The former pipeline executive who spoke on condition of anonymity laughed when asked about first responders finding leaks. “This unodorized gas can soak into the ground around the pipeline. You can’t see it, smell it, taste it. And then boom!
What Runs Beneath
More than 700 miles of pipelines carrying corrosive gas run under Fort Worth — but no one’s sure exactly where.
November 28, 2012 by PETER GORMAN
I highly recommend medication before reading this article. Then read every word and read it again.
In July 2011, Fort Worth finally hired an engineering firm to map out the 150 miles or so of pipeline laid since the Barnett Shale boom.
Where the 500 to 600 miles of pipeline laid prior to 2009 are is anybody’s guess. The Texas Railroad Commission kind of knows but, not really, and they aren’t much into pipeline regulation.
“Everyone in the industry thinks this is a ticking time bomb,” said a former pipeline executive who asked that his name not be used. “The truth is, it’s just insane to have wet gas around schools. Yet you go down to Vickery and Horne and turn north and see pipes right across the street from a school. And all pipes leak over time. They corrode and rot out, and the initial builder sells out, and you wind up with some jackleg [company] with little insurance owning the lines, not being able to maintain them properly.”
The lack of regulation by the state and local governments is “simply gross negligence,” he said.
The pipelines leak because the gas is wet and highly corrosive.
We are using defective pipe from China.
The leaks are hard or next to impossible to detect.
If a leak or explosion happens, you have to wait for a special crew to shut off the flow of gas.
In the San Bruno, Calif., explosion in 2010 that killed eight and leveled a neighborhood, it took the pipeline company 90 minutes to identify the line — a dry-gas transmission line — and shut it down.
If a leak or explosion happens you’re kind of on your own.
“Look, we do whatever we can to limit hazards to our communities,” he said. “But emergencies will occur, so people have to know how to protect themselves to some extent.”
My favorite sentence in this article is
That’s quite a mix of sentiment on an issue that can turn a neighborhood into a fireball in a matter of seconds.
About Sharon Wilson
Sharon Wilson is considered a leading citizen expert on the impacts of shale oil and gas extraction. She is the go-to person whether it’s top EPA officials from D.C., national and international news networks, or residents facing the shock of eminent domain and the devastating environmental effects of natural gas development in their backyards.
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Anonymous says
In Tx, DO NOT spend a bunch of money on a residential homestead–live comfortably, but cheap. Always be prepared to RUN.
FC says
There’s all sorts of tech. stuff they use in cable tv biz to find they cables, fix them etc. They use little cable-like probes with mini cameras on the ends etc.
Why don’t these pipeline peple just use the cable tv truck?
Reallllly nuts!
Fish Creek Neighbor says
Our beloved Governor, Rick Perry loves the energy industry because of job creation. It does create some jobs.
I met a man several weeks ago who just happened be to laying gas gathering pipelines through a Grand Prairie neighborhood, and learned that he is not from Texas, but Mississippi. I guess if you don’t mind living as a gypsy, bouncing around from job to job and living out of motels, this kind of work is fine.
We are also creating jobs oversees because these same pipelines that man was boring horizontally under our heavily traveled roads were made in Taiwan and Korea. See for yourself: http://fishcreekmonitor.blogspot.com/2012/11/made-in-taiwan.html
Now we are sitting on top of a ticking time bomb from pipes made oversees, and the gas flowing through these lines may very well be liquified and shipped oversees. Isn’t it wonderful living in a manufacturing mining zone for dirty shale gas? I sure hope the quality of these pipes hold up for a long, long, time and that careless construction workers don’t accidentally strike one while digging…tick…tick…tick…
Anonymous says
Corrosion is working on the pipes as we speak–just wait and listen for that BOOM.