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Shell: The New Aristocracy in Mayo

category mayo | environment | feature author Monday March 07, 2005 20:15author by Terry - NUIG Ecology Society/Anarchist Federation/Organise (personal capacity)author email room101ucg at yahoo dot co dot uk Report this post to the editors

The story of Shell's attempt to re-develop Erris, North West Mayo: Interview with Maura Harrington, local campaigner, and a photo story of the sites to be vandalised and being vandalised.

Shell signs now decorate the landscape

On Wednesday March 1st at 11 a.m. Shell again attempted to access the lands of farmers in Rossport, north-west Co. Mayo. They were refused access, told that they did not have proper consent to work on the land. The land in question is on the route of a high pressure up stream pipeline which is to bring untreated gas from the Corrib Gas field to a massive on-shore refinery at Ballinaboy. This is a repeat of Shell’s earlier attempt to access the lands in January.

The previous Saturday there was an NUIG Ecology Society fact finding mission to the Erris area to see what Shell propose to do. Here follows a photo story of the development and the text of an interview we made with Maura Harrington, a local campaigner.

Related Links:

On the cushy deals multinationals are getting:
Gas Lads | The Great Oil and Gas Rip-Off | The Biggest Scandal of Them All | Some History: The environmental and social costs of living with Shell

Previous Indymedia Stories
Shell in Mayo: An Update | Corrib Gas Go Ahead Granted to Shell

A Tourist Guide to the Area
Erris and Belmullet, Co.Mayo




Hi Maura, could you explain a bit about why people oppose this development and the environmental costs and associated health and safety dangers?

That’s a fairly tall issue but, the first thing I’d say is in terms of the environment, as it is defined and normally used at the moment, I consider it a kind of inversion, because to use Bertie Ahern’s infamous phrase about snails and swans it is not essentially about snails and swans per se, as it is about the quality of the entire environment which sustains them and by sustaining them sustains us. It is the whole interaction of the environment as a holistic system.

In terms of the proposed gas refinery here it is proposed for an area which has absolutely nothing like that, in that it is completely rural and at the time that industrialisation could have helped the people here it didn’t happen through political neglect and this is the same type of political neglect that would now try to foist on an area, that has a natural resource of its own right in terms of its quality of air, soil and water, and now at the very time it is coming to an end of that kind of dirty process of doing things elsewhere, it is now that they are attempting to impose it on the people here. It would have at least 30 million cubic feet of emission per day, that’s a horrendous amount of stuff spewing out in the middle of what is now at least unspoilt.

This is into Broadhaven Bay?

No this is the emission into the air around Ballinaboy, it will not just stay the air of course, it will move as the air current moves it, and Ballinaboy is no more that one and a half or two kilometres as the crow flies from Carrowmore Lake which is the source of the regional water supply.

The lake itself is largish but very shallow which means that its area will absorb the emissions but there isn’t the depth of water to deal with them, if they could be dealt with anyway.

At the same time there will be waste water discharged into Broadhaven Bay and because the tidal nature of Broadhaven Bay is more circular than straight out to sea most of those emissions through water will come back in and lodge in areas around the shore.

At the same time you have what is an unprecedented high pressure pipeline running through the villages of Glengad, Rossport and Gortacragher and well this pipeline; the difficulty here at the moment is to get the message out to people who have only a passing knowledge of this, this pipeline is not like the Bord Gais pipelines.

It is in private ownership and the pressure of gas inside it is totally different and the pressure inside it can be up to four times greater than that of the biggest Bord Gais pipelines in the country. You normally have one bar pressure bringing the gas into houses in towns. You have transmission pressure of up to 70 bar in the big Bord Gais pipelines, this pressure in this pipeline is between 150 bar and 345 bar, at the maximum that is 5,000 pounds per square inch pressure.

It’s a horrendous concept and it is proposed to be built in an area of proven natural instability and they still think they can go ahead and do it.

Can you explain a bit about the proven natural instability and the bog surface that both the pipeline and the terminal or refinery are being constructed on?

The proposed landfall for the pipeline is at a place called Glengad or Dooncarton, it’s called by both names, and it was Dooncarton Mountain which experienced horrendous peat slides on the 19th of September 2003.

