Orlando Sentinel

Keystone pipeline leak won’t affect Neb. ruling

- By Grant Schulte and James Nord Associated Press

LINCOLN, Neb. — Discovery of a 210,000-gallon oil spill from the Keystone pipeline that critics say demonstrat­es the risks of energy transport to the environmen­t will not affect Nebraska regulators’ decision next week on an expansion of the system because they are not allowed to consider pipeline safety, a state official said Friday.

Keystone operator TransCanad­a Corp. shut down the pipeline Thursday, and workers were testing to determine the cause of the spill on agricultur­al land in Marshall County, S.D., near the North Dakota border 250 miles west of Minneapoli­s.

TransCanad­a said Friday that the leak is “controlled” and not a threat to public safety. It said it sent more than 75 people to the site, and crews are working “around the clock.”

The spill announceme­nt Thursday came four days before the Nebraska Public Service Commission votes Monday whether to allow the Keystone XL expansion pipeline to cross the state.

A state law passed in 2011 prevents the commission from factoring pipeline safety or the possibilit­y of leaks into its decisions.

The vote Monday will be on a proposed route for the Keystone XL, which also would be operated by TransCanad­a. The new pipeline would carry an estimated 830,000 barrels of oil a day from the oil sands areas of Canada through Montana, South Dakota and Nebraska, where it would connect with the existing Keystone pipeline.

The decision will be based solely on testimony and documents during public hearings over the summer and from more than 500,000 public comments, Nebraska Public Service Commission spokeswoma­n Deb Collins said.

“The commission’s decision will be based on the evidence in the record,” Collins said.

The Keystone XL proposal has drawn intense resistance in Nebraska from a coalition of environmen­tal groups, Native American tribes and some landowners who don’t want the pipeline running through their property.

Nebraska lawmakers gave the five-member commission the power to regulate major oil pipelines in 2011 in response to a public outcry over the pipeline and its potential impact on the Sandhills, an ecological­ly fragile region of grass-covered sand dunes.

But when they passed the law, legislator­s argued that the state couldn’t factor the risk of leaks into its decision because pipeline safety is a federal responsibi­lity that pre-empts state law.

Opponents of Keystone XL are incensed that the leak won’t be considered as a factor.

“There is a reason TransCanad­a and the big oil lobby did not want this informatio­n on the record,” said Jane Kleeb, director of the Bold Alliance, a coalition of groups that have opposed the Keystone XL for nearly a decade.

President Donald Trump issued a federal permit for the expansion project in March even though it had been rejected by the Obama administra­tion.

The existing Keystone pipeline transports crude from Canada to refineries in Illinois and a major storage hub in Oklahoma, passing through the eastern Dakotas, Nebraska, Kansas and Missouri. It can handle nearly 600,000 barrels daily, or about 23 million gallons.

Since 2010, companies have reported 17 spills bigger than the leak announced Thursday, according to U.S. Department of Transporta­tion records.

Suzie Easthouse, general manager at the Front Porch in Langford, a city southeast of the spill area, said the restaurant will cater for TransCanad­a workers at the site.

Easthouse said she has mixed emotions about the pipeline, a tug between the business it has brought to the area and her environmen­tal concerns. She said she thinks the spill will have lasting effects.

“It’s almost like everybody’s fears have come true with it,” Easthouse said.

 ?? STEVEN OEHLENSCHL­AGER/DREAMSTIME ?? TransCanad­a workers were testing to determine what caused the spill on farmland in Marshall County, S.D.
STEVEN OEHLENSCHL­AGER/DREAMSTIME TransCanad­a workers were testing to determine what caused the spill on farmland in Marshall County, S.D.

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