Oroville Mercury-Register

Oil spill off coast is dispersing, amount unclear

- By Stefanie Dazio, Matthew Brown and Brian Melley

LONG BEACH » Some of the crude oil that spilled from a pipeline into the waters off Southern California has been breaking up naturally in ocean currents, a Coast Guard official said Wednesday as authoritie­s sought to determine the scope of the damage.

Coast Guard Petty Officer Steve Strohmaier said some of the oil has been pushed to the south by currents. Storms earlier in the week may also have helped disperse the oil, which he said could make it more challengin­g to skim as it spreads out.

“Most of this oil is separating and starting to float further south,” he said while accompanyi­ng reporters aboard a boat to the scene of the spill. “The biggest problem is the uncertaint­y, the amount that leaked into the water. We are at this point unsure of the total amount that leaked out.”

How much oil leaked remains unclear. The pipeline operator, Amplify Energy Corp., has publicly pegged the maximum amount of the spill at 126,000 gallons of heavy crude. But the company told federal investigat­ors with the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administra­tion that initial measuremen­ts put the total only around 29,400 gallons.

The water and shoreline are still off limits in Huntington Beach and several other areas, but people are allowed on the sand. Beachgoers played volleyball on the Huntington Beach sand Wednesday morning as walkers and bikers passed near the city’s famed pier. A few globs of oil were visible along the shoreline but no smell remained.

Investigat­ors have said the spill may have been caused by a ship’s anchor that hooked, dragged and tore open an underwater pipeline. Federal officials also found that the pipeline owner did not quickly shut down operations after a safety system alerted to a possible spill.

Questions remained about the timeline of the weekend spill, which fouled beaches and a protected marshland, potentiall­y closing them for weeks along with commercial and recreation­al fishing in a major hit to the local economy.

Some reports of a possible spill, a petroleum smell and an oily sheen on the waters off Huntington Beach came in Friday night but weren’t corroborat­ed and the pipeline’s operator, Amplify Energy Corp., didn’t report a spill until the next morning, authoritie­s said.

An alarm went off in a company control room at 2:30 a.m. Saturday that pressure had dropped in the pipeline, indicating a possible leak but Amplify waited until 6:01 a.m. to shut down the pipeline, according to preliminar­y findings of an investigat­ion into the spill.

The Houston-based company took another three hours to notify the U.S. Coast Guard’s National Response Center for oil spills, investigat­ors said, further slowing the response to an accident for which Amplify workers spent years preparing.

 ?? JEFF GRITCHEN — THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER ?? Workers clean oil from the sand south of the pier in Newport Beach on Tuesday.
JEFF GRITCHEN — THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER Workers clean oil from the sand south of the pier in Newport Beach on Tuesday.

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