Federal agency to probe gas explosion
PG&E gives reasons for slow shut-off effort
SAN FRANCISCO — The National Transportation Safety Board will investigate a natural gas explosion in San Francisco that sent flames into the sky for hours and damaged five buildings, an official said Thursday.
An eight-person team will travel to San Francisco, said Eric Weiss, a spokesman for the federal agency that often investigates blasts on pipelines because they transport oil and natural gas, which it oversees. California regulators also are investigating.
A private construction crew digging on a street to install fiber-optic wires cut a natural gas line, igniting the fire Wednesday, Fire Chief Joanne Hayes-white said. No one was injured.
Flames shot above the rooftops of three-story buildings and burned for more than two hours until Pacific Gas & Electric workers were able to shut off the gas fueling the fire. Some questioned why it took the utility so long.
State law required crews to dig by hand around several other pipelines before they were able to “squeeze” a 4-inch plastic line, PG&E spokeswoman Melissa Subbotin said.
Because the fire was contained to a limited area, the utility said it had to weigh the threat from the flames with the risk of more drastic action on a cold day in San Francisco. Officials opted not to quickly shut off a massive transmission line as they would do in an earthquake, Subbotin said.
“Had we turned the gas off to a transmission system, we would have shut off gas to nearly the entire city of San Francisco,” Subbotin said. “The objective of this was to turn the gas off safely and as quickly as possible.”
The company stressed that the workers who cut the gas line are not affiliated with the nation’s largest utility.
The utility faces heightened scrutiny over its natural gas pipelines after one exploded in a neighborhood south of San Francisco in 2010, killing eight people and wiping out a neighborhood in suburban San Bruno.
A U.S. judge fined PG&E $3 million for a conviction on six felony charges of failing to properly maintain the pipeline, and the utility remains under a federal judge’s watch in that case.