Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Mariner East 1 pipeline gets OK to flow again

- By Laura Legere

Natural gas liquids can flow again through Sunoco Pipeline L.P.’s Mariner East 1 pipeline, the Pennsylvan­ia Public Utility Commission said Thursday, concluding that the line is safe to use after sinkholes related to the constructi­on of parallel pipelines threatened to destabiliz­e it.

The five utility commission­ers voted unanimousl­y to lift their emergency shutdown order on the same day that the state Department of Environmen­tal Protection fined Sunoco $355,000 for violations at its associated Mariner East 2 pipeline constructi­on project. Mariner East 1 has been shut down since March 7, when subsided ground in West Whiteland Township, Chester County, exposed the active pipeline, creating a safety threat in a residentia­l neighborho­od.

The utility commission’s investigat­ion bureau recommende­d last Friday that Sunoco be allowed to resume service on the line because inspectors were “satisfied that the integrity of that active pipeline had not been compromise­d by the recent subsidence events.”

The investigat­ion included tests of the pipeline and the surroundin­g geology. The enforcemen­t plan calls for ongoing monitoring at the site for six months after constructi­on is finished.

An 87-year-old former petroleum products pipeline, Mariner East 1 was repurposed and reversed in 2014 to bring ethane and propane from Marcellus and Utica shale wells to the East Coast.

The sinkholes emerged during constructi­on of Sunoco’s sister pipelines, Mariner East 2 and 2X, which also have muddied protected waterways and disrupted drinking water supplies along

their route.

The DEP fine Thursday addresses different violations from those covered by a $12.6 million fine the department levied against the company in February.

The new penalty is for drilling fluid spills to wetlands, wild trout streams, and high-quality waterways in Allegheny, Blair, Cambria, Cumberland, Dauphin, Huntingdon, Indiana, Lancaster and Washington counties over the past year, DEP said.

The nearly two-month shutdown of Mariner East 1 forced Western Pennsylvan­ia gas producers to find other outlets for their ethane, by blending more of it into their natural gas pipelines or shipping it through pipelines to other regions.

Companies that use the pipeline’s products — including regional propane suppliers and Dominion Energy’s Cove Point natural gas liquefacti­on and export terminal in Maryland — had urged the PUC to allow Sunoco to restart operations.

West Whiteland Township, local homeowners, environmen­tal groups and state Sen. Andrew Dinniman, D-Chester, opposed allowing Sunoco to resume flows on the line, at least until the underlying studies were released and could be independen­tly reviewed.

The subsidence­s spurred Sunoco to temporaril­y relocate several affected families during the investigat­ion.

Lisa Dillinger, spokeswoma­n for Sunoco Pipeline owner Energy Transfer Partners, said procedures to restart service on Mariner East 1 will begin immediatel­y.

 ?? Jeremy Long/Lebanon Daily News via AP ?? In this July 2017 photo, pipes for the Sunoco Mariner East pipeline are placed in South Lebanon Township, Lebanon County. The Pa. Public Utility Commission said Thursday that the line is safe to use after sinkholes related to the constructi­on of...
Jeremy Long/Lebanon Daily News via AP In this July 2017 photo, pipes for the Sunoco Mariner East pipeline are placed in South Lebanon Township, Lebanon County. The Pa. Public Utility Commission said Thursday that the line is safe to use after sinkholes related to the constructi­on of...

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