Despite preparation, California pipeline operator may have taken hours
to stop leak
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[October 08, 2021]
By Jessica Resnick-Ault and Nichola Groom
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -The company that
operates the pipeline that spilled an estimated 3,000 barrels of oil
into the Pacific Ocean off California has an 800-page manual on handling
an oil spill - but it is unclear whether its employees followed those
procedures.
Houston-based Amplify Energy Corp and several state and federal
regulatory agencies have provided differing accounts of what happened on
Oct. 2, when the pipeline spill that fouled beaches, killed wildlife and
closed down fishing along miles of coastline was officially reported.
The U.S. Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA)
said Beta Offshore, an Amplify subsidiary that operates the pipeline,
received a low-pressure warning in its control room about 2:30 a.m.
Pacific time (5:30 a.m. EDT) on Oct. 2, a sign of a rupture in the line.
The leak-detection alarm should have triggered rapid phone calls to
managers, boat crews, regulators and the U.S. Coast Guard, and swiftly
set in motion steps to shut down the pipeline and platform that feeds
it, according to 10 former and current Beta Offshore employees and
contractors, as well as a copy of the company's spill response plan
reviewed by Reuters.
But the San Pedro Bay Pipeline wasn't shut down until 6 a.m. Pacific,
about three and a half hours later, according to PHMSA's timeline.
Amplify CEO Martyn Willsher has said the company was not aware of the
spill until mid-morning.
"We were not aware of any spills until 8:09 a.m. (Pacific) on Saturday
morning," he said at a news conference on Wednesday. He noted that the
line was shut off about 6 a.m., but did not explain why or for how long,
adding: "We were not pumping oil at 8:09 a.m. when we actually
discovered oil on the water."
In response to a reporter's question on Wednesday about the 2:30 a.m.
alarm, Willsher said: "We were not aware of any alarm at 2:30."
He also said the company was investigating the timeline and "working
with regulators to see if there was anything that should have been
noticed."
Amplify did not respond to requests for comment on this remark. The
company also did not respond to several other requests for comment.
Tom Haug, a third-party contractor who is listed as an Incident
Commander in the response plan, referred questions to Amplify's official
spokesperson.
The 16-inch diameter, 17-mile-long pipeline runs from Amplify's Elly oil
production platform offshore to Long Beach, where the oil is stored and
transported for refining.
The spill's volume is miniscule compared with others that have sparked
regulatory change, such the 2010 Deepwater Horizon rig explosion in the
Gulf of Mexico, which released more than 5 million barrels of oil into
the water.
Still, it raises questions about the effectiveness of
government-mandated spill response plans, which are meant to ensure
companies react quickly to minimize pollution and public hazards.
The cause of the California spill is under investigation. Officials are
probing whether the rupture may have been caused by a strike from a
ship's anchor. Investigators discovered a section of the pipeline had
moved 105 feet and had a 13-inch split running parallel to the pipe.
Residents and nearby vessels have said they first noticed foul smells
and a sheen on the water on Friday evening, according to the U.S.
National Response Center, the designated point of contact for
environmental accidents. The U.S. Coast Guard has said reports of this
type are common, however, and do not always indicate a spill.
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Workers rake up crude oil, after more than 3,000 barrels (126,000
gallons) of crude oil leaked from a ruptured pipeline into the
Pacific Ocean in Newport Beach, California, U.S., October 7, 2021.
Picture taken with a drone. REUTERS/David Swanson/File Photo
"In General - For Spill Response - Do Not Delay. Plan
Ahead. Over-respond and stand down if necessary. Do not get behind
on the curve,” Amplify's response plan says, in laying out a 15-step
action plan for reacting to spills.
UNDER PRESSURE
Amplify produced 3,600 barrels per day at its platforms in
California in the second quarter of this year, making it the
second-largest offshore producer in that state.
Federal regulators mandated in 1994 that operators be trained to
shut off pipelines and platforms in the event of a leak or rupture.
Former Amplify employees say the company had conducted such training
in the last two years.
Amplify did not confirm whether those efforts had continued during
the COVID-19 pandemic. But records from the California Office of
Spill Prevention and Response show Beta conducted a drill virtually
using the Microsoft Teams platform last year. Another was scheduled
for next month.
Software made specifically for the platform monitors the status of
pressure at pumps along the pipeline, two former employees said.
Sensors on the pipeline can notify an operator on the Elly platform
if pressure changes, triggering an immediate shutdown and halting
the flow of crude into the pipeline.
"After they detected a single barrel, the pipeline should have
shut," said a former employee familiar with the line's operations.
Willsher said this week that Amplify's employees monitored the
pipeline by boat weekly. The company reviews the chemical properties
of the oil to ensure iron levels are not high, which would indicate
a pipe's deterioration, another former employee familiar with the
procedure said.
A third former employee recalled that U.S. Bureau of Safety and
Environmental Enforcement (BSEE) inspectors frequently visited the
platform and reviewed its pipeline connections. The inspections were
meticulous and lasted weeks, and citations were issued for even the
smallest items, such as corrosion on a handrail, one employee
recounted.
Inspection reports two years ago determined that the pipeline was
sound and that anomalies in the metal walls detected in past
inspections had been remedied, according to a summary of an
inspector's report from October 2019, filed with the BSEE in April
2020.
(Reporting By Jessica Resnick-Ault and Nichola Groom; editing by
Rich Valdmanis, David Gaffen and Gerry Doyle)
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