Now the pipeline is proposed to come in at the toe of the slope of Dooncarton , right at the bottom of it, it would travel parallel to Dooncarton for about a kilometre, about a 1,000 metres, then cross over into Rossport.

Now first of all to come into the inner shore there will be blasting required and there will be blasting required at the site in Rossport, where it’s gonna hit the land over there.

The local communities are naturally very worried as to what the effects of that blasting may be on an area which has already experienced such devastation and is a very short time in recovery.

Again the up stream route itself is proposed to run through some areas of reclaimed bog, that is working farmland, but also through some areas which are deep, deep, bog, at least 20 foot deep, and in that instance nobody who knows the bog can see how Shell’s contractors can propose to anchor that pipeline safely, through that terrain. It has not been done anywhere else.

I mean Andy Pyle of Shell on local radio was defending it saying that of course Bord Gais pipelines go through peat, but that is the old lie, of this pipeline being the same as a Bord Gais pipeline, it is not, and anyway Bord Gais pipelines would not run through such depth of peat.

The terminal itself is being constructed on bog, you were saying earlier that the method they are using for this has only been used in laboratories previously.

Yes, because of the refusal by Bord Plenala the first time, which related primarily but not solely to the volumes of peat, of bog, to be desegregated and dumped, this time around they came up with a solution, so-called, of removing approximately half a million ton of bog from Ballinaboy to a cut away bog area in Bord na Mona at Srahmore 8 miles away and then they also said they wouldn’t be removing quite as much peat as before. It was supposed to be 660 thousand cubic meters the first time.

So what they are not removing they propose to stabilise by mixing it with cement. Now there have been laboratory experiments done in Sweden but they have been largely laboratory, there have been a couple of very small field trials done in Trinity, but they have been tiny by comparison, and they are only the first step on from laboratory trials.

Here in Ballinaboy Shell propose, and it was accepted by the An Bord Plenala capitulation, to try this: what is essentially a very large field test, but to use it as a basis for building a gas refinery on it, and not alone that, but the flare tower, which would have to deal with releasing the pressure from the high pressure pipeline, they prose to build that on top of what they call stabilised peat.

But when you mix cement with bog, the bog is acidic, the cement is alkaline, so you have a chemical reaction which produces heat and releases certain elements including hexavalent chromium which is deadly if it gets into the water courses.

But in the EIS they all say well hexavalent chromium will travel for about one meter and then sit, this is very well behaved hexavalent chromium, and then not go near any water courses. Anyone who believes that will believe in flying pigs.

The one final thing about so-called stabilisation is that is this mixing of bog and cement works better at the higher level than when it goes further down and it has to go from the top down to bed rock if it is to be properly stabilised. Its strength fails as it goes further down so it is a recipe for potential disaster.

Can you tell us a little more about the effects on Carrowmore Lake?

Carrowmore Lake is of massive importance for all the people of the region and this would include the many people who thought there were benefits and dollars to be got from what’s now known around here as the gas. Those people have now changed their minds as well, when they see the dollars aren’t coming. The only thing at this stage we would be assured of getting from the gas is I believe the further contamination of Carrowmore Lake.

As I say it is largish, shallow, it is also a spring fed lake as well as fed from the rivers going into it, nobody knows the exact location of all the springs which feed it, we do know that the Ballinaboy river, which is going alongside the terminal site, into the lake, forms 27% of the catchment.

That river has not been properly monitored by any statutory agency since last October, the EPA, which is supposed to be responsible for testing water sources on behalf of the council, while they say they carry out tests we haven’t seen the results of them so there is a complete disconnection between any responsibility being accepted by anybody who is dealing with Shell on behalf of the people who have to deal with the consequences of the lake being damaged.

Now for the past two years it has had an algae bloom on it and that had never happened before, it has sustained angling before for years and years, but there has been no angling on the lake for the past two summers and the EPA’s explanation for that is because of a peat slide which occurred in the area in 1997.

But I would ask that given that the status of Carrowmore lake has been degraded since 2000 and given that the water quality in the Glenamoy river has been degraded and both of those are facts and the only common denominator between the two is the Civil Engineering activity at Ballinaboy, I don’t think it is illogical to say that da bhri sin Ballinaboy is the culprit, and that you are gonna get worse.

