transcanada pipeline exploded, sent flame 200-300 meters into the air!

explosion

CREDIT: YOUTUBE/ROBERTO GOMEZ

A natural gas pipeline operated by TransCanada Corp. exploded and caught fire in the Canadian province of Manitoba on Saturday, shutting off gas supplies for as many as 4,000 residents in sub-zero temperatures.

“We could see these massive 200- to 300-meter high flames just shooting out of the ground and it literally sounded like a jet plane,” resident Paul Rawluk told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp.

There were no injuries and the area was evacuated as a precaution, according to the National Energy Board. TransCanada said the fire was extinguished by Saturday afternoon, more than 12 hours after it started, but in order to repair the line, they shut off the natural gas supply to several municipalities.

Temperatures dropped to -20 degrees Celsius overnight.

Niverville Deputy Mayor John Funk said that “service is expected to be lost for minimum of 24 hours to multiple days” in a statement on the town’s website. Funk also said that “Manitoba Hydro is asking residents to turn down thermostats and minimize use of electric heaters.”

There is no timeline for restoring regular natural gas services so in the interim, compressed natural gas is being trucked in to the area. “The initial supply will be used to provide gas to critical services such as personal care homes and hospitals, as well as schools or churches being used as emergency warming centers,” the CBC reported.

TransCanada has also been pushing for the approval of its controversial Keystone XL pipeline to transport Canadian tar sands to refineries on the U.S. Gulf Coast. Oil began flowingthrough the southern leg of the pipeline this week and in a conference call marking the announcement, CEO Russ Girling called Keystone XL “the safest oil pipeline built in America to date.”

As of November, TransCanada had already fixed 125 sags and dents in the southern leg of the pipeline, according to a report by non-profit consumer rights group Public Citizen. And while Girling told reporters on this week’s conference call that the company had “voluntarily agreed” to 57 conditions with the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA), Jeffrey Weise, the agency’s head of pipeline safety, said last year that his agency “has very few tools to work with” and as a result, the regulatory process he oversees is “kind of dying.”

Indeed, a Wall Street Journal analysis released this week found that people discover pipeline spills far more often than the leak-detection technology touted by companies. Based on PHMSA data for 251 pipeline incidents over four years, the WSJ found that nearby residents or company employees were nearly three times as likely to detect a pipeline leak. Leak-detection software, special alarms and 24/7 control room monitoring, on the other hand, discovered leaks just 19.5 percent of the time.

so are we still pretending that these underground pipelines are safe?  i mean, is that even on the table anymore?  evidence, for real scientific evidence, has shown this is a really bad idea!  it puts so many ppl at risk, not just from explosions but swimming in the cesspools of the tarsands that leak out of the ground.  to say they are safe is equivalent to thinking the world is flat!!

 

informant for the rcmp

informant

A SNAKE AMONG US…HARRISON FRIESON, A RCMP INFORMANT BURNS CARS, SO POLICE CAN BLAME PROTESTORS & IS AN EXCUSE TO USE EXCESSIVE FORCE ON MI’KMAQ NATION. BEWARE THIS MAN!

yesterday i made a post about the fight of the first nations of canada against rcmp for illegal fracking on their lands, and i used the picture of this guy…i had no idea he was an informant and agitator for the rcmp, sent to stir the pot and incite violence or in the very least imply that violence was happening, allowing the state to use force against protesters.  i apologize for unintentionally promoting this traitor’s initiative.