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Atkin reports: "2013 brought a stark reminder of the inherent risk that comes with a fossil-fuel dependent world, with numerous pipeline spills, explosions, derailments, landslides, and the death of 20 coal miners in the U.S. alone."

A crab covered in oil on Ao Prao Beach, Koh Samet, on July 30, 2013. (Reuters/Athit Perawongmetha)
A crab covered in oil on Ao Prao Beach, Koh Samet, on July 30, 2013. (Reuters/Athit Perawongmetha)


45 Fossil Fuel Disasters the Industry Doesn't Want You to Know About

By Emily Atkin, ThinkProgress

18 December 13

hile coal, oil, and gas are an integral part of everyday life around the world, 2013 brought a stark reminder of the inherent risk that comes with a fossil-fuel dependent world, with numerous pipeline spills, explosions, derailments, landslides, and the death of 20 coal miners in the U.S. alone.

Despite all this, our addiction to fossil fuels will be a tough habit to break. The federal Energy Information Administration in July projected that fossil fuel use will soar across the world in the come decades. Coal - the dirtiest fossil fuel in terms of carbon emissions - is projected to increase by 2.3 percent in coming years. And in December, the EIA said that global demand for oil would be even higher than it had projected, for both this year and next.

Here is a look back at some of the fossil fuel disasters that made headlines in 2013, along with several others that went largely unnoticed.

Pipelines

March 29: An ExxonMobil pipeline carrying Canadian Wabasca heavy crude from the Athabasca oil sands ruptures and spills thousands of barrels of oil in Mayflower, Arkansas. The ruptured pipeline gushed 210,000 gallons of heavy Canadian crude into a residential street and forced the evacuation of 22 homes. Exxon was hit with a paltry $2.6 million fine by federal pipeline safety regulators for the incident in November - just 1/3000th of its third quarter profits.

May 20: Underground tar sands leaks start popping up in Alberta, Canada, and do not stop for at least five months. In September the company responsible was ordered to drain a lake so that contamination on the lake's bottom can be cleaned up. As of September 11, the leaks had spilled more than 403,900 gallons - or about 9,617 barrels - of oily bitumen into the surrounding boreal forest and muskeg, the acidic, marshy soil found in the forest.

July 30: About 50 tons of oil spills into the sea off Rayong province of Thailand from a leak in the pipeline operated by PTT Global Chemical Plc. It was the fourth major oil spill in the country's history.

August 13: An ethane and propane pipeline belonging to Tesoro Corp. running beneath an Illinois cornfield ruptures and explodes. Residents heard a massive blast and then saw flames shooting 300 feet into the air, visible for 20 miles.

September 29: A North Dakota farmer winds up discovering the largest onshore oil spill in U.S. history, the size of seven football fields. At least 20,600 barrels of oil leaked from a Tesoro Corp-owned pipeline onto the Jensens' land, and it went unreported to North Dakotans for more than a week. An AP investigation later discovered that nearly 300 oil spills and 750 "oil field incidents" had gone unreported to the public since January 2012.

October 7: An Oil and Natural Gas Corp. pipeline that carries crude from the offshore Mumbai High fields to India ruptures and spills at an onshore facility, but oil winds up flowing into the Arabian sea because of rainfall.

October 9: A natural gas pipeline explodes in northwest Oklahoma, sparking a large fire and prompting evacuations. No injuries or deaths were reported.

October 30: 17,000 gallons of crude oil spill from an eight-inch pipeline owned by Koch Pipeline Company in Texas. The spill impacted a rural area and two livestock ponds near Smithville and was discovered on a routine aerial inspection.

November 14: A Chevron natural gas pipeline explodes in Milford, Texas, causing the town of 700 people to evacuate. The flames could reportedly be seen for miles.

November 22: An oil pipeline explodes in Qingdao, China, killing 62 and setting ocean on fire. The underground pipeline's explosion opened a hole in the road that swallowed at least one truck, according to Reuters, and oil seeped into utility pipes under Qingdao.

November 29: A 30-inch gas gas pipeline in a rural area of western Missouri ruptures and explodes, sending a 300 foot high fireball into the air.