But surely this is an economic black spot where lots of people have to either migrate or emigrate for employment and surely there are economic benefits associated with this development?

I’m afraid not, that is the spin which was accepted at the beginning, but it has now become very obvious, given what has begun at that proposed site at Ballinaboy, there are at the most I would say half a dozen locals employed there, there is something like 100 or 150 working at the site at the moment, they are being bussed in from Ballina everyday, I don’t know where they are coming from, some would be from Galway, some from Clare, they are not local they are obviously people who have been contracted to Roadbridge, they are the lot doing the work, and there is no real local employment.

There is no local spin off, because one of the great economic benefits as trumpeted in the EIS was to be that of the sale of sandwiches in the local shops, now it transpires that a person who has a close connection with the County Manager has got the catering contract on site at Ballinaboy.

So how did the campaign start?

The campaign started initially, when Enterprise Oil, as it was at the time, announced the good news for the Erris region that they intended to pipe the Corrib Gas ashore in Erris and this was in the summer of 2000, at the time nobody in the area had the faintest conception of what the pipeline entailed.

I tell the story against myself, when I heard it I quite literally thought that we might be getting the piped gas the same as the water supply.

I really did think that with the gas coming into Erris that there would be gas, piped along country roads into the houses, which I know now was a ludicrous notion.

But at the time a lot of so-called movers and shakers, and those who are considered influential bought into this, and they came out in favour of it, this included both Church and State, moulders of opinion, because they thought it would be a very good idea, and because they don’t have what it takes to admit they were wrong they are still caught in that spin of the oil companies.

What have been the high points of the campaign so far?

High points, the major one would have been the refusal of permission by An Bord Plenala in April 2003. This was accompanied by the inspector’s report which ran to 377 pages, the independent consultant’s report which was over 100 pages as well.

So you consider that there was 500 pages of solid forensic examination of the proposal and in very simple terms they said it was the wrong place for such a development.

But then of course that was quickly followed by a Fianna Fail and vested interests’ rally in Bellmullet in July of that year. When you had O’Cuiv and Fahey from Galway down in Bellmullet, and the then Fianna Fail TDs for Mayo, which included Beverly Cooper-Flynn at the time, and John Carthy, weren’t there at all.

What international links have you been building with this campaign?

From an early stage in the campaign when we met with Majella McCarron, who had 30 years experience in Nigeria and who personally knew Ken Saro Wiwa, we made links with her in 2001, and she provided a link to ECCR, which is based in Oxford, they are the Ecumenical Council for Corporate Responsibility, and they are Christian Churches as the name implies.

They arose from the Nigerian scandal of ten years ago now, when they decided rather than remove their pension investments from Shell they would keep Shell in their portfolios and work as a shareholder pressure group. They were our first international link.

It was through them and thanks to them that I attended the Shell AGM in London last year. At that AGM I made lots of other international contacts the chief of which would be Global Community Monitor which is based in San Francisco.

What kind of reception did you get at the Shell AGM?

It was interesting from the Irish perspective cause people are used to any meeting you attended you can ask your question if you are not satisfied with the answer you can pursue that. I followed the same track at the AGM.

I asked a question; it was at the time that the directors’ remuneration was being voted, so I asked if the directors were aware of the health and safety implications of the proposed up stream pipeline.

The question was fielded by the chairperson Lord Oxbourgh to the head of Shell Transport and Trading who proceeded to waffle blithely on about what an important development the Corrib thing was for Ireland and it would supply two thirds of Ireland’s energy needs, which again was pure waffle, so I came back on him on a point of order and I was lucky in fact to get the mike back, it was a roving mike.

I just asked him how .87 tcf of gas could provide for two thirds of the energy needs of the country. At that he had to kick to touch and say he would discuss it with me afterward.

But it seems that was considered greatly daring by those attending the meeting because it seems people don’t come back with a point of order, they say their little bit, they get their pro forma answer and they go away for another year.

So I was lucky in that that drew attention to me at the meeting which meant that the activists from others parts of the world knew here was someone else who could be joined up with.

You mentioned earlier about being in front of bulldozers, could you tell us a little about that?

