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Cleanup is done on a big Kansas oil spill on the Keystone system, TC Energy and EPA say

WATCH ABOVE: (From Dec. 14, 2022) Kevin Birn, S&P Global Commodity Insights’ chief analyst of Canadian oil markets, joins Joel Senick to discuss the potential impact of a prolonged shutdown of Calgary-based TC Energy’s Keystone pipeline after a recent oil spill on the line in Kansas. – Dec 14, 2022

The operator of the Keystone pipeline system has finished cleaning up a massive December 2022 oil spill, and the creek affected by it is flowing naturally again, the company and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency say.

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Pipeline operator TC Energy promised to continue monitoring the site along Mill Creek in Washington County, about 241 kilometres northwest of Kansas City. The Alberta-based company and the EPA’s regional office announced Tuesday that berms that had diverted the creek around the spill site had been removed.

The EPA said Kansas’ environmental agency and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers also will continue to inspect the area for the next five years or “until it is determined that monitoring is no longer needed.”

The spill dumped nearly 13,000 barrels of crude oil — each one enough to fill a standard household bathtub — into the creek as it ran through a rural pasture. The oil was recovered by mid-May, the company has said.

FILE – In this photo taken with a drone, cleanup continues in the area where the ruptured Keystone pipeline dumped oil into a creek in Washington County, Kan., Dec. 9, 2022. TC Energy, the operator of the Keystone pipline system, has finished cleaning up a massive December 2022 oil spill, and the creek affected by it is flowing naturally again, the company and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced Tuesday, Oct. 31, 2023. (Zeitview via AP, File)

The company said that it has started “demobilization” at the site and, “expect to complete these activities by year end.” The pipeline carries oil from Canada to the Texas Gulf Coast.

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The company reported in February that a faulty weld in a a pipe bend caused a crack that grew over time under stress. An engineering consultant firm’s report for U.S. pipeline regulators that became public in May cited pipeline design issues, lapses by its operators and problems caused during pipeline construction as factors in the spill.

The consultants’ report said the bend had been “overstressed” since its installation in December 2010, likely because construction activity itself altered the land around the pipe. It was the largest onshore spill in nearly nine years.

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