I wonder what libertarians and their love of low regulation
have to say about this:
The series of deadly explosions and fires that tore through suburban
Boston on Thursday has thrown a spotlight on proposed upgrades to safety
standards for natural-gas pipelines, something that has languished amid
opposition from utilities.
“We
have been pushing for more regulations for years and there has been
some huge regulations in the works but for some reason they have been
stalled,” Carl Weimer, executive director of the Pipeline Safety Trust
in Bellingham, Washington, said in a telephone interview. “The industry
does a whole lot to slow these things down.”
At least one person died and dozens were injured Thursday after a series of explosions and fires along NiSource Inc.’s
natural gas network in Massachusetts. Investigators say it’s too soon
to say what the cause is, but past incidents have led safety advocates
to issue proposals for tighter rules or closer oversight that have gone
unheeded.
Federal filings show NiSource, which owns seven local gas
distribution companies from Ohio to Virginia, has joined the broader
pipeline industry in opposing rules on when certain pipelines need to be
inspected, frequency of corrosion monitoring, and reporting leaks.
The enormous scale of the Boston incident outright killed only one person. I didn't even remember this deadly gas pipeline problem from 2010:
U.S. oil and gas pipeline-related deaths jumped to the highest level in
seven years in 2017. The 20 fatalities were the most since 2010, when a
natural gas pipeline explosion in San Bruno, California, leveled a
neighborhood and killed eight people.
Another article ends by saying that "serious consequences" from natural gas distribution aren't all that common, but then gives some figures that make that sound a dubious proposition:
Even though natural-gas leaks are fairly common, serious consequences aren’t. From 1998 to 2017, 15 people a year,
on average, died in incidents related to gas distribution in the U.S.
“Significant incidents”—those that do things such as cause an injury or
death, result in at least $50,000 of damage, or lead to a fire or
explosion—happen about 286 times a year.
That might sound like a lot. But then again, the streets of Boston carry an average of four gas leaks a mile.
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