Residents returning home after gas pipeline catches fire in Marrero

By Times-Picayune Staff

October 03, 2009, 1:44PM

gasfire
A giant ball of fire covers most of 4th Street near the intersection of Ames Boulevard on Saturday.

About 40 apartments at the St. Bakhita complex were evacuated as a precautionary measure after a fire in a gas pipeline in the 4000 block of Fourth Street at Ames Boulevard, authorities said. The $22 million apartment complex opened in April.

No one was injured in the incident that was reported around 10:25 a.m. Chief Rickie Eslick of the Marrero-Ragusa Volunteer Fire Department said that residents were allowed to return aroiund 12:30 p.m.

Eslick said the cause of the fire is still under investigation.

Atmos Energy officials said they received a report shortly after 10:30 a.m. of a fire near an 18-inch main gas line that runs long Fourth Street. Company officials said they believe that a gas leak from the pipe was ignited by overhanging Entergy powerlines, causing the explosion and fire.

Entergy officials could not be reached for comment.

Complete story at:  http://www.nola.com/news/index.ssf/2009/10/post_41.html
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… and what if the well had ignited?

The Fort Worth Star-Telegram reports:

Trucks and other equipment worth about $8 million were destroyed late Tuesday in an explosive fire at a natural gas drilling site northwest of Joshua, officials said.

The fire started in one of the eight Kenworth trucks parked at the site operated by Chesapeake Energy in the 3200 block of County Road 913, said Gerald Mohr, emergency management coordinator for Johnson County.

Mohr said no one was hurt, but the flames were intense.

“It was a pretty good fire that generated a good bit of heat,” he said. “We had quite a few tankers hauling water.”

No natural gas contributed to the fire, which was reported at about 11:15 p.m., said Lt. Tim Jones, Johnson County Sheriff’s spokesman.

“It was all equipment and no gas,” he said. “There wasn’t a blowout or anything like that.”

Flames, however, spread to the other trucks, which were parked very close to each other, Mohr said.

The vehicles were destroyed along with pumps, blenders and other equipment used in the process of hydraulic fracturing of a gas well.

Members from several Johnson County fire departments battled flames for about four hours at the drilling site. The area is about a half-mile west of the intersection of Farm Road 1902 and CR 913, which is also called Caddo School Road.

Firefighters came from Joshua, Briar Oaks, Mid North, Godley, Bono, Burleson, Cleburne and Tarrant County, Jones said.

A lot of them were needed to haul water and operate long-distance nozzles and aerial ladder trucks, Mohr said.

He said that the blaze had to be fought at a distance to protect the firefighters, but not because it was a natural gas drilling site.

“There were trucks in there with diesel tanks on them,” he said. “All those trucks have two or three fuel tanks on them. “We had a couple explosions.”

The fire’s cause was being investigated Wednesday, said Jerri Robbins, Chesapeake spokeswoman.

“A contractor was finishing hydraulic fracturing operations when one of the blender trucks caught on fire,” she said.

She added that “it is likely that tires on the trucks made a sound like an explosion as they were burning, not the diesel tanks.”

The equipment was operated by Denton-based Liberty Pressure Pumping which. Jones said, reported that the estimated cost of the equipment lost was $8,310,000.

Officials for that company could not be reached for comment on Wednesday.

http://www.star-telegram.com/news/story/1581059.html

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http://www.newson6.com/Global/story.asp?S=9349075&nav=menu682_2

Natural Gas Pipeline Explosion

The explosion and fire near Alex closed down State Highway 19.
The explosion and fire near Alex closed down State Highway 19.

Associated Press

Start the slideshow

ALEX, Okla. (AP) — Two people were hospitalized after natural gas pipeline operated by Enogex exploded early Friday morning in Grady County.

Three homes were destroyed by fire after the explosion near Alex and State Highway 19 was shut down.

A man and woman in a mobile home were injured. The man was taken to a Chickasha hospital. His name and extent of his injuries weren’t immediately known.

The woman is identified as Mildred Hull and is reported in good condition in an Oklahoma City hospital with second- and third-degree burns to about 17 percent of her body.

The cause of the explosion isn’t known. Enogex and Oklahoma Corporation Commission inspectors have been sent to the scene.

The pipeline was built in 1975 and transports natural gas from wells northwest of Thomas in Custer County to a production plant south of Alex.

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Interview with fire chief:

http://www.kswo.com/Global/story.asp?S=9353162&nav=menu495_2

Grady County Fire Chief interviewed, says he could see it from his house 20 miles away, “A big massive, huge fire ball. The sound, it was unreal.”… “This is nothing like I’ve ever seen before. I’ve been in the fire service for 21 years now.” He says the initial explosion was only part of the problem. “Everything ignited from the heat, even the high line poles on the south side of the road ignited from the heat off that,” he said.  ”The other house across the road ignited from the heat.”

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http://www.9wsyr.com/news/local/story/Town-official-concerned-over-gas-rig-fire/OT4K6t5CC0mHfSnh14bQJg.cspx

Lebanon, Madison County (WSYR-TV) – For the second time in just three months, a huge gas rig has caught fire in southern Madison County.

It happened in the town of Lebanon, near the Chenango County border.  Two workers suffered burns from the fire that lasted for hours Thursday.

Cleanup efforts have carried over into Friday, when crews had to go deep into the fields to reach that rig owned by Nornew, a subsidiary of Norse Energy.

The fire was so far in, there was no real danger to anyone living around there, but Lebanon town supervisor Jim Goldstein worries about what would happen if it were on a rig closer in.

