Close X
Thursday, September 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Enbridge Boosting Security After Recent Cases Of Pipeline Sabotage

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Jan, 2016 01:12 PM
  • Enbridge Boosting Security After Recent Cases Of Pipeline Sabotage
CALGARY — In a field on the outskirts of Sarnia, Ont., there's a big blue wheel surrounded by a chain-link fence.
 
Attached to the fence and nailed to a nearby wooden post is a warning: high pressure petroleum pipeline.
 
Early one December morning, a trio of anti-pipeline activists managed to get to the other side of the fence. Photos show them smiling broadly as they turned the wheel, to which they then locked themselves.
 
While the incident caused no injuries or significant service disruptions, the owner of the pipeline — the newly reversed and expanded Line 9 between southwestern Ontario and Montreal — said that incident and others have raised "serious concerns."
 
"Enbridge sites are locked, secured and monitored for the safety of people and the environment. As with any vital infrastructure or service, they can be made dangerous if tampered with or sabotaged," said Graham White, a spokesman for Calgary-based firm Enbridge Inc. (TSX:ENB).
 
"We are assessing and employing various additional, permanent measures to enhance our security and safety at these sites to help prevent these types of tampering activities in the future. As part of ensuring the effectiveness of these measures, we will not provide details or discuss them publicly."
 
Lindsay Gray, speaking on behalf of the "land defenders" in an interview on the day of the Sarnia protest, said there wasn't much stopping them.
 
"Anyone could have done this," she said. "Anyone."
 
Line 9 was offline for about 90 minutes while the protesters were removed from the site and Enbridge inspected the line for damage. Though the protesters took credit for the shutdown, Enbridge says the line was shut off remotely from its control room.
 
There was a similar disruption two weeks earlier on another segment on Line 9 in Quebec. And then in early January, Enbridge's Line 7 near Cambridge, Ont., was shut down due to sabotage.
 
 
Kelly Sundberg, an associate professor at Mount Royal University who specializes in environmental crime, shakes his head at those tactics.
 
"It's just so dangerous," he said. "They risk causing damage to the line. There are so many possible negative outcomes that could come both from a security perspective, but also from an environmental damage perspective."
 
On that score, Gray retorted: "Every second that it's flowing, we're in danger."
 
Martin Rudner, professor emeritus at Carleton University who is an expert in security and critical infrastructure, said the industry has a variety of measures in place to secure their sites and respond when they are breached — and generally they seem to be working.
 
"It's hard to make an overall judgment, but I think the best way to judge it is the fact that no major interruption has taken place," he said.
 
But, he said: "Needless to say, they can't be everywhere all the time."
 
Many companies hire security guards to patrol sites, but Rudner said the use of drones could be a much more effective approach — though there are regulatory hurdles to that.
 
Warren Mabee, director of the Institute for Energy and Environmental Policy at Queen's University, said he sees the rash of pipeline tampering as a "blip," with the anti-pipeline movement emboldened by recent wins like the U.S. rejection of the Keystone XL project.
 
 "It's not a good tactic. I think that it backfires because I think that the broad public, although they may not like the pipeline, they see that as beyond the pale."

MORE National ARTICLES

African Trophy Hunting Show North Of Toronto Angers Animal Rights Activists

African Trophy Hunting Show North Of Toronto Angers Animal Rights Activists
African Events Canada, the organizer of The Africa Show, says the two-day event in Vaughan, Ont., offers Canadians an opportunity to book trips to Africa where they can hunt animals such as lions, leopards, elephants and hippopotamuses.

African Trophy Hunting Show North Of Toronto Angers Animal Rights Activists

Judge Rules Guy Turcotte Must Serve 17 Years Before Parole Eligibility

Judge Rules Guy Turcotte Must Serve 17 Years Before Parole Eligibility
Guy Turcotte was found guilty of second-degree murder by a jury in December in the 2009 stabbing deaths of his two children, Olivier, 5, and Anne-Sophie, 3.

Judge Rules Guy Turcotte Must Serve 17 Years Before Parole Eligibility

Canadian Man Ordered Held In Jail Until 4th Trial Of 1988 Double Killing

Canadian Man Ordered Held In Jail Until 4th Trial Of 1988 Double Killing
  Anthony Barnaby pleaded not guilty in September to murder charges.

Canadian Man Ordered Held In Jail Until 4th Trial Of 1988 Double Killing

Government Will 'Get It Right' On Getting Oil, Gas To Tidewater, Says Jim Carr

Government Will 'Get It Right' On Getting Oil, Gas To Tidewater, Says Jim Carr
OTTAWA — Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr acknowledges there's considerable urgency to building new Canadian pipeline capacity to tidewater, even as new roadblocks continue to appear.

Government Will 'Get It Right' On Getting Oil, Gas To Tidewater, Says Jim Carr

10 Years Later, Canadian Diplomat Glyn Berry's Death In Kandahar Still Unpunished

10 Years Later, Canadian Diplomat Glyn Berry's Death In Kandahar Still Unpunished
The family intends to mark today's sombre anniversary with a quiet celebration of Berry's life and legacy, his widow Valerie told The Canadian Press.

10 Years Later, Canadian Diplomat Glyn Berry's Death In Kandahar Still Unpunished

'i Am Not Donald Trump,' Says Brash Kevin O'leary, Mulling Bid For Tory Leadership

Both of them are business titans, authors, and TV personalities — one actively running to lead the U.S. political right, and the other thinking about doing the same in Canada.

'i Am Not Donald Trump,' Says Brash Kevin O'leary, Mulling Bid For Tory Leadership