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11/17/17

Keystone Pipeline leaking once again!


Keystone Pipeline leaking once again!
This one oil leak plus the other 17 leaks that are reported in the following post is sending Caustic, Corrosive, Sulfur loaded oil down into the Aquifer of our brothers and sisters around Minnesota, Nebraska, Kansas and Missouri, effectively finishing the job not completed not so long ago with ‘Small Pox laden Blankets’!
Keystone Pipeline leaking once again!

This one oil leak plus the other 17 leaks that are reported in the following post is sending Caustic, Corrosive, Sulfur loaded oil down into the Aquifer of our brothers and sisters around Minnesota, Nebraska, Kansas and Missouri, effectively finishing the job not completed not so long ago with ‘Small Pox laden Blankets’!


So, how many oil leaks are never reported?

Keystone Pipeline Suspends Operation After Leaking 210,000 Gallons of Oil in South Dakota

NOVEMBER 16, 2017
The federal Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration didn’t immediately return an email requesting additional information from The AP. Since 2010, companies have reported 17 spills bigger than the leak announced Thursday, topping 210,000 gallons (5,000 barrels) of crude oil or refined petroleum products, according to U.S. Department of Transportation records.
The existing Keystone pipeline transports crude from Canada to refineries in Illinois and Oklahoma, passing through the eastern Dakotas, Nebraska, Kansas and Missouri. It can handle nearly 600,000 barrels daily, or about 23 million gallons. TransCanada says on its website that the company has safely transported more than 1.5 billion barrels of oil, or about 63 billion gallons, through the system since operations began in 2010.
President Donald Trump issued a federal permit for the expansion project in March even though it had been rejected by the Obama administration. The Keystone XL project would move crude oil from Alberta, Canada, across Montana and South Dakota to Nebraska, where it would connect with existing pipelines feeding refineries along the Gulf Coast.

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