Friday, September 11, 2015

Texas firm in Santa Barbara oil spill ordered to fix ‘probable’ safety violations – Los Angeles Times

Federal pipeline safety regulators Friday issued a series of warnings to the Texas owners of an oil pipeline that ruptured and spilled as many as 143,000 gallons of crude along the Santa Barbara Coast in May.

Federal inspectors found two “probable” violations of federal safety regulations during inspections of Lines 901 and 903, which together connect offshore platforms off the Santa Barbara Coast to Bakersfield, in 2013 and 2014. 

Among the inspectors’ more serious findings, Plains All American Pipeline failed to keep adequate records of safety evaluations performed on the pipeline system. Though the findings are separate from the investigation into the May 19 oil spill, they point to lax safety oversight on the part of Plains.

Officials with the federal Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration found that the company didn’t keep adequate pressure testing records for breakout tanks designed to handle surges in hazardous material where the pipeline goes into Kern County.

The company couldn’t locate records of an internal safety evaluation that was performed on two segments of the oil pipeline that runs between the towns of Sisquoc in Santa Barbara County and Emidio in Kern County, according to the inspectors’ findings. 

Regulations require operators to identify and mitigate risks on their pipeline then develop measures to safeguard the pipeline. 

A Plains employee told regulators in 2014 that the company was “unable to locate ” their 2013 evaluation for the two segments.