Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Gas firm:Landslide caused pipeline explosion

- By Anya Litvak

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Columbia Gas Transmissi­on has told federal pipeline regulators that a landslide was the apparent cause of the rupture and explosion of a new natural gas pipeline in Marshall County, W.Va., last month.

The site of the break was at the bottom of a steep hill on Nixon Ridge, just south of Moundsvill­e.

The Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administra­tion incident report, provided to the Post-Gazette by environmen­tal activist organizati­on Climate Investigat­ions Center, indicates that officials inside Columbia’s control room got an alert about low pressure on the line at 4:16 a.m. on June 7 and sent someone to investigat­e. Marshall County 911 reported getting calls just a few minutes later reporting an explosion. At 4:37 a.m., the emergency agency called Columbiato report the news.

The carbon steel pipe, manufactur­ed by Durabond in 2015, was not operating above its maximum pressure at the time of the incident. When it burst, it spewed $437,250 worth of natural gas. No one was injured.

TransCanad­a, which owns the Columbia Gas Transmissi­on system, has been working on repairing the pipeline, pushing back the expected in-service date from early July to the middle of the month.

“The weather in the region has continued to create challengin­g conditions during the remediatio­n process,” the company said on a website it uses to communicat­e with customers.

Lindsey Fought, a spokespers­on with TransCanad­a, said the company is continuing to cooperate with federal authoritie­s in the ongoing investigat­ion. She confirmed that the federal pipeline agency and TransCanad­a’s “internal findings point to land subsidence as the cause of the rupture.”

It may take months or years for federal regulators to complete their investigat­ion of the Marshall County incident. When a natural gas liquids pipeline burst into flames in Follansbee, W.Va., in 2015, it took PHMSA more than a year to close the case, declaring that the root cause was subsidence.

A final report for the Spectra Energy pipeline that ruptured in Salem Township, Westmorela­nd County in 2016 is still not posted on the federal site.

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