HARVEST MIDSTREAM COMPANY

hazardous_liquid Incident —

Incident Information

Report Date
OperatorHARVEST MIDSTREAM COMPANY
Commodity—
Pipeline Typehazardous_liquid

Location

State
Coordinates29.36933, -89.53914

Cause

CauseEQUIPMENT FAILURE
Subcause—

Casualties

Fatalities0
Injuries0

Costs

Property Damage
Lost Commodity
Public/Private Damage
Emergency Response
Environmental Remediation
Other Costs

Location Map

Incident Narrative

ON NOVEMBER 6, 2023, AN OPERATOR WAS MAKING ROUNDS AT THE BOA OSTRICA STATION WHEN HE NOTICED THE SAMPLE POT HAD OVERFLOWED OIL ONTO THE GROUND. THE OPERATOR DRAINED THE SAMPLE POT AND SHUT THE STATION DOWN TO MITIGATE LOSS OF CONTAINMENT. THE OPERATOR IMMEDIATELY NOTIFIED SUPERVISION AND HELPED TO CLEAN UP THE SPILL. IT WAS DETERMINED THAT 4 GALLONS HAD BEEN SPILLED. THE SAMPLE POT WAS REMOVED FROM SERVICE, AND IT WAS DETERMINED THAT THE PROBE HAD MALFUNCTIONED, CAUSING THE OIL TO OVERFILL THE SAMPLE POT. AT THE TIME, IT WAS DETERMINED TO NOT BE REPORTABLE TO NRC DUE TO THE VOLUME. ON NOVEMBER 16, THE OPERATOR RETURNED TO OSTRICA STATION AFTER TWO DAYS OF RAIN AND NOTICED MORE OIL SEEPING THROUGH THE ROCKS AFTER THE RAIN EVENT. HE NOTIFIED SUPERVISION AT 5:45 PM, AND IT WAS DETERMINED THAT 1 BARREL OF OIL HAD BEEN SPILLED. AT THE TIME, THE CAUSE OF THE LEAK WAS UNKNOWN. ON NOVEMBER 17, A STAND-UP TEST WAS COMPLETED TO VERIFY IF ANY UNDERGROUND PIPING LEAKING EXISTED. THE STAND-UP TEST WAS SUCCESSFULLY COMPLETED ON NOVEMBER 18. BASED ON THE SUCCESSFUL STANDUP TEST, IT WAS DETERMINED THAT THE SAMPLE POT WAS THE CAUSE OF THE ORIGINAL LEAK, AND THE HEAVY RAINS BROUGHT THE EXCESS OIL TO THE SURFACE. TO PREVENT RECURRENCE, HARVEST WILL CONSIDER REDESIGN OF THE SAMPLE POT CONNECTION AT THIS LOCATION. HARVEST WILL ALSO EVALUATE THE SAMPLE POT RELIEF SYSTEM CURRENTLY IN PLACE TO DETERMINE IF IT IS APPROPRIATE FOR THIS SERVICE.

About This Pipeline Incident

Pipeline incident data is reported to the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA). All significant incidents involving fatalities, injuries, or property damage over $50,000 must be reported.

Back to All Incidents More Incidents in