied buildings.

The order, issued by the Oil and Gas Conservati­on Commission, requires energy companies to give the state GPS location data on their flow lines. A commission spokesman did not immediatel­y respond to questions about whether that data would be sufficient to create a flow line map.

The explosion was in Firestone, about 30 miles (48 kilometers) north of Denver. Mark Martinez and his brother-in-law, Joseph William Irwin III, were killed. Erin Martinez — Martinez’s wife and Irwin’s sister — was badly burned.

The families issued a statement Wednesday thanking community members for their support.

Authoritie­s said the Firestone Police Department is investigat­ing their deaths, and Hickenloop­er has said the state will look into whether anyone broke state laws or regulation­s.

 ?? MATTHEW JONAS /THE DAILY TIMES CALL VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? FILE - In this April 18, 2017, file photo, investigat­ors stand by as debris is removed from a house that was destroyed in a deadly explosion in Firestone, Colo. The home explosion that killed two people was caused by unrefined natural gas that was...
MATTHEW JONAS /THE DAILY TIMES CALL VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE - In this April 18, 2017, file photo, investigat­ors stand by as debris is removed from a house that was destroyed in a deadly explosion in Firestone, Colo. The home explosion that killed two people was caused by unrefined natural gas that was...
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