Kestone XL Pipeline vote Tuesday. Start stocking up on bottled water along the route.

Tomorrow (January 20th) the U.S. Senate will start debating and voting on a bill to force the Obama Administration to approve the construction of the controversial Keystone XL Pipeline that would carry ¾ million barrels of tar sands crude oil a day from Canada to the Gulf.  The pipeline won’t create but 50 permanent jobs according to government estimates.  Plus, the pipeline will deliver oil that is 17% more carbon intensive when burned thus fueling climate change.  That is if it makes it to the Gulf for refining.

And that’s  another not so nice characteristic of tar sands oil—it is almost impossible to clean up when it spills.  And the Keystone XL Pipeline, like all other pipelines, will have spills pouring thousands of gallons of the sludge-like crude into waterways and aquifers just like other spills in Michigan and Wisconsin.  Communities and businesses along the Keystone XL Pipeline look out.  Your clean water is in danger.  Ask the folks in Glendive, Montana (see below story).

Crews to clean up oil spilled from eastern Montana pipeline

By MATTHEW BROWN, Associated Press
Jan. 19, 2015

GLENDIVE, Mont. (AP) — Crews working to clean up crude oil that spilled in and near the Yellowstone River in eastern Montana and prevent it from traveling further downstream were hampered by ice covering much of the river, officials said Monday.

Officials with Bridger Pipeline LLC of Casper, Wyoming, have said the break in the 12-inch steel pipe happened Saturday morning in an area about 9 miles upstream from Glendive, a community in east-central Montana near the North Dakota border.

Bridger spokesman Bill Salvin said Monday that the company is confident that no more than 1,200 barrels — or 50,000 gallons — of oil spilled during the hour-long breach.

“Oil has made it into the river,” Salvin said. “We do not know how much at this point.”

An oil sheen has been seen near Sidney, almost 60 river miles downstream from Glendive, said Paul Peronard, the on-scene coordinator for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Booms are being placed in two areas of open water to try and trap oil with another collection site near Crane, which is about 30 miles downstream from the spill site.

“We want to put up a backstop so no free oil can get past this location,” Peronard said Monday.

But locating the rest of the oil could prove to be difficult because some of it is trapped under the ice that covers much of the river.

“We really can’t see it so we’re going to have to hunt and peck through ice to get it out,” Peronard said.

Bridger Pipeline crews were still working Monday to determine exactly where the breach occurred.

If it happened on the bank, some of the oil may be trapped in the soil near the river.

“If it happened underneath the river, then it’s all in the river,” Peronard said.

Initial water samples taken at the Glendive water treatment facility showed no sign of oil or gas contamination, said Peronard and Dave Parker, spokesman for Gov. Steve Bullock.

Glendive’s intake station draws water from 14 feet beneath the river surface, while most of the oil was expected to be floating, Peronard said.

Some Glendive-area residents had reported an odor in their water and those reports are being investigated, officials said.

Bullock planned to visit the spill site Monday afternoon, Parker said.

The Poplar Pipeline system runs from Canada to Baker, Montana, and carries crude oil from the Bakken oil producing region in Montana and North Dakota. It remained shut down Monday while crews planned to pump out any remaining oil from the section of the pipeline where the breach occurred.

The pipeline receives oil at the Poplar Station in Roosevelt County, Fisher and Richey Stations in Richland County and at Glendive in Dawson County, all in Montana. It was last inspected in 2012, Salvin said, and is at least 8 feet below the Yellowstone River bed where it crosses the river near Glendive.

Bridger Pipeline, a subsidiary of True Cos., also owns and operates the Four Bears Pipeline System in North Dakota along with the Parshall Gathering System and the Powder River System in Wyoming, according to the company’s website.

http://bigstory.ap.org/article/47a0982936a84485a7585880de363e02/crews-clean-oil-spilled-eastern-montana-pipeline

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