Fresh
ExxonMobil pipeline spill hits Missouri
While questions over the severity of ExxonMobil’s March 29 oil spill in Mayflower, Arkansas still remain, the same pipeline has now ruptured, this time to the north, in Missouri.
RT,
2
May, 2013
The
70-year-old Pegasus pipeline, which released thousands of barrels of
tar sands oil in Arkansas, has now caused another, albeit far smaller
incident in Ripley County, Missouri, 200 miles north of Mayflower,
Arkansas.
A
resident notified ExxonMobil after spotting a patch of oil and dead
vegetation in their yard outside the town of Doniphan, according to
Reuters.
Luckily,
unlike the spill that is still ongoing in Mayflower, the latest
breach seems so far to be minor, with an estimated one barrel of
crude oil having been leaked. According to an Exxon spokeswoman the
cleanup operation there was “close to completion.”
Originally
built in the late 1940s, the Pegasus is now the subject of severe
scrutiny, as many environmentalists argue that the increased
corrosive impact of transporting tar sands oil presents a greater
concern than other forms of oil. It is worth noting that the pipeline
was shut down following the Arkansas spill, and leaked in Missouri
despite being out of operation.
The
Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) is
ultimately responsible for approving the Pegasus pipeline's restart.
That agency did not immediately respond to Reuters on Wednesday
regarding the Missouri leak, and whether that may delay reactivation.
On
April 26 the PHMSA released a new report on the Mayflower spill that
shed light on several new details. Of the approximately 5,000 barrels
of crude oil involved in the pipeline breach, less than half had been
cleaned up by ExxonMobil.
The
report also pointed to the contamination of surface water, accounting
for 2,000 barrels of oil located in ditches and a cove south of
nearby Lake Conway. Though the latest report does not seem to
indicate that oil reached the larger body of Lake Conway, an
independent study conducted by Opflex Solutions indicated otherwise.
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