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Michigan oil spill cause may be revealed today
Posted: 07.10.2012 at 8:36 AM
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This file photo shows oil along Talmadge Creek in Marshall Township, Mich., near the Kalamazoo River, on July 29, 2010.  / AP photo
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DAVID RUNK and JOHN FLESHER, Associated Press


DETROIT (AP) — Federal investigators are expected to present their findings Tuesday on the likely cause of a pipeline rupture that spilled more than 800,000 gallons of crude oil into a southwestern Michigan river nearly two years ago.

A five-member panel of the National Transportation Safety Board will hear the investigators' conclusions at a meeting Tuesday, then decide whether to accept, reject or modify them before issuing a final report that will include recommendations on how to improve pipeline safety.

Oil began leaking from the line July 25, 2010, into Talmadge Creek near Marshall, about 60 miles east of Grand Rapids. It spread across roughly 35 miles of the Kalamazoo River, fouling wildlife habitat and closing a large swath of the river to boaters and anglers.

Enbridge Inc., the Canadian company that owns the pipeline, continues to clean up the oil under the supervision of the Environmental Protection Agency and has estimated its costs at more than $700 million.

Nearly all the river has been reopened, including a 34-mile section last month. Just a quarter-mile stretch of the delta between the river and Morrow Lake remains closed.

"It's a much different picture than it was a year ago and certainly than it was two years ago," Ralph Dollhopf, coordinator of the EPA team overseeing the cleanup, said Monday.

The U.S. Department of Transportation's Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration last week proposed a record $3.7 million civil penalty against Enbridge for what it described as 24 regulatory violations, including failure to fix corrosion problems in the damaged pipeline discovered as far back as 2004.

The agency said crews in Enbridge's control center in Edmonton, Alberta, waited 17 hours after receiving initial alarms from its Marshall pumping station before closing valves to isolate the damaged section of pipe.

Enbridge is seeking approval from Michigan officials to replace and enlarge the entire line, which runs from Griffith, Ind., to Sarnia, Ontario.

___

Flesher reported from Traverse City, Mich.

 
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

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