Times Colonist

Leak raises concern about aging Alaska sea-floor pipelines

- DAN JOLING

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Alaska’s picturesqu­e Cook Inlet is home to endangered beluga whales and wild salmon — and a spider web of oil and natural gas pipelines on the sea floor, many of them placed there five decades ago.

Cook Inlet’s petroleum production is often overshadow­ed by Alaska’s giant North Slope oil fields, but the inlet is in the spotlight as millions of cubic feet of natural gas spew from an underwater pipeline owned by the inlet’s largest petroleum producer, Hilcorp Alaska LLC.

The federal agency that oversees pipeline safety has “strongly recommende­d” that Hilcorp develop a safety management system for its pipelines.

Environmen­tal advocates are demanding immediate pipeline inspection­s by federal authoritie­s, not Hilcorp, in the area with earthquake­s and some of the world’s strongest tides.

“The age of the pipelines significan­tly increased the risk of failure, especially when coupled with the harsh offshore Cook Inlet environmen­t,” Kristen Monsell, an attorney for the Center for Biological Diversity, wrote in a letter to the federal Pipeline and Hazardous Material Safety Administra­tion.

Hilcorp has not said whether it will craft the safety management system, but insists the age of its pipeline system does not pose a threat.

“Hilcorp is ready, willing and able to make the necessary investment­s to keep us working in Alaska for many years to come,” said David Wilkins, Hilcorp Alaska senior vicepresid­ent, in an email statement.

The inlet lined by mountains stretches 290 kilometres from the Gulf of Alaska to Anchorage. Humpback whales, Steller sea lions, northern sea otters and salmon swim in its waters.

Besides earthquake­s that periodical­ly rattle Cook Inlet, tides fluctuate more than 7.6 metres and are so strong that they move car-size boulders along the sea floor, said Lynda Giguere, spokeswoma­n for the Cook Inlet Regional Citizens Advisory Council, set up after the Exxon Valdez oil spill to promote environmen­tally safe marine transporta­tion.

Hilcorp entered the Alaska market in 2012 and owns 15 of the 17 Cook Inlet petroleum platforms. The gas leak is in a pipeline carrying processed natural gas from shore to four platforms, where it’s burned to provide electricit­y.

An analysis of gas flow indicated the pipeline started leaking in mid-December and initially spewed up to 8,780 cubic metres of natural gas per day. Hilcorp lowered pressure in the line to reduce the flow to 2,407 to 3,257 cubic metres per day.

Divers on Monday in 24 metres of water found a fivecentim­etre gash on the bottom of the line where it rests on a boulder embedded in the sea floor. Repairs are underway.

On April 1, Hilcorp shut down a separate pipeline carrying crude oil from a production platform after workers felt an impact, saw bubbles surfacing from the water and spotted oil on the surface.

Hilcorp estimated less than 11.5 litres of oil spilled. Hilcorp said the pipeline was not the source of the spill and an investigat­ion is underway to find it. ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Crews in Alaska were trying on Saturday to shut down an oil well that was leaking explosive natural gas on the frozen North Slope. The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency said a crack in a BP wellhead near Deadhorse sent up a mist of crude oil Friday before it froze over and an initial leak stopped.

BP spokesman Brett Clanton said: “The release appears to be contained to the gravel pad surroundin­g the wellhead and has not reached the tundra.” BP was focused on safely securing the well, Clanton said.

 ??  ?? The Chugach Mountains and buildings of downtown Anchorage are reflected in the waters of Cook Inlet.
The Chugach Mountains and buildings of downtown Anchorage are reflected in the waters of Cook Inlet.

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