The Province

Oil cleanup continues on California’s coast

BROKEN PIPELINE: Calm waters may aid recovery effort

-

aim to begin excavating the pipe Thursday to get their first look at the breach.

The company’s chief executive visited the spill site Wednesday and apologized.

“We deeply, deeply regret that this incident has occurred at all,” chairman and CEO Greg L. Armstrong said at a news conference. “We apologize for the damage that it’s done to the wildlife and to the environmen­t.”

Crude was flowing through the pipe at 207,000 litres an hour during the leak, the company said. Company officials didn’t say how long it leaked before it was discovered and shut down or discuss how fast the oil escaped.

Federal regulators from the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion, which oversees oil pipeline safety, investigat­ed the leak’s cause, the pipe’s condition and the potential violations.

The 60-centimetre pipe, built in 1991, had no previous problems and was thoroughly inspected in 2012, according to the company. The pipe underwent similar tests about two weeks ago, though the results had not been analyzed yet.

The Los Angeles Times reported that the company accumulate­d 175 safety and maintenanc­e infraction­s since 2006, according to federal records. The infraction­s involved pump failure, equipment malfunctio­n, pipeline corrosion and operator error. The newspaper said a Plains Pipeline spokesman did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment about its regulatory record.

There was no estimate on the cost of the cleanup or how long it might take.

A combinatio­n of soiled beaches and the pungent stench of petroleum led officials to close popular campground­s Refugio State Beach and El Capitan State Beach over the Memorial Day weekend.

GOLETA, Calif. — More than 29,000 litres of oil has been raked, skimmed and vacuumed from a spill that stretched across 14.5 kilometres of California coast, just a fraction of the sticky, stinking goo that escaped from a broken pipeline, officials said.

Up to 398,000 litres may have leaked from the ruptured pipeline Tuesday, and up to 79,500 litres reached the sea just north of Santa Barbara, according to estimates. The environmen­tal impact still is being assessed, but so far there is no evidence of widespread harm to birds and sea life.

The early toll on wildlife included two oilcovered pelicans, officials said. Biologists counted dead fish and crustacean­s along sandy beaches and rocky shores.

The spill occurred along a long, rustic coast that forms the northern boundary of the Santa Barbara Channel, home to a rich array of sea life. Whales, dolphins, sea lions, seals, sea otters and birds such as pelicans live along the channel between the mainland and the Channel Islands, five of which are a national park surrounded by waters declared a national marine sanctuary.

Workers in protective suits have shovelled black sludge off beaches, and boats towed booms into place to corral two oil slicks. The cleanup effort continued through the night and additional crew members and boats came out early Thursday, U.S. Coast Guard Lt. Jonathan McCormick said.

They could get help from expected light winds and calm seas, said Dr. Sean Anderson, an environmen­tal scientist at California State University, Channel Islands.

“When the water’s choppy, the response gets complicate­d. But since the water’s nice and flat, the oil sticks together and it’s easier to spot and easier to pick up,” he said.

Regulators and workers with Plains All American Pipeline LP, which runs the pipeline,

 ??  ?? Hundreds of thousands of litres of oil leaked from a pipeline this week, polluting the coastline along California’s Santa Barbara Channel.
Hundreds of thousands of litres of oil leaked from a pipeline this week, polluting the coastline along California’s Santa Barbara Channel.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada