Unregulated Texas gas pipeline triggers giant methane leak

Published Mon, Apr 18, 2022 · 09:46 PM

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A NATURAL gas pipeline in Texas leaked so much of the super-potent greenhouse gas methane in little more than an hour that by one estimate, its climate impact was equivalent to the annual emissions from about 16,000 American cars.

The leak came from a 40 cm wide pipe that is a tiny part of a vast web of unregulated lines across the US, linking production fields and other sites to bigger transmission lines. Although new federal reporting requirements start next month for so-called gathering lines, the incident highlights the massive climate damage even minor parts of the network can inflict.

Energy Transfer, which operates the line where the leak occurred through its ETC Texas Pipeline Ltd unit, said an investigation into the cause of the event last month is ongoing and all appropriate regulatory notifications were made. It called the pipe an “unregulated gathering line".

The timing of the release and its location appeared to match a plume of methane observed by a European Space Agency satellite that geoanalytics firm Kayrros SAS called the most severe in the US in a year. Bloomberg investigations into methane observed by satellite near energy facilities show the invisible plumes often coincide with routine work and deliberate releases.

Methane is the primary component of natural gas and traps 84 times more heat than carbon dioxide during its first 20 years in the atmosphere. Severely curbing or eliminating releases of the gas from fossil fuel operations is crucial to avoiding the worst of climate change. The International Energy Agency has said oil and gas operators should move beyond emissions intensity goals and adopt a zero-tolerance approach to methane releases.

ETC Texas Pipeline reported a “line break” that lasted from 8:08 am to 9:17 am local time on Mar 17 on its Big Cowboy pipeline that is jointly owned with Kinder Morgan Inc., according to a filing to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. The incident caused a release of 52,150 thousand standard cubic feet of natural gas.

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The event likely released about 900 metric tons of methane into the atmosphere, said the Environmental Defence Fund, a non-profit group that has used aerial surveys to map releases of the fossil gas over oil and gas operations in the US Permian basin. That amount of the greenhouse gas will trap about as much heat as 75,600 tons of carbon dioxide during its first two decades in the atmosphere.

Except for rare over-pressurization events that can pose significant safety risks, there are almost always ways to significantly minimize methane releases from pipelines, said Bill Caram, executive director at the Pipeline Safety Trust. However, these techniques haven’t been required in the US. Since pipeline operators are reimbursed for any lost or unaccounted gas through their negotiated rates, they have no financial incentive to keep the gas in the pipe, he added.

“Ultimately, the consumer is paying for all of this climate-wrecking methane being released into the atmosphere,’’ he said in an e-mail.

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