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Yellowstone Oil Spill Prompts Evacuations


First Posted: 07/03/11 12:50 AM ET Updated: 09/01/11 06:12 AM ET

Matthew Brown, Associated Press

LAUREL, Mont. — Hundreds of barrels of crude oil spilled into Montana's Yellowstone River after an ExxonMobil pipeline beneath the riverbed ruptured, sending a plume 25 miles downstream and forcing temporary evacuations, officials said.

The break near Billings in south-central Montana fouled the riverbank and forced municipalities and irrigation districts Saturday to close intakes.

The river has no dams on its way to its confluence with the Missouri River just across the Montana border in North Dakota. It was unclear how far the plume might travel.

Cleanup crews deployed booms and absorbent material as the plume moved downstream at an estimated 5 to 7 mph.

"The parties responsible will restore the Yellowstone River," Mont. Gov. Brian Schweitzer said.

A 600-foot-long black smear of oil coated Jim Swanson's riverfront property just downstream from where the pipe broke.

"Whosever pipeline it is better be knocking on my door soon and explaining how they're going to clean it up," Swanson said as globules of oil bubbled to the surface. "They say they've got it capped off. I'm not so sure."

ExxonMobil spokeswoman Pam Malek said the pipe leaked an estimated 750 to 1,000 barrels of oil for about a half-hour before it was shut down. Other Exxon officials had estimated up to 42,000 gallons of crude oil escaped.

Duane Winslow, Yellowstone County director of disaster and emergency services, said the plume was dissipating as it moved downstream. "We're just kind of waiting for it to move on down while Exxon is trying to figure out how to corral this monster," Winslow said.

"The timing couldn't be worse," said Steve Knecht, chief of operations for Montana Disaster and Emergency Services, who added that the plume was measured at 25 miles near Pompeys Pillar National Monument. "With the Yellowstone running at flood stage and all the debris, it makes it dang tough to get out there to do anything."

Brent Peters, the fire chief for the city of Laurel about 12 miles west of Billings, said the rupture in the 12-inch diameter pipe occurred late Friday about a mile south of Laurel.

He said about 140 people in the Laurel area were evacuated early Saturday due to concerns about possible explosions and the overpowering fumes. He said they were allowed to return at about 4 a.m. after fumes had decreased.

Winslow said hundreds of residents downstream were told to evacuate in the early morning hours as authorities knocked on doors, but it's unclear how many did.

In a statement, ExxonMobil said it was sending a team to help with cleanup, and that state and federal authorities had been alerted to the spill. The ExxonMobil Pipeline Company "deeply regrets this release," it said.

Crews were putting out absorbent material along stretches of the river in Billings and near Laurel, but there were no attempts at capturing oil farther out in the river. In some areas oil flowed underneath booms and continued downstream.

The smell of oil permeated the air for miles downstream and through the city of Billings.

"Nobody's been able to lay their eyes on the pipe," Peters said. "Right now, the Yellowstone River is at flood stage. The bank isn't stable enough for anybody to get close."

The cause of the rupture in the pipe carrying crude oil from Belfry, Mont., to the company's refinery in Billings wasn't known. Peters and Malek said speculation involves high water that might have gouged out the river bed and exposed the pipe, which was possibly hit by debris.

"I haven't seen it this high for at least 15 years," Peters said.

Jeb Montgomery of ExxonMobil said the pipe was buried six feet below the riverbed.

The state has received record rainfall in the last month and also has a huge snowpack in the mountains that is melting, which has resulted in widespread flooding in recent weeks.

Three oil refineries are in the Billings area, and Peters said he asked all three to turn off the flow of oil in their pipelines under the river once the leak was reported. He said ExxonMobil and Cenex Harvest Refinery did so, and that Conoco Phillips said its pipe was already shut down.

He said the river where the leak occurred is about 250 yards wide, and that an oil slick appeared to be about 20 feet wide.

"That was the farthest my flashlight would reach," he said.

Laurel, which has about 6,500 residents, is known for a huge Fourth of July fireworks display put on by the fire department. Peters said the town can swell to as many as 50,000 people for the event.

He said the fire department plans to hold the event on Monday.

_____

Associated Press writer Keith Ridler in Boise, Idaho, contributed to this report.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

Matthew Brown, Associated Press LAUREL, Mont. — Hundreds of barrels of crude oil spilled into Montana's Yellowstone River after an ExxonMobil pipeline beneath the riverbed ruptured, sending a plu...
Matthew Brown, Associated Press LAUREL, Mont. — Hundreds of barrels of crude oil spilled into Montana's Yellowstone River after an ExxonMobil pipeline beneath the riverbed ruptured, sending a plu...
Matthew Brown, Associated Press LAUREL, Mont. — Hundreds of barrels of crude oil spilled into Montana's Yellowstone River after an ExxonMobil pipeline beneath the riverbed ruptured, sending a plu...
Matthew Brown, Associated Press LAUREL, Mont. — Hundreds of barrels of crude oil spilled into Montana's Yellowstone River after an ExxonMobil pipeline beneath the riverbed ruptured, sending a plu...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Livinginthenow
Social Justice
10:35 PM on 07/10/2011
Does every man-made disaster trace back to Halliburton and Dick Cheney?

