Pipeline
Rupture Report Raises Questions About TransCanada Inspections
4
February, 2014
A
CBC News investigation has unearthed a critical report that the
federal regulator effectively buried for several years about a
rupture on a trouble-prone TransCanada natural gas pipeline.
On
July 20, 2009, the Peace River Mainline in northern Alberta exploded,
sending 50-metre-tall flames into the air and razing a two-hectare
wooded area.
Few
people ever learned of the rupture — one of the largest in the past
decade — other than the Dene Tha’ First Nation, whose traditional
territory it happened on.
In
an early 2011 draft report about the incident, the National Energy
Board criticized TransCanada, the operator of the line owned by its
subsidiary NOVA Gas Transmission, for “inadequate” field
inspections and “ineffective” management.
Final
reports are typically published by the investigative bodies, either
the NEB or the Transportation Safety Board, but this report wasn’t
released until this January when the CBC obtained it through an
access-to-information request.
The
NEB said the delay was caused by an “administrative error” when
an employee left without transferring the file over.
TransCanada
did not respond to a CBC request for an interview.
Timing
questioned
Environmental
policy expert Nathan Lemphers says he’s “deeply concerned” that
the federal regulator kept the “fairly damning” report behind
closed doors.
“It’s
quite likely that there are other incidents like this that the public
simply doesn’t know about,” said Lemphers, a former Pembina
Institute analyst. “This one stands out simply because of its size
and the timing and the company involved.”
Lemphers
questions whether TransCanada’s contentious Keystone XL proposal,
under environmental review in the U.S. at the same time, had a
bearing on the regulator not publishing the Peace River Mainline
draft report.
“It's
hard to guess intentions,” said Lemphers. “It certainly seems
fishy from the outside that this report was kept quiet due to an
apparent administrative error. If the report came out it would have
been, risen to immediate public attention.”
In
January 2011, TransCanada was in the midst of negotiating dozens of
U.S. safety requests on pipeline construction, operation and design
on the controversial Keystone XL proposal. That was followed by
several months of public comments in the States later that year.
The
Keystone XL project, first proposed in 2008, is still in limbo. A
crucial assessment released last week said there are no major
environmental objections to the $7-billion mega-project, but a 90-day
comment period still remains.
‘Big
ball of fire’
Members
of Dene Tha’ First Nations community of Chateh, about 50 kilometres
away from the site of the blast, also want to know why the report was
not released until now.
“They
should let the public know about these deficiencies that exist,”
said Baptiste Metchooyeah, the former Dene Tha’ First Nation lands
director. “We have to start saying something about these incidents,
because the regulator is not there for us.”
According
to the report, the pipeline spewed 1.45 million cubic metres of
natural gas – equivalent to the volume of 580 Olympic-sized pools –
over a period of hours before TransCanada stopped the flow and put
out the fire.
Fabian
Chonkolay, a local hunter who flew over the site, described the
aftermath as looking like a “big ball of fire” had consumed the
forest. “Just like when they drop a bomb,” he said.
Chateh
residents fear that because the area is remote, it might be
considered a low-risk area for pipeline operators, leading to fewer
safety precautions. The pipeline runs under the community of Chateh,
and hunters and trappers often travel in the area.
“It’s
way in the bush, but there’s a lot of activities going on out
there,” said Chonkolay.
High
rate of ruptures
The
report reveals that the Peace River Mainline has a historically high
rate of ruptures — six since the 1970s. The Alberta pipeline’s
rupture rate is five times higher than Canada’s national rupture
rate, reported in a 2004 study.
The
pipeline had an uncommon problem: a bacteria that caused
“particularly aggressive growth rates” of corrosion. But, as the
NEB report notes, the bacteria was a known threat to the pipeline and
caused a rupture in 2002.
The
section of the pipeline that burst in 2009 was 95 per cent corroded.
TransCanada’s own rules required that it physically inspect a
pipeline when it reached 75 per cent corrosion, the report says.
The
report notes the inline inspection tool failed to accurately assess
the depth of the “corrosion within corrosion.”
Pipeline
integrity experts say that given the pipeline’s high rate of
ruptures and its known corrosion problems, the company ran along the
“ragged edge” of the rules. Many operators use far lower
thresholds, closer to 40 or 50 per cent corrosion, before inspecting.
The
NEB says that since the incident, TransCanada changed criteria for
identifying corrosion, while the NEB made changes to its management
requirements for pipeline operators.
Safety
‘not compromised’: NEB
The
report on the 2009 rupture sat in draft stage for nearly three years,
only coming to light when CBC obtained a copy this January.
NEB
spokesperson Rebecca Taylor wrote in an email that the investigation
closed Jan. 19, 2011.
“The
delay in publishing this report to our external website in no way
compromised the safe operation of the Peace River Mainline,” said
Taylor.
CBC
asked for the report last October on at least four separate
occasions. NEB refused to release the report to CBC News, saying that
it could be requested through access-to-information.
When
the report was released, the final report was dated November 2013. A
one and a half page section on TransCanada’s field inspection was
redacted in the 2011 draft and changed in the final report.
NEB
says they asked CBC to request the document through access to
information to meet “legal and confidentiality obligations
associated with the release of the document.”
For
the Dene Tha’ First Nations community that lives above the
pipeline, the focus is on what happens in the future.
In
2010, TransCanada began signalling its intent to decommission a
266-kilometre southern section of the line, built in 1968. The NEB is
holding public hearings soon to get input as it decides whether to
approve the move and the conditions.
But
the section under review for decommissioning doesn’t extend into
the northern Alberta region where Chonkolay lives.
“It’s
an old pipeline,” said Chonkolay. “Heaven knows how many more
damage it’s going to do in the future. … How many more times is
it going to rupture?”
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