Interstate Pipeline Spills 10,000 Gallons of Crude Oil Into Ohio Nature Preserve
About 240 barrels of crude oil—roughly 10,000 gallons—leaked from a Sunoco pipeline this week, contaminating a large area in the Oak Glen Nature Preserve, near Cincinnati, OH.
19 March,
2014
Local,
state and federal officials reported to the scene Monday evening and
contained the leak by about 5 a.m. Tuesday, Cincinnati’s WCPO
reported. The cause remains under investigation and cleanup could
take two weeks.
Crude oil
is pictured in a stream near the site of a pipeline leak in Southern
Ohio. Photo credit: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency/via RT
America
Crude oil
is pictured in a stream near the site of a pipeline leak in Southern
Ohio. Photo credit: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency/via RT
America
Sunoco
Logistics Partners owns most of the Mid-Valley Pipeline Co. pipeline,
which extends 1,000 miles from Michigan to Texas. No injuries were
reported after the leak, according to the Cincinnati Enquirer.
U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) spokeswoman Heather Lauer said
the crude oil was pooled in a marshland area about the size of a
football field, as of Wednesday morning. There are natural barriers
that the agency hopes will prevent it from seeping into the Great
Miami River, which is just 150 meters away.
While some
authorities say the leak is unlikely to affect drinking water in the
area, the EPA is investigating and trying to ensure that the
underground pipe’s oil has not leaked into the ground water supply.
In addition to the Great Miami River, water treatment plants are
nearby, upstream in Fairfield, OH and upstream on the Ohio River.
“We do
have a drinking well used for drinking on this side of the road that
will be sampled in the near future, in addition, the health
department has identified up to 70 more locations that will be
looking into,” the EPA’s Steve Renninger told WCPO.
Crude oil flows from a stream to a lake near the oil spill. Photo credit: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency/via RT America
The first
cleanup phase will take about a week or so, officials estimated. That
includes recovering crude oil and contaminated land using powerful
vacuum cleaners and large machinery.
“[An oil
spill] could definitely have been worse later in the spring when all
of our wildlife is coming out of hibernation,” Bob Mason,
stewardship manager with Great Parks, said. “Plus now the ground is
still hard, still somewhat frozen, so that helps.”
The
pipeline carries crude oil to refineries in Ohio and Oregon.
Inspectors last checked it in 2011. A system-wide inspection of the
1,119-mile-long pipeline five years ago resulted in a $48,700 fine
for Sunoco, which did not address corrosion problems in the pipeline.
According
to the Enquirer, Gary M. Broughton placed the initial 911 call after
taking in a “fuel, oily smell.” He got out of his car and saw oil
spreading across a pond.
“It’s
absolutely terrible,” Broughton told the 911 dispatcher.
“It made
me sick when I saw it.”
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