Alittle off topic but there are a few conservative trolls using this disaster to pump fracking.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/03/opinion/03tue3.html

Frackers do not have to disclose the chemicals they use because of a little known law put into the energy bill of 2005 by guess who? If fracking is so safe, why did it compel Cheney to get this law through? Why is water contaminated?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Dadtka
Grim
08:55 PM on 07/06/2011
Welcome to the world of Republican style government. They want to take OUR resources away from us, destroy the Natural Environment, make only their friends wealthy and when their technology fails they want us to live with the toxins.
Get used to this America.
10:59 AM on 07/06/2011
Wow! It's always really sad to hear about these oil spills. It really does trash the earth. But Montana is a beautiful state overall with lots of beautiful scenery.

http://www.ranchesatbeltcreek.com/amenities
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bad spelling grammar
Help save Big Cats from extinction!
12:59 PM on 07/05/2011
This should be front page news!
03:13 PM on 07/05/2011
You are right IT SHOULD BE BIG TIME! but now we realize even more how goofy our media is. By the way EU citizens already new this as soon as right after it happened....as a catastrophe Yet here they are playing with it. First Alaska, the Gulf now our rivers .....an observation...unless we don;t really give a bean about it...........it is very strange this actually happened............we are making this land slowly but surely a waste land and our oceans what a pity!...where is Obama so far?..............
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bad spelling grammar
Help save Big Cats from extinction!
03:26 PM on 07/05/2011
I do agree Obama has done nothing for the environment with his presidency. I know he has to spend most of his attention on the economy but he could have done something…anything.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mr Anonymous
Mumpsimus, I am not entertained!
09:24 PM on 07/05/2011
It is front page news in Montana, but I guess you're not from there.
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bad spelling grammar
Help save Big Cats from extinction!
09:46 PM on 07/05/2011
It's not front page on HP.
03:25 PM on 07/09/2011
No doubt Montana ranchers will balme the wild wolf population.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mithrall
My inner child is a mean little S.O.B.
11:52 AM on 07/05/2011
When an oil company tells the media the volume of oil that was spilled is there a standard number which we should multiply it or factor of 10?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WESmith
Energy Conservation can save you M-O-N-E-Y!!!!!!!!
12:13 PM on 07/05/2011
We should ask the oil company involved, whoever they are. It was never brought up whose oil this is. The State makes a 50 cent tariff per barrel of oil that is transported throught this pipeline. The government approved the opening of this pipeline in 2007.

The US Government taxes ExxonMobil Pipeline Company $180,000 a day; $65,700,000 a year. And they are just one of a hundred pipeline companies in the US. Where does this money go? We need to ask our Congress.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WESmith
Energy Conservation can save you M-O-N-E-Y!!!!!!!!
12:16 PM on 07/05/2011
EM Pipeline company is the 8th largest in the US.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WESmith
Energy Conservation can save you M-O-N-E-Y!!!!!!!!
12:42 PM on 07/05/2011
Exxon Mobil Pipeline Company is not an oil company. Our government doesn't allow for oil companies to use or sell their oil to themselves. They call that oligarthy and it is against the law. Oil companies must sell to speculators at each step in the process of delivering your gasoline to you. And each step is taxed.
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amphibious1
The future ain't what it used to be ~ Yogi Berra
10:39 AM on 07/05/2011
Oil would hardly seem worth it if it weren't so sustainable and safe... Hold on.... you mean it isn't? Nevermind...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dsws
No owning ideas. Limit only commercial use.
10:08 AM on 07/06/2011
Compared to deforestation for firewood, or mountaintop removal for coal, though, oil isn't the worst option currently in widespread use.
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Brown Buddha
Throwing pebbles into the ocean
10:15 AM on 07/05/2011
Oil Runs through it.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
04:53 PM on 07/05/2011
good one....
10:11 AM on 07/05/2011
Keep voting Republican Montana and this is only the beginning.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mr Anonymous
Mumpsimus, I am not entertained!
09:29 PM on 07/05/2011
We don't just "keep voting Republican", but you'd know that if you were from here.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dsws
No owning ideas. Limit only commercial use.
10:19 AM on 07/06/2011
For those who don't feel like hitting Google yourselves, here's the rundown.

Gov. Schweitzer - D
Sen. Baucus - D
Sen. Tester - D

But from there on down, it leans pretty heavily R: The representative (Montana only has one) and majorities in both houses of the state legislature are Republican. However, the legislature isn't as lopsided as a lot of states.

