An estimated 20,000 barrels, or 840,000 gallons, of crude oil leaked from a pipeline in northwest North Dakota, the Department of Environmental Quality said on Monday. The spill in Mountrail County involved emulsion—both crude oil and produced water from a well before it’s separated—which flowed onto agricultural land.
While the leak went undetected by Hess Corp., which owns the pipeline, the company first became aware of a potential problem Sept. 2 when they “started getting an indication their numbers weren’t right.” But the spill wasn’t discovered and reported until Sept. 12, Bill Suess, manager of the Department of Environmental Quality’s spill investigation program, said.
“They went in and did some tests,” Suess said. The tests came back negative. And then on the 12th they found the dead vegetation.”
The cause of the spill is still under investigation, yet is said to be “equipment failure” Suess said. The leak is believe to have “occurred from a 6-inch carbon steel pipeline called a ‘flow line,’ used to transport the oil, natural gas and produced water from a well to a treater unit where the products are separated,” the North Dakota Monitor said.
“We don’t know yet how deep the impacts go,” Suess said.
The Department said that no water resources have been impacted so there is no risk to drinking water.
While cleanup is underway, it is expected go well into mid-November, according to the incident report.
“This is a big one,” Suess said.
A Hess representative said the leak was contained and mobilized a “third-party environmental contractor,” the representative said.
“Safety and the protection of people and the environment are our top priorities,” the Hess representative said in a statement.


















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