Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumWilliams Energy Plans More Pipelines While Two Rupture
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Atlantic Sunrise Pipeline Price Tag Is $2.1 Billion
Williams Energy pipeline will service 7 million homes from NYC to Georgia
From an Article by Casey Junkins, Wheeling Intelligencer, April 14, 2015
Wheeling, WV Williams Energy plans to service 7 million homes from New York City to Georgia with about 1.7 billion cubic feet of Marcellus Shale natural gas daily via its $2.1 billion Atlantic Sunrise pipeline project.
If the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) grants approval, the Atlantic Sunrise will join several other pipeline projects designed to ship the natural gas drawn from West Virginia, Pennsylvania and Ohio to metropolitan markets.
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The natural gas companies working in the Marcellus formation are now producing about 14.6 billion cubic feet daily, compared to just 1.3 Bcf per day in 2010. These yields could continue increasing once new pipeline projects are placed into service, the agency believes.
Williams officials hope to place the Atlantic Sunrise into service before the end of 2017 to keep up with demand for infrastructure. The new project will be an expansion and extension of Williams Transco pipeline system, which runs some 10,200 miles from south Texas to New York City, providing natural gas to numerous metropolitan areas along the way.
A Penn State University report indicates the Atlantic Sunrise pipelines design and construction would support about 8,000 temporary jobs, as well as 29 full-time jobs once the operation is running.
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WV-DEP: 132 Barrels of NGL Spilled Into Marshall County Creek Williams to be sanctioned for pollution by NGL condensate
From an Article by Casey Junkins, Wheeling Intelligencer, April 14, 2014
Glen Dale, WV West Virginia regulators will cite Williams Energy for conditions not allowable in state waters after the companys pipeline rupture allowed 132 barrels of Marcellus Shale condensate to spill into Little Grave Creek last week.
The 4-inch condensate conduit broke late Thursday, less than three hours before a 12-inch natural gas pipeline also operated by Williams failed in the Bane Lane area of Marshall County along U.S. 250.
Other violations may be issued depending on the evolution and discovery of site conditions, West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection spokeswoman Kelley J. Gillenwater said of the 4-inch pipeline rupture. The condensate has impacted approximately 6 miles of Little Grave Creek in Marshall County.
Gillenwater said a visible sheen remains along Little Grave Creek, along with a slight odor. This stream ultimately leads to the Ohio River, but she said no drinking water intakes have been impacted. Gillenwater said an environmental remediation company hired by Williams has placed containment booms in the creek to prevent the material from proliferating.
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Friday, Williams spokeswoman Helen Humphreys said company officials believe heavy rains in the area, which may have destabilized soils, were a contributing factor in the two pipeline failures late Thursday. Monday, Humphreys said both pipelines remain shutdown as company and state inspectors determine the full cause of the ruptures before initiating repairs.
Williams transports natural gas and liquids for Chevron, Southwestern Energy, Gastar Exploration, Trans Energy, and several other producers in northern West Virginia. The firm operates a massive pipeline and processing infrastructure network in Marshall County. It runs the Oak Grove processing plant, the Fort Beeler processing plant and the Moundsville fractionator, all of which are connected by pipelines.
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On April 5, 2014, a 12-inch Williams pipeline ruptured near the Oak Grove plant. After the investigation, Gillenwater said this explosion created a 10-foot crater, and the resulting fire scorched trees over an approximately 2-acre area.Unlike last years event, Humphreys said neither Thursday rupture created a fire.
See also: http://www.MAREproject.org