Their electoral votes went McCain, but only by a few percentage points.
10:03 AM on 07/05/2011
Oil companies are incredibly careless. And then our Republican party caters to them, preventing increased safety measures. That pipe should have been double jacketed for a few miles from that river both ways. Now that river will be polluted for years to come. How are they going to drink it now?
05:08 AM on 07/06/2011
Uhmm...Not certain where you're getting your information, but most of Montana get their drinking water from underground wells and cisterns, -not- rivers. Please, if you're not from Montana then don't start pointing fingers at our politics being the cause of this. Living a short distance away from Laurel, I can say that the record amount of water running down the Yellowstone river probably aided in this happening. It's not the Republican's fault, it's natures.

Want to know why I voted Republican? Because the democrat we currently have in office let British Petroleum off the hook for their spill in the Gulf, because they were one of the leading supporters for his candidacy and election. Don't talk about it being a Republican fault, when you don't have the facts...

And that's my soap-box comment for the week.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Christi Costigan
09:37 AM on 07/05/2011
HP, why didn't this rate front page?
I pay taxes to protect the park (which I totally don't have a problem with) and then oil companies pay to exploit/destroy it. Ya can't burn both ends of the candle. You're going to get burned.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WESmith
Energy Conservation can save you M-O-N-E-Y!!!!!!!!
12:20 PM on 07/05/2011
EM Pipeline pays $66 million a year in taxes. That trumps you. Besides the spill was no where near Yellowstone Park. And HP doesn't know or won't tell us the oil company involved. That oil company also pays taxes. Double trump.
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bad spelling grammar
Help save Big Cats from extinction!
12:56 PM on 07/05/2011
if it is $66m post a link
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Typical Boston Liberal
Formal semantics trumps formal grammar
08:26 AM on 07/05/2011
The "invisible hand" is turning out to be a gross, oil covered evil that is anything but invisible. It is obtrusive, greedy, unfair, and overreaching.
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ken607
Nothing natural about gas,nothing clean about coal
08:26 AM on 07/05/2011
you must ask yourself one question do you crap were you eat? we live on this planet our whole lives. it is our house, why polute it to death.
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ken607
Nothing natural about gas,nothing clean about coal
08:22 AM on 07/05/2011
hey montana hows that DEregulation workin out for you? nothing like destroynig your enviornment to make yourselves wealthier, all because your all too LAZY to create an alternative to disaster time and time again. you know the definition of INSANE is doing the same thing over and over again expecting a different outcome. the outcome is always the same DEVISTATION!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mr Anonymous
Mumpsimus, I am not entertained!
09:34 PM on 07/05/2011
We didn't DEregulate. Almost everything that some of the tea party has tried to pass has been vetoed by Schwitzer. But since you have a thing against republicans and you assume that Montana is a very red state, instead of a large mix of red and blue areas, you start spouting off like this and make these remarks about things you apparently don't know about.
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ken607
Nothing natural about gas,nothing clean about coal
06:21 AM on 07/06/2011
not true wbhen bush was in office he and cheney (from montana) DEregulated the entire energy sector. ever heard of "fracking" thats a cheney invention. republicans in the 80s DEregulated the banking and investment areas that started ENRON(PHIL GRAMM ring a bell) and now the rest of them. lehmann and goldman sucks. the fact is DERAGULATION is a republican strategy and will bring down the country if not stopped. yes i do have something against the republicans they are choosing MONEY over country. the small buisness ownwers are not millionairs and raisng their taxes wont effect job creation. like in every instsance the gop are wrong on every level. by the way N KOREA became a nuke state on GWB watch. or was that obamas fault too?
08:13 AM on 07/05/2011
Thank you, US voters and taxpayers, for your wonderful attention to the environment. Enjoy the garbage you created by the guardians of the environment you elected. May your children also enjoy the crap. Be sure to vote these guys in again. They care so much about you and your country.
10:05 AM on 07/05/2011
Hey, Montana is a red state. They get what they vote for.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
marijam
Independent
08:06 AM on 07/05/2011
How many Americans knew that an oil pipeline was going through pristine Yellowstone? This is outrageous.
10:09 AM on 07/05/2011
Listen! Stop complaining Marijam. Don't you understand how much bribe money Exxon had to give to get the EPA regulations set aside? Have a little respect for money, will you? We can always make pristine parks, - like maybe in Chicago? But oil profits once lost, are lost.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WESmith
Energy Conservation can save you M-O-N-E-Y!!!!!!!!
12:22 PM on 07/05/2011
$35 billion. $66 million just from this Pipeline company in tariffs.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ickymcpooh
yes I get it my grammur is bad and I cant spell.I
10:13 AM on 07/05/2011
I know.Wonder where else they are? It would be nice to know if your living in a danger zone.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WESmith
Energy Conservation can save you M-O-N-E-Y!!!!!!!!
12:24 PM on 07/05/2011
I have seen a pipeline map of the US. There are more pipelines than highways. Our government must make at least a billion dollars a year taxing these pipelines.