That happened in July 2002 and it is a small scale version of what Shell do globally, they had begun to do horrible damage at the beach in Glengad, they had broken through the sandy cliff base, and they had a digger, pulling down the shore, so we were there that morning, a group of us from about 8 in the morning, we were walking along the shore to show and establish that the public had a right of access along the foreshore.

The digger was just kinda on the shore and Shell they called the Garda, so the Garda came spoke with us, spoke with the oil company lot and the Garda were given a guarantee that the digger would be moved up, off the shore, onto land, and at that everybody left, those of us who had been walking the beach and the Garda and we saw the digger being pulled up, that was fine, we went away.

I went into my school but before I left there to go home I drove back through Glengad and lo and behold the digger was further down the shore. So I went down on my own and it was a local person driving the digger, he is actually related to be, a Sweeny, and what I said to him, though I doubt he heard as he had the engine going at the time, I mentioned my grandfather, god rest him he is long dead, I told him Anthony Sweeny would come back and haunt him, whatever Anthony Sweeny’s spirit did it was enough for yer man to switch off the machine leaving the bucket touching the ground and just instinctively I hopped up on it and sat on it, and I had my mobile phone so I just rang around and more people came to stay with me.

What would you like people who are not in the immediate Bangor Erris area, but sympathetic to the campaign, to do?

Well I would first of all extend a very warm welcome to them to please come here. I know that to come to Erris you have to make a conscious effort to do so because we are not on the way to anywhere other than to America, but I do believe that if people who have, if only a passing interest in the subject, if you could given the opportunity, when the weather improves, which it does sometimes in Erris, if you could make the journey down. >br>
You come to either Ballina or Castlebar and into a place called Bangor Erris and once you get there you can follow the Shell signs which would bring you to the centre of this inglorious activity and certainly I believe that once you see the area you will agree with us that it is not the place for a gas refinery and an unprecedented high pressure up stream pipeline.

Maura Harrington at the Ballinaboy Refinery site
Maura Harrington at the Ballinaboy Refinery site

Broadhaven Bay, into which emissions will be pumped
Broadhaven Bay, into which emissions will be pumped

Carrowmore Lake, already degraded by Shell related civil engineering
Carrowmore Lake, already degraded by Shell related civil engineering

Planing Permission sign at Ballinaboy Refinery site
Planing Permission sign at Ballinaboy Refinery site

author by Terry - NUIG Ecology Society/Anarchist Federation/Organise (personal capacity)publication date Thu Mar 03, 2005 20:45author email room101ucg at yahoo dot co dot ukauthor address author phone Report this post to the editors

Here is Ballinaboy, the site of the refinery, what they are doing here is building themselves a hard surface and preparaing before construction proper starts. It is on what was formerly Coilte land and which was, rumours have it, given away for a very nominal price.

The site of the refinery at Ballinaboy
The site of the refinery at Ballinaboy

Clearing bog at Ballinaboy
Clearing bog at Ballinaboy

Hippy spotter at the first gate of the Ballinaboy construction site
Hippy spotter at the first gate of the Ballinaboy construction site

Him again
Him again

The new 'oil road' at Ballinaboy refinery site
The new 'oil road' at Ballinaboy refinery site

author by Terry - NUIG Ecology Society/Anarchist Federation/Organise (personal capacity)publication date Thu Mar 03, 2005 20:57author email room101ucg at yahoo dot co dot ukauthor address author phone Report this post to the editors

More photos of the refinery site...

The site
The site

New shiny taxpayer funded roads and signs everywhere
New shiny taxpayer funded roads and signs everywhere

Private property, something Shell have a idiosyncratic definition of
Private property, something Shell have a idiosyncratic definition of

Site Entrance
Site Entrance

There is considerable amounts of heavy traffic associated with this construction
There is considerable amounts of heavy traffic associated with this construction

author by Terry - NUIG Ecology Society/Anarchist Federation/Organisepublication date Thu Mar 03, 2005 21:10author email room101ucg at yahoo dot co dot ukauthor address author phone Report this post to the editors

Carrowmore Lake, provides the region's water supply

It is an international regulation protected habitat.

Appreciations of Carrowmore Lake by local schoolchildren and A.E.

