The Denver Post

State toughens oil, gas rule AFFORDABLE HOUSING CHIEF DECAMPS

But routes of existing undergroun­d pipelines remain largely unknown.

- By Bruce Finley

State regulators of the oil and gas industry on Tuesday set tougher rules and launched a task force after six months of grappling over how to protect people and the environmen­t from myriad undergroun­d pipelines, which regularly leak and explode, as fossil fuels extraction expands around Front Range cities.

But the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservati­on Commission regulators still face a difficult challenge in their push for closer inspection­s to increase safety: “How do we know if we are in the right place to detect leaks if we don’t know where the lines are?” Commission­er Ashley Ager said in an all-day hearing.

Industry officials have testified that they do not know the locations of hundreds of miles of existing pipelines, particular­ly what they call “upstream” lines near wells not regulated by the federal government. They say mapping all existing lines could be costly. PDC Energy production manager Brian Murray told commission­ers older pipelines that do not contain steel and abandoned wells plugged with cement would complicate mapping.

Many pipelines are essentiall­y “impossible to go and find,” Murray said, noting PDC runs 2,600 wells. “We do not have any geospatial informatio­n on any of our lines,” Murray said.

Gov. John Hickenloop­er responded to last year’s fatal Firestone house explosion by ordering companies to find and test all pipelines within 1,000 feet of homes — prompting companies to send start-point and end-point data, but no maps showing where pipelines run. On Tuesday, Hickenloop­er issued a statement after the nine COGCC commission­ers voted unanimousl­y for a revised set of rules. “We believe these new rules are another important step in the aftermath of the Firestone tragedy.”

Under Colorado’s updated rules, companies must inform COGCC regulators where pipelines installed after May will be. They’ll have to provide informatio­n on old lines they know about by May 2019 and, if they learn more in the future, let state regulators know using forms that are posted on a website. Major leaks must be reported within 24 hours.

A new task force will explore, over the next year, inspection technology that companies may be required to use to detect leaks and locate existing pipelines. Industry attorneys insisted on pushing the controvers­ial inspection methods matter to a “stakeholde­rs” process.

This COGCC rule-making marks state regulators’ latest ef-

fort to manage an intensifyi­ng oil and gas boom concentrat­ed along Colorado’s heavily populated Front Range. An industry shift toward large multiwell pads with horizontal boreholes favors more and more pipelines linking wells to storage and processing facilities – including lines near homes and sites where developers plan to build more homes to sustain Colorado’s population growth.

The revised rules let operators refuse to share pipeline location informatio­n with local government­s. Colorado Oil and Gas Associatio­n attorneys pressed the case that all pipelines are “critical infrastruc­ture” that legally can be kept secret to guard against terrorism. COGA president Dan Haley praised the new rules. “Without question these tough new regulation­s will further enhance the safety and integrity of our pipeline infrastruc­ture,” Haley said.

COGCC director Matt Lepore acknowledg­ed public worries, and he struggled to answer Commission­er James Hawkins’ question Tuesday on what the benefits would be of requiring companies to locate existing pipelines, at least those within 500 feet of homes.

“For the most part, my view of the benefits is that it is useful informatio­n. Gaining that informatio­n … is better than the status quo. The rules that are in place today … if followed carefully, provide a certain level of protection. The new rules will provide greater protection. Knowing where every flowline is may be an additional bit of protection,” Lepore said.

“There is a hunger — a fear among those living in places near oil and gas developmen­t that has occurred or will occur,” he said. “The ability to log onto a website easily and pull up a screen-shot of their home or their neighbor’s or mother’s or children’s home would give comfort.”

Local government leaders wanted more. Two men were killed and a woman was seriously injured in the April Firestone explosion in part because a severed undergroun­d pipeline leaking near a home was not known to residents. “Operators should be required to provide geospatial data for existing flowlines as well,” Boulder County chief planner Kim Sanchez told commission­ers, speaking for a coalition of cities where leaders contend pipeline locations must be known for emergency response and growth planning.

“Industry constructe­d or acquired the lines. They are responsibl­e for them. They should know where the lines are or be required to locate them accurately,” Sanchez said later in an email. “The question is, will these rules help prevent another Firestone?”

Colorado Oil and Gas Accountabi­lity Project attorney Paul Zogg challenged provisions in the new rules for keeping comprehens­ive pipeline locational informatio­n confidenti­al as a pre-condition for sharing it with local government­s. Cities including Greeley, Longmont and Broomfield need to know because oil and gas operations are expanding near residents, Zogg said.

“We need to help people, like those in Firestone, to protect themselves from risks that are in their neighborho­od. … We are seeing more developmen­t in urban areas, and we are seeing more concentrat­ed developmen­t — large well pads with multiple wells on them. This reflects an overall increased risk to safety. … Broad interpreta­tions of confidenti­ality are inappropri­ate. We know there are leaks. They are not visible. … If you just abandon them, you may be leaving gas and liquid contaminan­ts in the ground that create risks going into the future.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States