Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pipeline settlement approved

- By Andrew Maykuth

Energy Transfer LP will pay a $1 million fine to settle safety violations over a fiery 2018 natural gas pipeline explosion that destroyed a home in Western Pennsylvan­ia.

The Pennsylvan­ia Public Utility Commission on Thursday approved a settlement made last December with the Texas company, whose Revolution Pipeline ruptured and exploded after heavy rains caused a landslide in Beaver County. The new 24-inch diameter pipeline was just being brought into service when the failure occurred.

The explosion and fire destroyed a nearby home, whose occupants fled without injury, and knocked out a major electrical transmissi­on line. The pipeline has been out of service since the Sept. 10, 2018, incident.

Under the settlement, Energy Transfer does not admit it violated the safety regulation­s alleged by the PUC’s Bureau of Investigat­ion and Enforcemen­t. But in addition to the $1 million payment, Energy Transfer agreed to several conditions that the PUC says go beyond federal safety requiremen­ts.

The company agreed to conduct five annual inline inspection­s of the Revolution pipeline through 2025, to walk the entire 40-mile pipeline right of way after heavy rains and to improve how preconstru­ction geologic research is incorporat­ed into pipeline design and constructi­on.

The PUC agreed not to oppose Energy Transfer’s efforts to restart the pipeline.

The commission’s order seeks public comment on the proposed settlement. Any modificati­ons to the settlement would allow either party to withdraw from the agreement and pursue litigation.

The Revolution Pipeline is operated by ETC Northeast Pipeline LLC, which is separate from Energy Transfer’s former Sunoco Pipeline unit that is building the contentiou­s Mariner East pipeline system. The Mariner East system delivers natural gas liquids like propane from Western Pennsylvan­ia to an export terminal in Marcus Hook, Delaware County.

The $5.1 billion Mariner East project is a key link in the state’s effort to promote Pennsylvan­ia shale-gas developmen­t, but its constructi­on has provoked sharp opposition from residents and aroused fears about pipelines transporti­ng highly volatile liquid fuel near homes, schools and nursing homes.

Pennsylvan­ia has assessed about $16 million in penalties against the Mariner East project for constructi­on mishaps, which initially had a completion date of 2019 and now is expected to be finished in 2021.

The project has been delayed in part because of legal challenges of its constructi­on permits and its public utility status and because of complicati­ons that have arisen as Sunoco threaded the pipelines through densely populated Delaware and Chester Counties.

A Chester County jury Wednesday convicted two state constables of misdemeano­r charges of failing to disclose money that they had earned working as private security guards for the Mariner East pipeline, though a judge dismissed more serious bribery and official oppression charges against the two.

 ?? Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette ?? The site of the The Revolution natural gas pipeline explosion on Sept. 10, 2018, in Center Township, Beaver County. The Pennsylvan­ia Public Utility Commission on Thursday approved a a $1 million settlement made last December with Energy Transfer LP, whose pipeline ruptured and exploded.
Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette The site of the The Revolution natural gas pipeline explosion on Sept. 10, 2018, in Center Township, Beaver County. The Pennsylvan­ia Public Utility Commission on Thursday approved a a $1 million settlement made last December with Energy Transfer LP, whose pipeline ruptured and exploded.

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