Keystone oil pipeline shutdown could quickly lead to higher gasoline prices
Source: AP
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) The nearly 2,700-mile Keystone oil pipeline was shut down Tuesday morning after it ruptured in North Dakota, halting the flow of millions of gallons of crude oil from Canada to refineries in the U.S. and potentially leading to higher gasoline prices.
South Bow, a liquid pipeline business that manages the pipeline, said it shut down the pipeline after control center leak detection systems detected a pressure drop in the system. The spill is confined to an agricultural field in a rural area, about 60 miles southwest of Fargo.
The affected segment has been isolated, and operations and containment resources have been mobilized to site, the company said. Our primary focus right now is the safety of onsite personnel and mitigating risk to the environment.
The pipeline transported an average 624,000 barrels or more than 26 million gallons per day in 2024, according to Canadian regulators. It stretches 2,689 miles (4327 kilometers) from Alberta, Canada, to Texas.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/keystone-oil-pipeline-north-dakota-spill-36e86142566763a5464e1dd132eede56

GreenWave
(11,047 posts)Easterncedar
(4,245 posts)Who could have foreseen this.
Chasstev365
(5,337 posts)The rightwing hate/noise machine would scream: It's BIDEN'S FAULT!
And the mainstream media would give it credence, knowing damn well Joe had nothing to do with it.
pimpbot
(1,074 posts)I do hate wheh they start their gotcha questions with that line.
Ritabert
(1,005 posts)It was to bring dirty tar sands oil through Nebraska's Sandhill region and over the Ogalalla aquifer. There are already 4 Keystone pipelines in the US.
angrychair
(10,538 posts)This pipeline carries Bitumen, a tar sands oil, one of the nastiest oils processed and a serious mess to clean up. The pipeline has to be heated in order for it to even flow.
Tar sands cannot be processed into gasoline so I fail to see how this impacts gas prices.
orangecrush
(24,157 posts)So how are they coming up with this?
Bengus81
(8,686 posts)angrychair
(10,538 posts)But not at anywhere near this price point. Right now oil is beow 60 a barrel but it would need to be over 80 to start to be financially cost effective.
Wonder Why
(5,493 posts)Response to Wicked Blue (Original post)
orangecrush This message was self-deleted by its author.