“I think there should be a moratorium on drilling in this area until we get to the bottom of what’s causing these problems and what has to be done to remediate them,” Goldstein says.

…..

It is the second fire in three months, but Holbrook says his company makes safety a top priority.
Still,  Goldstein is worried this gas rush may come at too great a risk.

The DEC says about 100 to 200 gallons of diesel fuel were released from equipment at the rig.  A spokesperson says the spill is contained and most of the diesel has been padded up.

There are also barriers in place to prohibit it from reaching a nearby stream.

That part of southern Madison County may just be sitting on huge reserves of natural gas, which energy companies see as a potential gold mine.

“We are in an area that some people have estimated is the largest gas well plate in the history of the United States, and there’s a right way to do it and the wrong way to do it.  We have an industry that I think is moving far too fast that cannot be tracked,” Goldstein says.

A handful of companies have come and gone — especially now, as the state reviews regulations for companies wanting to drive through the Marcellus Shale in an attempt to find that natural gas.

But one company has stayed; Nornew says it sees a goldmine in the Herkimer sandstone formation in the area.

…..

In the town of Lebanon and the neighboring town of Smyrna, Nornew has about 100 gas wells already drilled.

“I have huge concerns about their ability to track when this Marcellus slate drilling starts where the water’s going to come from — where the waste is going to go,” says Goldstein.

Goldstein worries just what toll the search for the next big energy source will take on his area without proper controls.

Some geologists say there is enough recoverable natural gas in the Marcellus Shale to supply the entire United States for about two years.

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Another example of gas company drilling PR damage control.  Read between the lines:

Gas well explodes in nearby Lebanon

031909-gas-fire

Tyler Murphy, Sun Staff Writer
Published: March 20th, 2009

LEBANON – A gas well in the Town of Lebanon exploded early Thursday morning, less than five and a half miles from Chenango’s border with Madison County. The explosion injured two workers and jolted nearby residents from their beds.

“Two well operators that were on site were both treated for burns, one to his face and arms and one with burns to his face. They were treated for the burns and released within hours of the incident,” said Norse Energy spokesman Dennis Holbrook.

Norse Energy is the parent company of Nornew, which has an office located in The Eaton Center in Norwich.

The incident began at 5 a.m. Thursday when a fire was somehow ignited at the site, causing an explosion. The company flew in a response team and had the fire put out using foam and water by 2 p.m., explained Holbrook.

The cause of the fire is still being investigated, but the company said it ignited while operators were in the process of removing drill piping.

The closest residence to the explosion was a home along Lebanon Hill Road, approximately 300 to 400 yards away.

Don Johnson lives there with his family and was awakened by the sound Thursday morning.

“I was sleeping and the sound woke me up,” said Johnson, who described the noise as a loud concussion.

“It was one of those things you wake up and think ‘what the heck was that? Was I dreaming?’ I went back to bed and the next thing I hear is someone knocking on my door and that’s when you start to wonder ‘What is going on?’”

“They came knocking on the door, maybe 20 minutes after five (a.m.) and we were told by them that there was an ‘incident’ and to ‘pleased stay in your home and away from your windows for the time being,’” said Johnson, quoting Norse Energy personnel he recognized from the gas rigs down the road.

Lebanon Hill Road has three gas wells along it and two of them are within sight of the family’s farmhouse home.

Johnson said he’s used to having Norse Energy as a neighbor. “Nothing surprises me up here anymore,” said Johnson. “It’s just constant traffic,” he added.

Norse Energy flew in a response team to review the fire as it burned to evaluate how to terminate the blaze safely.

“We flew in our senior operations people. Vice President of Operations Daniel Steffy, who is located in Norwich most of the week but was in Pittsburgh for a meeting – and we flew in his boss, Senior Vice President Mark Williams, who works in Pittsburgh,” said Holbrook.

The company’s head of safety operations, Doug Stebbins, was also on site. “He was already in the area since most our activities right now are focused right here,” said Holbrook.

While the company scrambled a response, Madison County fire departments responded to the blaze within minutes of the initial explosion.

“We had a fire at a gas well and we’re standing by waiting for the company to decide how it want to extinguish the fire,” said Eaton Fire Chief Rick Stoddard Thursday morning.

“We’re not specifically trained to put out these kinds of gas fires and the company is bringing in its own response team. We are here to give them a hand if they need it,” he added.

“The property damage was limited to the rig and the property around it. We try to locate these wells a sufficient distance away from people and we anticipate the possibility of these sorts of things happening and have a plan in place,” said Holbrook.

He said that part of that plan was working closely with emergency services and notifying them whenever an incident took place.

The company is also in the process of trying to inform appropriate public officials in the region to help educate elected leaders and the public, explained Holbrook.

The Department of Environmental Conservation was also on site to address environmental concerns, which Holbrook said was contained to a diesel spill from one of the vehicles there.

“We have a contract with an environment cleanup agency for these things,” he said.

In a statement released Thursday, the company wrote that “minimal environmental impact is anticipated.”

“Obviously when anything like this occurs, we want to step back and make sure we are operating in the safest manner possible,” said Holbrook. The company also closed a nearby rig for inspection as a precaution.

“The most important is thing is the people, making sure we address public safety and then the environment and securing the location and putting out the fire. After that, we look at the cause – what occurred, why it occurred, and minimizing it from occurring again,” he said.

————

If any of that last paragraph was true, they just wouldn’t drill in the first place.

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