Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

TransCanada hopes to restart Keystone on Sunday after leak in South Dakota

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Apr, 2016 12:57 PM
    SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — TransCanada says it hopes to restart its Keystone pipeline on Sunday after a leak in South Dakota forced it to shut down the cross-border line for the past week.
     
    Mark Cooper, a spokesman for Calgary-based TransCanada (TSX:TRP), says repairs to the pipeline were completed on Saturday afternoon after the area where the leak occurred was excavated and U.S. regulators approved a plan to fix it.
     
    Cooper says there's still aerial observation that crews want to do, and the company is waiting for further direction from the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Administration before the taps are turned on.
     
    The leak, which was reported April 2, let over 63,000 litres of oil seep into a South Dakota field.
     
    An environmental scientist with the South Dakota Department of Natural Resources has said the impact seems to be limited to soil in and around the pipeline.
     
    Cooper says the line will run at a lower pressure at first.
     
    "As we continue to verify the integrity of the pipeline, that pressure will be increased," Cooper said from Calgary.
     
    The pipeline runs from Alberta to refineries in Illinois and Cushing, Okla., passing through the eastern Dakotas, Nebraska, Kansas and Missouri.
     
    It's part of a pipeline system that also would have included the Keystone XL pipeline had President Barack Obama not rejected that project last November.
     
    Cooper said the week-long-shutdown is being felt upstream, where the oil must be stored, and downstream, where it's refined.
     
    There's no alternate route to get the oil to it's destination, he said.
     
    "What this really has demonstrated is that the Keystone pipeline is a key cog in getting the needed energy, that we need on a day-to-day basis to function in our lives, to people in North America," Cooper said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Children's Advocate Calls For Missing, Murdered Women Inquiry To Probe Suicides

    Children's Advocate Calls For Missing, Murdered Women Inquiry To Probe Suicides
    Of 33 suicides MacDonald has investigated in the last three years, 17 were indigenous girls.

    Children's Advocate Calls For Missing, Murdered Women Inquiry To Probe Suicides

    Manitoba Health Says H1N1 Influenza Cases On The Rise In The Province

    Manitoba Health Says H1N1 Influenza Cases On The Rise In The Province
    That's the strain that claimed several hundred lives during the 2009 pandemic.

    Manitoba Health Says H1N1 Influenza Cases On The Rise In The Province

    Doctor Affiliated With Catholic Hospital Speaks Out Against Assisted-Death Ban

    Doctor Affiliated With Catholic Hospital Speaks Out Against Assisted-Death Ban
    A doctor affiliated with a Catholic hospital in a small British Columbia community says the facility's likely ban on assisted-dying is a violation of terminally ill patients' charter rights.

    Doctor Affiliated With Catholic Hospital Speaks Out Against Assisted-Death Ban

    Alberta Man Charged With Severely Beating, Raping 6-Year-Old Girl Could Get 10 Years In Prison

    Alberta Man Charged With Severely Beating, Raping 6-Year-Old Girl Could Get 10 Years In Prison
      James Clifford Paul, who is 22, was charged after a six-year-old girl was found lying naked in the snow on the Paul reserve west of Edmonton on Dec. 20, 2014.

    Alberta Man Charged With Severely Beating, Raping 6-Year-Old Girl Could Get 10 Years In Prison

    No Buts About It: Prof Argues Tobacco Companies Must Deal With Discarded Butts

    No Buts About It: Prof Argues Tobacco Companies Must Deal With Discarded Butts
    Prof. Kelley Lee of Simon Fraser University argues that a new regulatory approach is long overdue for what she considers an industry-created problem.

    No Buts About It: Prof Argues Tobacco Companies Must Deal With Discarded Butts

    Maple Batalia's Killer, Gurjinder 'Gary' Dhaliwal, Sentenced To Life In Prison

    Gurjinder "Gary" Dhaliwal has no chance of parole for 21 years for the 2nd degree murder

    Maple Batalia's Killer, Gurjinder 'Gary' Dhaliwal, Sentenced To Life In Prison