Judge's DAPL Ruling, Reckless
Spill Record Pushes Pipeline Company's Shares Below $20 for First Time
Energy
Transfer Partners, the company behind the controversial Dakota
Access Pipeline and the fracked gas Rover
Pipeline, has quite the extensive spill history, a new analysis shows.
After crunching the numbers
from the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA), TheStreet revealed that the Dallas-based company spilled
hazardous liquids near water crossings more than twice the frequency of any
other U.S. pipeline
company this decade.
According to the report:
"The company has spilled
hazardous liquids five times near water crossings since 2010 when PHMSA started
collecting detailed data. The company's spills account for almost 20% of all
hazardous liquid spills near water crossings since 2010, primarily because of a
55,000-gallon gasoline spill in 2016 near the Susquehanna River in Lycoming
County, Pennsylvania. TheStreet only included onshore spills in its analysis,
and included subsidiary companies.
"Since 2010, the company
has spilled hazardous liquids 204 times in all, ranking only behind Enterprise
Products Partners LP (EPD) and Magellan Midstream Partners, LP MMP, according
to TheStreet's tally."
Energy Transfer owns
about 71,000 miles of natural gas, natural gas liquids, refined products and
crude oil pipelines across the country.
Alexis Daniel, an Energy
Transfer spokesperson, defended the company's safety record.
"Not only does Energy
Transfer Partners adhere to the approved regulatory standards, but it is always
Energy Transfer Partners' priority to go above and beyond when building
pipelines and is a common practice on all projects," she told TheStreet.
"For example on Rover, the pipeline route will be flown every ten days,
weather permitting, versus every 14 days which is the current requirement, for
visual inspection of the pipeline."
Still, it's been a rough few
months for Energy Transfer. In May, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
(FERC) rejected the Energy Transfer's request to resume horizontal directional
drilling at two sites for the Rover Pipeline after numerous leaks into Ohio's wetlands (including 2
million gallons of drilling fluid spill near the Tuscarawas River) in
addition to various
Clean Air and Clean Water act violations across the state.
And earlier this week, a federal judge ruled that that the Trump administration failed to
consider the Dakota Access Pipeline's impact on the hunting and fishing rights
of the Standing
Rock Sioux Tribe. While the ruling did not shut down operations on the oil
pipeline, which started flowing earlier this month, the judge has ordered a new
environmental review.
A day after the judge's order,
Energy Transfer shares fell to $19.53 on Friday—the first time it fell below $20 a share. The stock also
slid 11 percent after FERC's order last month.
Earlier reports have also
highlighted the company's frequent spill and accident rate. A February analysis from the Louisiana Bucket Brigade and DisasterMap.net found that
Energy Transfer and its subsidiary Sunoco have filed 69 accidents over the past
two years to the National Response Center, the federal contact point for oil
spills and industrial accidents. That's 2.8 accidents every month, the analysis
noted.
However, spills are not the
only problem. A June study by Oil Change International highlighted how the Rover
Pipeline will fuel a massive increase in climate
pollution, causing as much greenhouse gas pollution as 42 coal-fired power
plants—some 145 million metric tons per year.
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