Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Pennsylvan­ia permits halted for Texas-based pipeline company

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG >> Pennsylvan­ia is halting constructi­on permits for natural gas pipelines operated by a company whose pipeline exploded last year, as the governor said Friday that Energy Transfer LP has failed to respect the state’s laws and communitie­s.

The state Department of Environmen­tal Protection said the Texas-based company is not fixing problems related to the explosion, and piled yet another penalty onto a company project in the state.

State agencies already have imposed millions of dollars in fines and several temporary shutdown orders

on Energy Transfer projects, while a county prosecutor is demanding documents from the company.

The methane gas explosion destroyed one home in Beaver County last September along the Beaver-toButler County pipeline. The Dallas-based firm blamed the blast on “earth movement in the vicinity of the pipeline.”

“There has been a failure by Energy Transfer and its subsidiari­es to respect our laws and our communitie­s,” Gov. Tom Wolf said in a statement Friday. “This is not how we strive to do business in Pennsylvan­ia, and it will not be tolerated.”

The Department of Environmen­tal Protection said Energy Transfer hasn’t stabilized

the soil and erosion around its Revolution pipeline in western Pennsylvan­ia, as it was ordered to do in October.

As a result, it is halting constructi­on permits on the company’s pipelines in the state, it said.

“This hold will continue until the operator corrects their violations to our satisfacti­on,” Environmen­tal Protection Secretary Patrick McDonnell said in a statement.

Energy Transfer said it told state officials that it is committed to bringing the Revolution pipeline “into full compliance with all environmen­tal permits and applicable regulation­s.”

In a statement, it said the action did not affect the operation

of any of its in-service pipelines or any areas of constructi­on where permits have already been issued.

Energy Transfer’s pipelines in Pennsylvan­ia include the Mariner East 1, 2 and 2X natural gas liquids

pipelines across southern Pennsylvan­ia.

A DEP spokesman, Neil Shader, said permits for the 16-inch Mariner East 2X — which has yet to start operating — are now on hold.

Constructi­on on those three pipelines has drawn

blame for causing sinkholes and polluting drinking water and waterways across the state.

That has resulted in more than $13 million in fines and several temporary shutdown orders from state agencies.

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