Energy Transfer: Missouri gas pipeline blaze
Published by Elizabeth Corner,
Senior Editor
World Pipelines,
Bloomberg: a rupture and fire on a Missouri natural gas pipeline early Sunday caused “no known loss of life or serious injury,” according to a Sunday morning Facebook post from the Audrain County Sheriff’s Office.
The cause of fire, which interrupted power to several homes, was unknown, according to a KMIZ television report, citing a spokeswoman for Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Company LP. The company wasn’t working on the pipeline before the explosion, the Bloomberg report said.
The fire lit up the early-morning sky on Sunday, the sheriff’s office said, but once the supply was cut off, it burned off the remaining gas and was extinguished after about 40 minutes. The pipeline ruptured north of Mexico, Missouri, about 120 miles (193 km) from St. Louis.
Both Panhandle and its owner, Energy Transfer, are described by the KMIZ report as having “a history of regulatory issues,” mentioning other news accounts and filings with US agencies such as the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
Read the article online at: https://www.worldpipelines.com/project-news/04032019/energy-transfer-missouri-gas-pipeline-blaze/
You might also like
The World Pipelines Podcast
Juan Caballero, Chair of the AMPP Board of Directors, talks about AMPP’s global efforts to prevent corrosion and to protect assets, offering insight into how the association listens to its members and serves the pipeline industry.
Listen for free today at www.worldpipelines.com/podcasts or subscribe and review on your favourite podcast app.
FET to provide UAE-based offshore construction firm with two work class remotely operated vehicles
The Forum Energy Technologies (FET) Subsea product line has secured a contract to provide two work class remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) to CCC (Underwater Engineering) S.A.L (CCC (UE)), the UAE-based offshore construction organisation.