Small crack in pipeline may have delayed detection of spill off California coast

Video of the ruptured pipeline that spilled tens of thousands of litres of crude oil off Southern California shows a thin crack along the top of the pipe that could indicate a slow leak that initially was difficult to detect, experts said Thursday.

The 33-centimetre narrow gash could explain why signs of an oil slick were seen Friday night but the spill eluded detection by the pipeline operator until Saturday morning, said Richard Kuprewicz, a private pipeline accident investigator and consultant.

"My experience suggests this would be a darned hard leak to remotely determine quickly," Kuprewicz said. "An opening of this type, on a 27-kilometre underwater pipe is very hard to spot by remote indications. These crack-type releases are lower rate and can go for quite a while."

When pipes experience a catastrophic failure the breach typically is much bigger, what's referred to in the industry as a "fish mouth" rupture because it gapes wide like the mouth of a fish, he said.

Amplify Energy, a Houston-based company that owns and operates three offshore oil platforms and the pipeline south of Los Angeles, said it didn't know there had been a spill until its workers detected an oil sheen on the water Saturday at 8:09 a.m. local time. The cause of the spill is under investigation by numerous agencies as the cleanup continues along miles of shoreline on the Orange County coast south of the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, Calif.

That data shows the Rotterdam Express, a German-flagged ship nearly 305 metres long, was assigned to anchorage SF-3, the closest to where the pipeline ruptured off Huntington Beach. The ship made three unusual movements over two days that appear to put it over the pipeline.

The Rotterdam Express is seen at the Port of Oakland on Wednesday. (Josh Edelson/The Associated Press)

The U.S. Coast Guard is investigating whether a ship's anchor might have hooked and bent the pipeline. Amplify has said publicly that no more than 477,000 litres leaked. But it also told federal investigators the total amount may only be 111,300 litres.

Officials said Wednesday they were investigating whether a ship waiting to offload its cargo might have had something to do with the leak. Coast Guard investigators boarded the massive German-flagged container ship Rotterdam Express to determine if it was involved in the spill. The Rotterdam was the ship anchored closest to the pipeline last week.

Coast Guard interviewed captain, crew

Hapag-Lloyd, the shipping company that operates the vessel, confirmed Thursday that investigators boarded the ship while it was docked at the Port of Oakland in San Francisco Bay. The Coast Guard interviewed the captain and crew and was provided access to the logbook showing the ship's locations, according to Nils Haupt, a spokesman at Hapag-Lloyd's headquarters in Hamburg, Germany.

Afterward, the Coast Guard called the company to say the Rotterdam no longer was under scrutiny for the spill, Haupt said. The ship was cleared to depart Oakland and was headed to Mexico.

The leak occurred about eight kilometres offshore at a depth of about 30 metres, investigators said. A 1,219-metre section of the pipeline was dislodged 32 metres, bent back like the string on a bow, Amplify's CEO Martyn Willsher has said.

Questions remain about when the oil company knew it had a problem and delays in reporting the spill.

Bags of crude oil collected by workers stack on a beach after an oil spill in Newport Beach, Calif., on Thursday. (Ringo H.W. Chiu/The Associated Press)

A foreign ship anchored in the waters off Huntington Beach reported to the Coast Guard that it saw a sheen longer than 3.2 kilometres just after 6 p.m. A satellite image shot by the European Space Agency indicated a likely oil slick in the area around 7 p.m. and was reported to the Coast Guard after 2 a.m. by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Federal pipeline safety regulators have put the time of the incident at 2:30 a.m. Saturday but say the company didn't shut down the pipeline until 6:01 a.m. and didn't report the leak to the Coast Guard until 9:07 a.m. Federal and state rules require immediate notification of spills.

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