California oil spill spurs queries from investigators about delay
Al Jazeera
Amplify Energy waited three hours to shut down the US pipeline after the alarm went off signalling a rupture, investigators say.
Amplify Energy’s emergency response plan for a major oil spill like the one it’s now dealing with in coastal Southern California depended heavily on a quick shutdown of the San Pedro Bay Pipeline if its sensors picked up a sudden loss of pressure. That’s not what happened, United States investigators revealed Tuesday.
After an alarm went off in a company control room at 2:30am (09:30 GMT) Saturday — signalling a rupture that would spill tens of thousands of gallons of crude into the Pacific Ocean — the company waited more than three hours to shut down the pipeline, at 6:01am (13:01 GMT), according to preliminary findings of an investigation into the spill.
The Houston, Texas-based company took another three hours to notify the US Coast Guard’s National Response Center for oil spills, investigators said, further slowing the response to an accident for which Amplify workers spent years preparing.