Posted May 6, 2016
The federal pipeline safety agency on Wednesday reported that investigators found evidence of corrosion on a natural gas pipeline that exploded in a massive fireball in Pennsylvania last week, damaging homes and burning a fleeing homeowner.
The cause of Friday's blast remains unknown, but the corrosion indicates a "possible flaw" in the coating material applied to a pair of welded joints, one at the point of failure and another excavated after the explosion, the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration said in a corrective order issued to the pipeline operator.
Spectra Energy Corp. said a 2012 inspection revealed no sections that required repair. The coating material, which is supposed to protect pipelines from corrosion, was applied when the 30-inch pipeline was installed in 1981 "following construction welding procedures in the field at the time," the agency said.
Decades ago, that coating was an "accepted and preferred method of coating" the pipeline weld joints, Spectra spokesman Creighton Welch said in an email. Spectra conducts a high-tech pipeline inspection every seven years, as well as routine field surveys of corrosion prevention systems, he added.
The explosion in Salem Township, Westmoreland County, destroyed one home, damaged three others and prompted evacuations. The owner of the leveled home, 26-year-old James Baker, is hospitalized with burns to more than 75 percent of his body.
The enormous blast propelled a 25-foot section of pipe about 100 feet from the epicenter and produced a crater that measured 30 feet wide, 50 feet long and 12 feet deep, according to documents released Wednesday.
The damaged pipeline and three nearby pipelines are out of service while the inquiry continues.
The pipeline safety agency ordered Spectra to inspect the pipeline in the vicinity of the blast for "corrosion, coating condition" and other damage and make repairs as necessary, and to take other measures.