U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Region 7
901 N. Fifth
St., Kansas City, KS 66101
Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, and Nine Tribal
Nations
Mid-America Pipeline Company LLC, Enterprise
Products Operating LLC to Pay $1M for Spills in Iowa, Kan.,
Neb.
Contact Information: Chris Whitley, 913-551-7433, whitley.christopher@epa.gov
Environmental News
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
(Kansas City, Kan., May
29, 2012) - Mid-America Pipeline Company, LLC (MAPCO), and Enterprise Products
Operating LLC (Enterprise), of Houston, Texas, have agreed to pay a civil
penalty of more than $1 million to the United States to settle violations of the
federal Clean Water Act related to three natural gasoline pipeline spills in
Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska.
As part of a consent
decree lodged today in U.S. District Court in Omaha, Neb., and in addition to
paying the $1,042,000 civil penalty, the companies have agreed to undertake
various measures aimed at reducing external threats to their pipeline, enhance
their reporting of spills, and spend at least $200,000 to identify and prevent
external threats to the pipeline involved in the
spills.
MAPCO owns and
Enterprise operates the 2,769-mile West Red Pipeline, which transports mixed
natural gasoline products between Conway, Kan., and Pine Bend, Minn. The
settlement resolves Clean Water Act violations related to three spills that
occurred along the pipeline:
-
A March 29, 2007, rupture near Yutan, Neb., which caused the discharge of approximately 1,669 barrels of natural gasoline directly into an unnamed ditch and Otoe Creek.
-
An April 23, 2010, rupture near Niles, Kan., which caused the discharge of approximately 1,760 barrels of natural gasoline directly into an unnamed ditch, Cole Creek, Buckeye Creek and the Solomon River.
-
An August 13, 2011, rupture near Onawa, Iowa, which caused the discharge of approximately 818 barrels of natural gasoline directly into the Missouri River.
“More than 20,000 miles of pipeline, carrying oil and petroleum
products, cross the states of Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska in EPA’s
Region 7,” EPA Regional Administrator Karl Brooks said. “A frequent cause of
pipeline breaks is the action of third parties during farming and excavation.
This settlement requires the defendants to honor a schedule of pipeline
inspections on the ground and from the air, and reach out to local agencies,
contractors and excavators to make sure they are more fully aware of pipeline
locations and depths.”
“This settlement requires proactive vigilance to ensure that our soil
and waterways are protected from contaminants,” said Deborah R. Gilg, U.S.
Attorney for the District of Nebraska. “The agreement will result in safer
pipeline operations and that will be good for Nebraska’s
environment.”
In addition to the proactive inspections and outreach efforts, the
settlement also requires MAPCO and Enterprise to spend $200,000 to relocate,
cover, lower or replace pipeline segments; install new remote shutoff valves;
install new physical protections such as fences or concrete barriers; and
install other new equipment, structures or systems to prevent spills from
reaching navigable waters.
The consent decree is subject to a 30-day public comment period and
court approval.
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