Coal Mines

February 11 An explosion in a coal mine in northern Russia kills at least 17 miners in a shaft saturated with methane gas. Rescue workers said 23 people had been in the shaft at the time. The blast occurred about 2,500 feet underground.

February 13: Very large landslide hits a colliery in Northern England. No injuries, but Dave Petley, a geology professor at Durham University, said it "may well be the largest and most significant landslide in the UK for a decade or more."

February 13: A 28-year-old mining machine operator was killed when he was pinned between the tail of the remote controlled continuous mining machine and the coal rib in an underground mine in Illinois. Timothy Chamness had only been a mine machine operator for 6 months when the incident occurred.

February 14: A landslide hits the Phillippines' largest open coal mining pit, burying at least 13 workers and killing at least 7. The accident was the third to occur in mining sites in the country over the last six months.

February 19: A large rock cliff collapses on top of a coal mine in southern China, burying and killing five people, including two children. An estimated 5,000 cubic metres of rock fell on Yudong village in Kaili, in the country's Guizhou province.

March 13: A 63-year-old man with 40 years of mining experience was killed underground when he was struck by a large piece of roof rock. The rock that fell was approximately 6 feet long by 5.5 feet wide and about 5 inches thick.

March 29 and April 1: The Babao Coal mine explosions kill 53 people in China. The coal mine company responsible, Tonghua Mining (Group) Co. Ltd., was later found to have concealed the death toll in the incidents, additionally concealing deaths of six workers in five accidents in 2012.

May 11: Illegal mining causes an explosion in a Chinese coal mine that killed 28 and left 18 injured. China orders production suspension at all coal mines in the southwestern province of Sichuan, China's 16th-biggest coal producing province, after the blast.

July 16: A landslide at a coal mine in Bulgaria claims the lives of two people who were discovered underneath 50 meters of land mass. It was the fourth major landslide in the Oranovo mine in the past eight years.

August 10: Seven people in India are killed after a landslide in a coal mine in the Sundergarh district of Odisha. The incident occurred while people from nearby villages were collecting coal from the "over-burdened" dump yard located near the mining area.

November 23: While working inside a coal mine in Ohio, a 32-year-old man was killed when he was struck by high pressure hydraulic fluid after a valve broke. Ryan Lashley had worked at The Century Mine, which was the site of another near-fatal accident that month.

November 27: A coal mine in northern China's Shanxi Province is hit with a landslide that buried several excavators and kills two people.

December 4: Gas explodes in a coal mine early in eastern China's Jiangxi province, killing at least six workers.

Offshore and Onshore Rigs

January 22: A Devon Energy natural gas rig in Utah catches fire, causing evacuations for half a mile radius of the rig. No injuries are reported.

July 7: A hydraulic fracturing operation at a gas well drilling pad in West Virginia explodes and injures seven people, four with potentially life-threatening burns. The explosion occurred while workers were pumping water down a well, part of the hydraulic fracturing process for recovering gas trapped in shale rock. The tanks that recover the water and chemical mixture after they return to the surface are what reportedly exploded.

July 27: BP's Hercules 265 offshore gas rig in the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Louisiana explodes, enveloping the rig in a cloud of gas and a thin sheen of gas in the water. After spewing gas for more than a day, the rig finally "bridged over," meaning small pieces of sediment and sand blocked more gas from escaping.

August 20: A gas rig belonging to the State Oil Company of Azerbaijan exploded in the Caspian sea while workers were carrying out exploratory drilling, when it hit a pocket of gas at unexpectedly high pressure.

August 28: A "well-control incident" at an oil drilling rig in rural south Texas causes an "intense" explosion after workers were drilling horizontally into the Eagle Ford Shale, causing homes to be evacuated. No injuries reported.

Train Derailments

March 27: A Canadian Pacific Railway train derails, spilling 30,000 gallons of tar sands oil in western Minnesota. Reuters called it "the first major spill of the modern North American crude-by-rail transit boom."

July 6: A unit, 74-car freight train carrying Bakken formation crude oil derails in Lac-Megantic, Canada, causing an incredibly tragic fire and explosion. Forty-two people were pronounced dead, 30 buildings downtown destroyed. Emergency responders describe a "war zone." 2,000 people evacuated because of toxic fumes, explosions, and fires.

