Enbridge is still cleaning up some 1,650 Bbl of crude oil that spilled from its Line 6 pipeline more than a month ago due to a faulty connection on a pump transfer pipe at a Wisconsin pump station.
The leak from Line 6 (light blue line in map below) occurred on November 11 at the Cambridge station (yellow pentagon in map) in Jefferson County, WI, east of the state’s capital in Madison. When the issue was discovered, the faulty connection on a pump transfer pipe was isolated and repaired, the company said. The facility was shut when the leak was discovered, according to an accident report from the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA).
The 667 Mb/d pipeline is operating, the company said. This incident occurred around the time when the state’s Department of Natural Resources granted several key permits for a plan by Enbridge to relocate a portion of another pipeline, Line 5 (medium blue line in map), that sits on the Wisconsin reservation of the Bad River Band of the Lake Superior Chippewa.
So far, Enbridge has recovered about 960 bbl of crude from excavation within the pump station. The spill was totally contained on property, the PHMSA report showed.
The 465-mile Line 6 pipeline is a 34-inch-diameter system originating at Enbridge’s Superior, WI, terminal (green icon in map), and ends at Enbridge’s Griffith/Hartsdale Terminal (red icon in map) near Griffith, Indiana. Its part of the U.S. Mainline system that transports Canadian crude from Alberta to the Midwest and eastern Canada.