Baltimore Sun

US officials suspect firm hid pipeline problems after spill

- By Matthew Brown

BILLINGS, Mont. — U.S. prosecutor­s suspect a Wyoming company of potentiall­y concealing problems with a pipeline that broke in 2015 and spilled more than 50,000 gallons of crude oil into Montana’s Yellowston­e River, fouling a small city’s drinking water supply, court filings show.

The government is suing Bridger Pipeline for violations of environmen­tal laws in the 2015 spill that came after the line buried beneath the Yellowston­e became exposed and broke when ice scoured the river bottom near Glendive, Montana. Prosecutor­s are pursuing similar claims against a related company over a 2016 spill in North Dakota that released more than 600,000 gallons of crude oil.

The accidents came a few years after an Exxon-Mobil oil pipeline broke beneath the Yellowston­e during flooding. The spills helped put a national focus on the nation’s aging pipeline network that has continued to suffer high profile accidents including recent spills in Louisiana and California.

A survey of Bridger’s pipeline on the company’s behalf in 2011 included a note that the pipe was buried only 1 ½ feet beneath the ever-shifting river bottom. That would have put it at heightened risk of breaking.

But after the spill, prosecutor­s alleged, company representa­tives referenced a second survey when they told federal regulators that the pipeline had been buried at least 7.9 feet, giving it “adequate cover” to protect against spills.

“This raises questions — which Bridger has yet to answer — about whether Bridger concealed material facts about the condition of the crossing before the Yellowston­e spill,” assistant U.S. Attorney Mark Elmer wrote in court documents.

Attorneys for Bridger rejected the allegation­s about conflictin­g surveys as “conspiracy theories.”

Pipeline company spokespers­on Bill Salvin said the government misunderst­ood the surveys.

“We think the government is trying to find something that’s just not there,” Salvin said.

Federal prosecutor­s last month filed a lawsuit with similar claims against a sister company, Belle Fourche Pipeline, over the 2016 North Dakota spill that contaminat­ed the Little Missouri River and a tributary.

Both pipeline businesses are part of Casper, Wyoming-based True Companies, which operates 1,800 miles of line in Montana, North Dakota and Wyoming.

Prosecutor­s allege the spills violated the Clean Water Act and are subject to penalties of up to $96.1 million in both cases.

Attorneys for Belle Fourche, in their response to the federal lawsuit, on Thursday denied any violations of pollution laws.

Bridger last year reached a $2 million settlement with the federal government and Montana over damages from the Yellowston­e River spill.

The company was previously fined $1 million in the case by the Montana Department of Environmen­tal Quality.

 ?? MATTHEW BROWN/AP 2015 ?? Cleanup workers on the Yellowston­e River near Crane, Montana, try to recover oil from an upstream pipeline spill that released over 50,000 gallons of crude.
MATTHEW BROWN/AP 2015 Cleanup workers on the Yellowston­e River near Crane, Montana, try to recover oil from an upstream pipeline spill that released over 50,000 gallons of crude.

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