July 18: 24 cars of a 150-car coal train derail in Virginia, spilling more than a thousand tons of coal along the roadside.

October 19: A train carrying crude oil and liquefied petroleum gas derails west of Alberta, Canada, causing an explosion and fire. No injuries were reported. Nine of the derailed cars were carrying liquefied petroleum gas and four carried crude. The crude oil cars were intact and kept away from the fires with no indications of any leaks.

November 8: A 90-car train carrying North Dakota crude derails and explodes in a rural area of western Alabama. Flames spewed into the air on a Friday, only finally dying down by Sunday, in what the Huffington Post called "the most dramatic U.S. accident since the oil-by-rail boom began."

December 9: 19 cars of a coal train near the Las Vegas Motor Speedway derail, spilling coal onto the ground. The train had four locomotives with 103 cars, each carrying about 75 tons of coal. The train was headed from a mine in Carbon County, Utah, to a utility company in Mojave, California.

Power Plants and Refineries

April 4: Federal safety officials eventually make Georgia Power pay $119,000 in penalties after an explosion at one of its coal plants. The blast injured two people and was caused by a buildup of hydrogen and air inside a generator.

April 5: Residents near an ExxonMobil refinery begin to smell "burning tires and oil" after the refinery leaked condensate water that accumulated while the company was flaring gas. Through the leak, ExxonMobil announced that it had released 100 pounds of hydrogen sulfide and 10 pounds of benzene. According to readings at the spill site, the refinery measured 160 parts per million of hydrogen sulfide and 2 parts per million of benzene in the air.

August 8 and 15: 15,000 liters of oil spills into local streams in Cuba, after two separate instances at the Sergio Soto Refinery. The oil spill was the result of a negligent operator who failed to properly secure the residuals trap used to contain the hydrocarbon. While some of the oil was able to be contained, much of it was pushed upstream because of strong rainfall following the spill.

August 28: Approximately 20 gallons of partially refined petroleum from a New Jersey refinery spills into the Delaware River, after a leak in a heat exchanger that is part of the refinery's crude oil processing unit. The spill was reported two hours after workers discovered it, when they realized it was going into the river.

September 10: An explosion at the Deely 1 coal power unit in Pennsylvania caused cascade housing damage. The explosion happened after coal dust in a silo caught fire. Miscellaneous

January 27: A barge carrying 668,000 gallons of light crude oil on the Mississippi River crashed into a railroad bridge. An 80,000 gallon tank on the vessel was damaged, spilling oil into the waterway, which prompted officials to close the river for eight miles in either direction.

September 15: Fuel tanks explode at Virgin Islands gas station, resulting in a huge blast and a fire and causing two injuries. The St. Thomas community of Bovoni was evacuated and traffic was diverted after the explosion.

October 1: An underground fuel reservoir explodes on a Czech Lukoil petrol station on a highway in Prague, killing one person and injuring two.

November 23: Five are hurt after a gas tank near a drilling rig explodes in Wyoming.

December 14: Thousands of gallons of gasoline spill into a harbor in southern Alaska on Saturday after a pump used to funnel fuel into boats is accidentally severed. The 5,500 gallon spill occurred in the small village of the village of Kake, whose residents rely on fish and subsistence to get by.

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+28 # coberly 2020-07-25 10:01
I've been trying to tell you: don't turn over statues. Turn over voting machines. Demand paper ballots in a box in front of witnesses. With cops to evict "challengers."

Hint: if Trump/Burr can have their own police force, so can the citizens of Flint, Detroit...

Elections MUST be held in full public view "on the same day." Sorry about that Covid thing. wear a mask. With enough voting place, a hand count can be completed in time for the "networks" to have their story, so we can go to sleep... or not.
 
 
+13 # lfeuille 2020-07-25 18:52
We can do both.
 
 
0 # coberly 2020-07-28 13:14
probably we can't.

knocking down statues costs us votes.
 
