ConocoPhillips reaches deals over Alaska spills

 
No Author Published: December 17, 2012    Comment on this article Leave a comment

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — ConocoPhillips has agreed to federal and state civil penalties of about $200,000 for spills of crude oil and contaminated water from corroded pipe in Alaska's Kuparuk Oil Field in 2006 and 2007.


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ConocoPhillips Alaska Inc. also agreed to reimburse the state $112,273 for the cost of its investigation and oversight.

The company also must complete restoration of the 0.32 acre that was affected.

ConocoPhillips Alaska spokeswoman Natalie Lowman said by email that spill prevention and protection of the environment are top priorities for the company.

"Lessons learned from these two incidents about potential corrosion pathways have been applied to our integrity management program, which has been subjected to rigorous internal and external oversight," she said.

North Slope facilities require increasing amounts of maintenance and capital as they age, Lowman said, and ConocoPhillips is spending significantly on pipeline inspection, asset renewals such as pipeline replacements, and upgrades in "pigging" infrastructure — the devices that look for corrosion inside a pipe.

Both spills were blamed on corrosion in flow lines, which carry a mix of crude oil, water, gas and solids from production wells to processing centers.

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