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Politics : Politics of Energy -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wharf Rat who wrote (61741)12/7/2014 9:20:19 PM
From: miraje1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Brumar89

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 86355
 
The land on which Kinder Morgan intended to build the expansion is the unceded traditional territory of the Tseil-Waututh, Musqueam, Sto:lo and Squamish Nations.

Kinder Morgan isn't building on a new pipeline route, but expanding capacity on an existing one. Those moron Indians can go freeze in the their teepees and take their clueless, greenie twit supporters with them.

I really wish you had to live in the fossil free world you advocate, Ratty. You would quickly become worm food as you starved to death..



To: Wharf Rat who wrote (61741)12/8/2014 8:10:42 AM
From: Alastair McIntosh1 Recommendation

Recommended By
miraje

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 86355
 
On the morning of November 28, after weeks of sustained protest, energy infrastructure company Kinder Morgan packed up the equipment it had planned to use in the construction of a new pipeline on Burnaby Mountain in British Columbia, and left without finishing the job.
Nonsense. There was no equipment KM planned to use in the construction of a new pipeline. A KM consultant was taking core samples to confirm bedrock properties for a possible relocation of an existing line through Burnaby's Westridge neighbourhood.

Burnaby Mountain stable enough for Kinder Morgan pipeline

The survey work conducted by Kinder Morgan over the past several days has found that Burnaby Mountain is stable enough to support a tunnel for a new pipeline route.

The reason for of the ongoing survey work is to determine if the mountain is stable enough to support a pipeline, and early indications show a tunneling option is possible.

"At this point, we are able to say a trenchless alternative is feasible," said Alex Baumgard, of BCG Engineering.

Kinder Morgan was considering either tunneling or using horizontal directional drilling through Burnaby Mountain to connect the tank farm to the Westridge Marine Terminal. Tunneling is a more expensive option and would cost roughly $47 million, while horizontal directional drilling, which involves boring a hole through the mountain and pulling the pipeline though with the drill, would cost the company an estimated $24 million. Core samples and early analysis indicate tunnelling would be preferable, which means there would be enough space to also deactivate the existing Westridge line and run that through the mountain instead.

One of the major concerns with the mountain route was earthquakes and fault lines, but Baumgard said data from his company and SFU indicates the area is seismically stable.

"A fault has never been observed on the south side of the Burrard Inlet," he said.

Kinder Morgan contracted SFU professors John Clague and Doug Stead, who are using the company's data for a new a study examining earthquake fault lines for the entire Lower Mainland.

Kinder Morgan's survey work marks the first time core samples have been taken from this deep in the mountain. Kinder Morgan contractors have been working around the clock for the past five days, taking core samples from two locations on Burnaby Mountain. Those samples pulled up a mix of sandstone, siltstone, conglomerate and traces of coal, which is what they expected.

The mountain route was not in Kinder Morgan's original application to the National Energy Board, so the board extended the hearing to allow for further studies on Burnaby Mountain but gave the company a December 1 deadline. BCG Engineering has been drilling, while police have been holding protesters back with a court injunction. At press time, the total number of arrests was at least 79, as people chose to cross the injunction line.

Baumgard's crews have been working in the midst of ongoing protests.

"The verbal abuse that's been said at people can increase the stress levels out there," Baumgard said. "But essentially we are trained to do the work and get it done."

Kinder Morgan opted for the mountain route because it was considered less invasive than following the existing line, which runs through Burnaby's Westridge neighbourhood.

Kinder Morgan still needs the NEB's approval before expanding the Trans Mountain pipeline.

biv.com