 
+24 # johnescher 2020-07-25 10:14
I live in Michigan and want my vote against Trump to count. The downside of this well-researched article is that it tends to erode that hope.
 
 
+25 # miffed 2020-07-25 10:32
Harvard Kennedy School of Government scholar Alex Keyssar has a book that shows how the abominable US election system is a cancerous growth spurred by incumbents. New democracies after WW2 never even considered the US system because it's undemocratic in its very structure.
 
 
+11 # 1dfnslblty 2020-07-25 10:36
 
 
+15 # davehaze 2020-07-25 10:40
RSN is on a roll. Providing its community with empowering information.
 
 
+23 # davehaze 2020-07-25 10:59
Uh, what happened here? If Palast is correct than it wasnt the Russians who handed Trump the election but Republican lawyers while under the "watchful" eyes of Democratic lawyers.

If what palast says is true than putting all of your energy into the million hours of Russia gate is a mistake that needs to be acknowledged.

All of your trump-hating would have been unnecessary because he never would have set foot in the White House if the Democratic party had demanded the recount. Hey, you want someone to blame blame Hillary herself and the Democratic party itself and you might want to ask them why they did not want to win.
 
 
-4 # Rodion Raskolnikov 2020-07-25 13:22
dh -- Palast has never been a Russia blamer. That role goes to democrats, esp. people like soon-to-be-vice -president-nomi nee Susan Rice or Hillary Herself. The elite media are Russia-did-it true believers as well.

You are right. The Russiagate was a total mistake, a distraction from the real issues we needed to be talking about, and a strategy to blame Trump for something he did not actually participate in.
 
 
+17 # davehaze 2020-07-25 16:28
RR
Yes reality-based Palast never a Russia conspiretalist. Because I have followed him for near 20 years, originally Democracy NOW and bought his books, I have shouted at unregenative Democrats: it is not NaderGreensLeft istsRussians (whatever current scapegoat) it is electorial cheating initiated and allowed to proliferate by both parties and the Supreme Court.

And ignored by most political discussion -- so kudos to RSN.
 
 
+11 # Rodion Raskolnikov 2020-07-26 05:21
dh -- yes, kudos to RSN for publishing Palast. I think he is definitely worth listening to.
 
 
+6 # livanlern 2020-07-25 17:19
Even Biden and the DNC wouldn't be stupid enough to name Rice or Clinton for VP.
The Don doesn't need to directly participate in anything for it to happen.
 
 
+9 # dquandle 2020-07-25 14:44
The "Democrats" couldn't be bothered. Just like they couldn't be bothered when Gore tried to pretend he was a "gentleman". All they were interested in was ginning up war, hot or cold, with Russia Russia Russia, and making sure Wall Street got its ton of flesh.
 
 
+3 # livanlern 2020-07-25 17:21
Huh? The war that followed Gore's defeat was with Iran, not Russia.
 
 
+5 # Salus Populi 2020-07-26 15:16
You mean Iraq. And it wasn't really a "war with," since Iraq had never so much as threatened the United States, and the "coalition of the killing" had ninety-five [not a misprint] times the total GDP of Iraq; rather, under the Nuremberg terms, it was a war of aggression, and, like all the other wars the U.S. has been involved in over the last three-quarters of a century -- that is, has initiated -- was both a war crime, a crime against the peace, and a crime against humanity. If Obama, the Constitutional scholar, was serious about his oath of office, he would have prosecuted [or sent to the Hague] all the high-level administrators of the Bush Sr., Clinton, Bush Jr., and Reagan administration, as well as Brzezinsky and Carter, under Article VIII of the Constitution. But of course, he was getting set to carry out his own war crimes, and therefore chose to "look forward, not back."
 
 
0 # Observer 47 2020-07-27 15:34
Outstanding comment!
 
 
+29 # Street Level 2020-07-25 11:26
And why was Hillary not screaming about this? I don't believe for one minute that she'd rather go on a world-tour whining and blaming Bernie no matter how much money her book made.

And why are the county registrars still allowed to confuse voters with cross-over ballots, absentee ballots or instructing volunteers to "not say anything" forcing voters to "ask" for the right ballot if they're lucky enough to know better? What happened to exit polls? Why are antique machines even allowed anymore? The country would riot if the Super Bowl was broadcast on unreliable and antique machinery.

