$2.4 Million Fine Ordered in Deadly Minnesota Pipeline Fire

The company that owns the pipeline that spilled an estimated 80,000 gallons of oil into a Michigan river last month has been ordered to pay a $2.4 million fine for a 2007 accident in Minnesota that killed two workers, The Detroit Free Press reports. The 2007 incident involved a pipeline oil spill that erupted into a fire.

Federal regulators said the company, Houston-based Enbridge Energy Partners, failed to adequately and safely perform maintenance and repairs, properly train workers or clear away materials that could ignite.

The fine is among the largest penalties the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration has imposed in the last decade. The company has 20 days to pay the fine or to ask the agency to reconsider it.

Larry Springer, spokesman for Enbridge, said the company conducted an internal investigation of the Clearbrook, Minn., accident, and made changes to to its training and pipeline repair procedures.

The agency also assessed two additional fines totaling $57,800 against the company — one for failing to monitor internal corrosion and perform valve maintenance in gas lines in Louisiana in 2006, and another for failing to properly inspect oil storage tanks in Oklahoma in 2009.

The company has 20 days to pay the fine, or ask the agency to reconsider it.

Meanwhile, clean-up of the pipeline spill near Marshall, Mich., continues. Enbridge estimates the clean-up will cost the company $300 million to $400 million, excluding any fines. The cause of the pipeline rupture is still being investigated.

Regulators have not yet allowed the company to restart the Michigan pipeline. On Tuesday, Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., Rep. James Oberstar, D-Minn., said the company should be closely scrutinized before it is allowed to move crude oil again.

Print Print  

Like what we're doing? We'd appreciate your support.

Leave a comment