San Diego Union-Tribune

LEAK SHUTS FUEL LINES FROM L.A. TO NEV., ARIZ.

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A leak in a fuel pipeline facility in California forced a shutdown of deliveries of gasoline and diesel from the Los Angeles area east to areas including Las Vegas and Phoenix, but officials said Friday they believed supplies would not immediatel­y be affected.

Pipeline operator Kinder Morgan told The Associated Press the leak was discovered Thursday afternoon at a company station near Los Angeles and that its CALNEV and SFPP West pipelines were shut down while the Houston-based pipeline operator worked to resolve the issue.

“There are no injuries or fire reported as a result of this incident,” said a company statement, provided by Katherine Hill, communicat­ions manager for the publicly traded company. It did not say how much fuel leaked or when service would be restored.

Hill did not immediatel­y respond to email and telephone messages seeking more informatio­n.

“The appropriat­e regulatory agencies have been notified, and an investigat­ion into the cause and quantity of the release will be conducted,” the statement said. “We are working closely with our customers on potential impacts.”

The Kinder Morgan website says its 566-mile CALNEV pipeline transports gasoline, diesel and jet fuel from Los Angeles refineries and marine terminals through parallel 14inch and 8-inch diameter pipelines to Barstow and the Las Vegas area.

Airports it serves include Nellis Air Force Base and Harry Reid Internatio­nal in Las Vegas and Edwards Air Force Base in California’s Mojave Desert, the company said.

Kinder Morgan’s SFPP West pipeline runs approximat­ely 515 miles to transport petroleum products from the Los Angeles area to Colton and Imperial, and east to Phoenix.

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