Santa Fe New Mexican

Calif. pipeline may have been hooked by ship’s anchor

- By Brian Melley, Matthew Brown and Stefanie Dazio

HUNTINGTON BEACH, Calif. — The pipeline that leaked tens of thousands of gallons of oil into the water off Southern California was split open and apparently dragged more than 100 feet along the ocean floor, possibly by a ship’s anchor, officials said Tuesday.

The segment of the pipe that was dragged was three-quarters of a mile long, and the gash was over a foot wide, the Coast Guard said.

Preliminar­y reports suggest the failure may have been “caused by an anchor that hooked the pipeline, causing a partial tear,” federal transporta­tion investigat­ors said.

The break in the line occurred about 5 miles offshore at a depth of about 98 feet beneath the surface, the investigat­ors said. Those findings were included in an order from the Department of Transporta­tion that blocks the company that operates the pipeline from restarting it without extensive inspection­s and testing.

The order did not identify the source of the investigat­ors’ informatio­n, and agency officials did not immediatel­y respond to a request for further comment.

Coast Guard Capt. Rebecca Ore said divers determined about 4,000 feet of the pipeline was “laterally displaced” by about 105 feet. She did not say what might have caused it to move.

In addition, the pipeline had a 13-inch gash in it, Ore said.

The head of the company that operates the line said the pipe was displaced into “almost a semicircle.”

“The pipeline has essentiall­y been pulled like a bow string. And so at its widest point, it is 105 feet away from where it was,” Amplify CEO Martyn Willsher said at a news conference.

Officials said Monday that they were considerin­g whether a ship’s anchor might have caused the oil spill that has fouled beaches in Orange County. There was no confirmati­on Tuesday that the leak was caused by an anchor.

The Coast Guard did not investigat­e initial reports of an oil spill for nearly 12 hours because it did not have enough corroborat­ing evidence and was hindered by darkness and a lack of technology, an official told the Associated Press earlier Tuesday.

Rear Admiral Brian Penoyer acknowledg­ed that the Coast Guard was alerted Friday night by a “good Samaritan” that there was a sheen on the water. Penoyer initially said the Coast Guard put out a broadcast to the many cargo and tanker ships anchored off the Los Angeles and Long Beach ports, along with oil rigs, seeking more informatio­n but did not receive any response.

At a news conference later, Ore disputed that and said the Coast Guard did not broadcast any informatio­n to ships or oil platforms.

Penoyer said it was common to get reports of a sheen near a busy seaport. It would take more than 12 hours before an oil pipeline company reported a spill that could be up to 126,000 gallons of heavy crude.

“In hindsight, it seems obvious, but they didn’t know that at that time,” Penoyer said. “So putting yourself in the position of what they did know, this is a very normal process.”

Two early calls about the spill came into the National Response Center, which is staffed by the Coast Guard and notifies other agencies of disasters for quick response. The first was from an anchored ship that noticed a sheen on the water. The second came six hours later from a federal agency that said a possible oil slick was spotted on satellite imagery, according to reports by the California Office of Emergency Services.

The spill sent up to 126,000 gallons of heavy crude into the ocean off Huntington Beach, and it then washed onto miles of beaches and a protected marshland.

 ?? RINGO H.W. CHIU/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Workers in protective suits clean oil Tuesday in an inlet leading to the Wetlands Talbert Marsh after an oil spill in Huntington Beach, Calif.
RINGO H.W. CHIU/ASSOCIATED PRESS Workers in protective suits clean oil Tuesday in an inlet leading to the Wetlands Talbert Marsh after an oil spill in Huntington Beach, Calif.

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