Californian
oil spill clean-up costs exceed $60 million: newspaper
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[June 11, 2015]
(Reuters) - Clean-up costs
associated with a Californian oil pipeline rupture that dumped as much
as 2,400 barrels of crude onto a pristine stretch of coastline and into
the Pacific Ocean have exceeded $60 million, the Los Angeles Times
reported on Wednesday.
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Plains All American Pipeline spokeswoman Meredith Mathews told the
newspaper that expenses for restoring the affected area near Santa
Barbara ran as high as $3 million a day.
Mathews added that the total, which did not include financial damage
claims from people or businesses that may have been affected by the
spill, were likely to increase as clean-up efforts continued.
Representatives for the pipeline did not immediately respond to
requests from Reuters for comment.
The May 19 pipeline rupture prompted the closure of two popular
beaches and a ban on fishing and shellfish harvesting. Officials
said on Tuesday that about 75 percent of the 96.5 miles (155 km) of
shoreline surveyed had met clean-up goals.
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On Tuesday Santa Barbara County rejected Exxon Mobil Corp's
emergency permit application to temporarily haul crude using tanker
trucks following the spill.
(Reporting by Curtis Skinner in San Francisco; Editing by Alan
Raybould)
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