Stricter gas gathering pipeline safety rules rejected by Texas Railroad Commission

Elected officials who oversee Texas’ oil and gas industry have rejected specific safety proposals for rural gathering lines, handing a victory to industry according to E and E News.

The Texas Railroad Commission replaced the specific rules with a vaguer requirement to operate the lines in a “reasonably prudent manner.”

That “gutted” the proposal, said Carl Weimer, executive director of the Pipeline Safety Trust, an advocacy group.

“The priority is to protect the bottom line of the pipeline industry and not the health and well-being of the residents of Texas,” Weimer said.

The change was hailed by pipeline operators and others in the oil and gas industry who say rural gathering lines aren’t risky enough to justify costly rules.

“This regulation is very cost-prohibitive,” Kelly Roberts, director of health, safety and environment at EnerVest Operating LLC, said in comments to the agency about the stricter staff proposal. EnerVest has 3,745 miles of pipelines in Texas, and only 126 miles of those are currently regulated. Roberts called the staff proposal “a financial burden to all operators.”

In other comments, trade associations and companies told Texas officials that the stricter rules should apply only to larger gathering lines or that they should wait on federal gathering rules being developed by the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration.

Representatives of the three elected commissioners — Chairman Wayne Christian, Christi Craddick and Ryan Sitton — didn’t respond to a request for comment on their proposal, which is scheduled to be published Oct. 18.

The Railroad Commission rules would cover only Texas. But the Lone Star State accounts for a huge share of the country’s gathering lines.

Nationally, more than 450,000 miles of such gathering lines snake underground from oil and gas wells, generally in oil and gas regions. Texas had 160,000 miles of gathering lines in 2014 and has since added about 14,000 more miles.

Gathering lines are commonly small pipelines carrying oil and gas from wells to processing sites. But the industry has been building large, high-pressure gas pipelines that legally qualify as gathering lines. So in rural areas, they’re not regulated despite their size.

Smaller lines can also be dangerous. Last summer, there were three fatal gathering line accidents in the Permian Basin region of Texas in a two-week period. One explosion killed a 3-year-old girl and left her family members badly burned.