Guess you can't find harm to wildlife or the environment if you don't look
for it! Spills are a way of life on our public property.
Phyllis
ANCHORAGE, Alaska - Oil began flowing again Monday through the trans-Alaska
pipeline after workers installed a pipe to bypass a leak at a pump house station
on the North Slope.
Alyeska Service Pipeline Co. said it hoped to
increase the amount of oil in the 800-mile pipeline to 500,000 barrels during
the next 24 hours.
The pipeline was carrying about 630,000 barrels a day
before the leak was discovered on Jan. 8 in an underground pipe encased in
concrete.
"We are really monitoring the pipeline and the equipment very
carefully as we bring it up," said Michelle Egan, a spokeswoman for Alyeska,
which operates the pipeline.
The pipeline delivers about 13 percent of
the nation's daily domestic oil production to tankers for West Coast
delivery.
The oil began flowing again after crews completed a 157-foot
bypass.
"It is a complicated process," said Rachel Baker-Sears, a
spokeswoman for the Joint Information Center set up in Fairbanks to handle the
crisis.
She said the restart went smoothly, but it could take a few days
for the pipeline to return to previous pumping levels.
During the initial
shutdown, the flow was scaled back to 5 percent of previous levels and oil was
collected in two large storage tanks at Prudhoe Bay.
The pipeline was
temporarily restarted after four days but was shut down again on Saturday so the
bypass pipe could be installed.
During the shutdown, a containment vault
was used to collect the estimated 13,326 gallons of oil that leaked from the
pump station pipe.
Egan said there had been no known harm to wildlife or
the environment.
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