Lies, damned lies, and Canadian pipeline studies

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A government study of tar sands corrosion ignores real pipeline conditions

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Before it will flow through a pipeline, bitumen from the tar sands must be diluted with toxic chemicals, then heated.

“Study eats into oil-sands opponents’ corrosion claims.”

That was the headline on a prominently placed article in the November 23 Globe and Mail. It reported a study by the federal department of Natural Resources that claims to show diluted bitumen isn’t more corrosive than regular crude. In fact, the study says the tar sands gunk is “among the least corrosive” types of oil.

This, the G&M article says, “is a major strike against a key argument made by opponents of pipelines.”

Unlike the Globe & Mail reporter, Anthony Swift of the Natural Resources Defense Council took the time to read the small print. He tells us:

  1. The study assumes the pipelines operate at room temperature, rather than the much higher temperatures needed to make diluted bitumen flow. High temperatures significantly increase corrosion. “It’s not surprising to find that all crudes in low temperature lab settings aren’t particularly corrosive. It’s not particularly useful either.”
  2. The study considered only internal pipeline corrosion, even though pipelines carrying heated crude are known to have “nearly ten times the external corrosion failure rate when compared to ambient temperature pipelines.” External corrosion was a significant factor in the huge pipeline break in the Kalamazoo river.

In short, this study seems to be one more example of Natural Resources Canada acting as a public relations agency for the oil industry. When profits are at risk, science takes a back seat.

—–
Ian

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