The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Regulators issue split ruling on gas pipelines near Philadephi­a

- By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG » Pennsylvan­ia utility regulators voted Thursday to let a pipeline resume transporti­ng liquid fuels, reversing an administra­tive law judge’s order, but they also upheld a halt to constructi­on of two other pipelines in the Philadelph­ia suburbs.

The Public Utility Commission voted 3-2 to allow Sunoco Pipeline LLC to resume use of the Mariner East 1 pipeline, with the chairman saying there was no new credible evidence to think it can’t be operated safely.

The regulators ruled that more informatio­n is required before work can continue on building a 3.5mile (6 kilometer) portion of Mariner East 2 and a companion line through Chester County. Those details include inspection and testing protocols, as well as safety training.

Public Utility Commission Judge Elizabeth Barnes said last month Sunoco failed to take reasonable steps to warn people and protect them from danger. She said there was evidence that drilling practices have put water supplies at risk, and she cited a history of leaks and failures to report spills when they’ve occurred, sinkholes, and the possibilit­y of a public catastroph­e.

Commission member John E. Coleman Jr., who wanted to allow constructi­on to resume, said before the Thursday vote that there is no immediate threat that would warrant the halt work on the two pipelines.

State Sen. Andy Dinniman, who brought the challenge to Sunoco’s permits before the commission, called the decision a mixed bag.

He said Mariner East 1 represents the greater potential danger.

“We continue to have very real and significan­t concerns regarding the stability of Mariner East 1,” Dinniman said in a statement, describing it as “an 87-year-old pipeline carrying highly volatile natural gas liquids within close proximity of schools, playground­s, senior care facilities, neighborho­ods, a library, shopping mall, and rail line, to name just a few.”

Messages left for the company were not immediatel­y returned, but it has previously defended the safety of the three lines.

Sunoco Pipeline LP, a subsidiary of Dallas-based Energy Transfer Partners LP, has nearly completed work on the 350-mile-long (563 kilometer), 20-inch (50-centimeter) diameter Mariner East 2 pipeline to carry propane, butane and ethane from western Pennsylvan­ia across the southern portion of the state to a terminal near Philadelph­ia. A second, 16-inch (41-centimeter) diameter line, Mariner East 2x, is following the same route.

Mariner East 1, which dates to the 1930s, has been sending natural gas liquids eastward for about a year.

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