Michigan Pipeline Company Was Warned about Corrosion Before Oil Spill

The company that owns the 30-inch pipeline that spilled 1 million gallons of oil into a Michigan river had been warned about insufficient monitoring of pipeline corrosion by federal regulators in January, The New York Times reports.

The company, Enbridge Energy Partners, had also received several citations before the January warning.

Patrick Daniel, Enbridge’s chief executive, said that the company had routinely tested for corrosion and that “annual maintenance” was performed on all of the company’s pipelines. He said there had been no recent repairs or replacements to the part of the pipe that leaked the oil.

Daniel, however, again apologized for the spill. “We will spend whatever it takes to clean it up,” he told reporters. “We have more than enough available for that.”

The spill has been contained about 50 miles inland from Lake Michigan, and is not threatening the Great Lakes, the Environmental Protection Agency said Thursday. Federal officials said they hope to contain the oil at Morrow Lake, just east of Kalamazoo, Mich.

However, a state official disputed claims that the oil had not reached Morrow Lake, saying he had seen a sheen on the surface of the lake during a flyover, Reuters reports.

Officials believe it will take several months to clean up the spill.

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