TOPEKA, Kan. – Thousands of barrels of oil from the Keystone Pipeline have spilled into a Kansas creek, prompting a temporary shutdown of the onshore system.
Pipeline operator TC Energy, a Canadian-based company, said oil began releasing from the 2,687-mile pipeline from the Canadian heartlands to the Gulf of Mexico on Dec. 7.
Company officials estimate that roughly 14,000 barrels – enough to fill an Olympic-style swimming pool – have spilled into Kansas’ Mill Creek, located about 150 miles northwest of Kansas City. A barrel is 42 gallons, about the same volume as a typical bathtub.
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On Monday, the company said that vacuum trucks and oil skimmers had recovered 2,598 barrels of oil and water from the creek, which is not connected to a drinking water source.
It’s the largest oil spill in Keystone history, according to government data. A July 2021 report by the United States Government Accountability Office states there have been 22 accidents in the system since Dec. 31, 2020. Twelve of those accidents released 2 or fewer barrels, while 18 of those released fewer than 50 barrels of crude oil.
The agency said two more recent accidents account for about 93% of the total 11,975 barrels of oil released from Keystone since 2010. Both accidents occurred on the pipeline right-of-way. The first was in northeastern South Dakota near Amherst, in November 2017 and spilled 6,592 barrels. Another in northeastern North Dakota, near Edinburg in October 2019 spilled 4,515 barrels.
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TC Energy began operating the Keystone Pipeline System in 2010 and has transported over 3 billion barrels of crude oil from Canada to refineries in Illinois, Oklahoma, and Texas.
More than 300 people, including the Environmental Protection Agency and third-party experts, are on hand to support containment and incident response. As crews work around the clock to contain the oil from moving downstream, they have also established environmental monitoring, including around-the-clock air monitoring. The oil has not breached the containment area, according to TC Energy.
“Our primary focus right now is the health and safety of onsite staff and personnel, the surrounding community and mitigating risk to the environment,” the company said in a statement.
TC Energy has built an earthen underflow dam on the creek approximately 4 miles downstream of the rupture location to prevent further oil migration, the EPA said. It includes a pipe that allows water to pass through while preventing further migration of oil.
The Kansas Department of Health and Environment has issued a Stream Advisory warning residents not to enter the creek, and also keep livestock, pets, and children out of the creek.
Reuters reports prices for sour crude grades in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico were strengthening on Monday, as the pipeline shutdown means more demand for heavier Gulf barrels.
Oil refiners could be forced to cut production rates by Christmas week if the pipeline does not restart by then, a crude analyst told the news agency. Refiners typically hold 10 days of crude supply on hand.
The Keystone Pipeline remains shut down as ongoing efforts continue to contain and recover the oil. EPA anticipates removal activities will extend into next week.