Observing the count (during the election) was a joke. Sample ballots were drawn from piles in a private room out of public view.

The only thing about voting that's changed is that the Republicans have made it harder and the Democrats have done nothing but sit back and count their Wall St. cash because they don't loose no matter who's in the Oval. It's the same corporate party.

Only people like Greg who's doing the heavy lifting doing the research to educate the public will bring about any change.
Voting matters in that it serves as a legitimate cover for whoever gets installed and is why we need to change it.
 
 
+19 # dascher 2020-07-25 11:43
 
 
+7 # Robbee 2020-07-25 13:26
1,913,369 Ballots Thrown Away, How Trump Did - and Will - Disqualify Your Vote
By Greg Palast, Reader Supported News
25 July 20

"This little chapter from How Trump Stole 2020 tells you how they did it in 2016 and can do it again in 2020:"

whereas of 2018 michigan has a dem secretary of state - (attorneys general and governor too)

robbee declares -

these outrages could not have happened, unless abetted by repukes, up and down the line

this will not happen again in 2020 - not in my state

note that the refusal to count votes in michigan happened under a repuke secretary of state (attorneys general and governor too)

this year there's a new sheriff in michigan - and she's all dem!

ps - greg is also an expert on cross-check - and who knows how many MILLIONS OF votes by folks with latino names? - repute secretaries of state threw out? destroyed? - no record kept?

voting in america is a shell game, expressly approved by sbcouts

but it's the only game we have

despair is no political strategy

V O T E !

pps - ifeuille's great idea is a federal mail-in voting rights law, backed by a one-day army of onsite federal inspectors at each local polling site? if i have that right? - i would add inspectors, at each s o s office

ppps - meanwhile we man polling sites with independent poll watchers!
 
 
+18 # Rodion Raskolnikov 2020-07-25 13:27
Palast has seen this story play out over and over again. He must think he is in the Groudhog Day movie. Wake up to a new election, same old story of ballot spoilage, mis-counts, and rigged elections.

What this shows is that repubicans have become masters of this technique, especially challenging votes that don't go their way. They also have zip coded voter lists so they car rule out places like east Detroit.

And the Democrats always behave the same way. They just throw their hands up in the air and make some profound expression like "darn it." And then they move on to collecting cash from their big donors -- who they don't know also backed the republican side.

The billionaire donors win at this game. They get the candidates they want. Democrat party bosses get a lot of money. Republicans get the elected offices and the bills they want passed. Everyone is happy. The american people get screwed -- again, and again, and again.
 
 
+20 # vt143 2020-07-25 13:29
And it's the bible-thumping flag-waving love-America "patriots" who sabotage the very foundation of their "American" greatness. What a fu*%ing joke!
 
 
+14 # livanlern 2020-07-25 13:39
I knew at the time, from online information, that the election results in Flint, Detroit, Milwaukee, etc. were bogus. But the mainstream media clamped down on this news, and they made Jill Stein into a figure of ridicule.
There were/are a bunch of computer experts some of whom came out of Princeton, who have been trying for years to put out the word about how easy it is to hack e-voting.
 
 
0 # Observer 47 2020-07-27 15:37
See www.blackboxvoting.org
 
 
+5 # coberly 2020-07-26 14:56
well, now that everyone has git that off ther=ir chest, we can go back to winning friends and influencing people by knocking down statues. instead of doing something about voting machines and voter registration ripoffs.

a word of warning though. Trump-hate of mail-in vote, is "please don' throw me in dat brier patch Br'er Fox. Please. Please.

I don't know if there has ever been mail-in voting fraud, but there easily could be, the point is that it is not transparent.

do we really need to get the television stations the results before midnight at the expense of never knowing who "really' won?
 
 
+1 # Inspired Citizen 2020-07-27 19:16
In a word, no.

Accuracy is all that matters, not speed. It's the difference between a legitimate election and an illegitimate one.

The Republicans suppress the minority voters in the general election. The Democrats suppressed the (young) Bernie voters in the primaries.
 

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