The lake
The lake

Taking a sample from the lake
Taking a sample from the lake

Mayo County Council working on a new bridge for the multinationals, beside Carrowmore Lake
Mayo County Council working on a new bridge for the multinationals, beside Carrowmore Lake

More Mayo Co Co, who appear to be taking no environmental precautions
More Mayo Co Co, who appear to be taking no environmental precautions

author by Terrypublication date Thu Mar 03, 2005 21:12author address author phone Report this post to the editors

It is an international regulation protected habitat.
See: http://www.unep-wcmc.org/protected_areas/data/un_eclist.htm

Appreciations of Carrowmore Lake by local schoolchildren and A.E.
See: http://www.inver.org/ceantar/lake.html

author by Terrypublication date Thu Mar 03, 2005 21:18author address author phone Report this post to the editors

This is the site at Srahmore where a dumping ground for the peat removed from Ballinaboy is to be. At the moment they are bringing in loads of rock for a hard surface for this peat.

There is a continuous  stream of trucks
There is a continuous stream of trucks

More trucks
More trucks

author by Terrypublication date Thu Mar 03, 2005 21:24author address author phone Report this post to the editors

As discussed above the pipeline is to adjoin Dooncarton Mountain, where there was a landslide in September of 2003.

This road was removed by the landslide
This road was removed by the landslide

The elderly lady who lives in this house had to open her front and back doors to let the peat slide through
The elderly lady who lives in this house had to open her front and back doors to let the peat slide through

The estuary through which the pipeline is to go
The estuary through which the pipeline is to go

Slope of Dooncarton
Slope of Dooncarton

In the background you can see the holes left by the peat slide
In the background you can see the holes left by the peat slide

author by Terrypublication date Thu Mar 03, 2005 21:39author address author phone Report this post to the editors

These are photos of the estuary at the start of Broadhaven bay alongside and across which the pipeline is to be built.

The estuary
The estuary

The pipeline is to be on the far side of estuary, see the black line.
The pipeline is to be on the far side of estuary, see the black line.

The estuary
The estuary

author by Terrypublication date Thu Mar 03, 2005 23:02author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Some Material Sent to me by another local activist:


This is all about safety and not anything else. We know - as does everyone who looks - that the benefits from this project are all for Shell shareholders -the best of luck to them, they need the extra on to last years 18000,000,000 euro, the poor things. Lives are directly at risk.
Enclosed an abstract from a publication for the British Health and Safety Executive, in name the equivalent of our H&SA. There are lots of other examples: 2 from an OECD Environmental Health and Safety Publication "Recent examples are the leakage of LPG from a pipeline in the USSR in 1989 which was ignited by passing trains and is estimated to have killed 500+ people and the rupture of a high-pressure methane pipeline in Venezuela in 1994 which killed 35 people."The Corrib upstream pipeline is unprecedented in its pressure and location past occupied houses and across roads on very unstable bog: even the Minister Dempsey now admits that it is unprecedented.
Report on a Study of International Pipeline Accidents* (excerpts and summaries)
*Prepared by Mechphyic Scientific Consultants for the Health and Safety Executive (HSE contract 3852/R72.043)

Appendix A ­ Bealton, Virginia, USA 09/06/1974
Substance Natural gas
Diameter of pipeline 762mm (30")
Wall thickness 7.9mm (0.312")
Pressure 51.5 bar (718 PSIG)
Depth of cover Unknown
Cause of failure Hydrogen stress cracking in a hard spot
Area of burn 213m x 122m
Minimum duration of fire 3.42 hours
Distance to pipe fragments 91m
Crater depth 2.1m (7¹)
Description Resulting fire in a rural district burned an area 312m long and 122m wide



Appendix B ­ Beaumont, Kentucky, USA 27/04/1985
Substance Natural gas
Diameter of pipeline 762mm (30")
Wall thickness 11.9mm (0.469")
Pressure 70.7 bar (992 PSIG)
Depth of cover 1.8m (6¹)
Cause of failure Atmospheric corrosion of pipe wall
Area of burn 213m x 152m
Minimum duration of fire 3.35 hours
Distance to pipe fragments Unknown
Crater depth 3.7m (12¹)
Description Hemispherical flame with highly curved jet-fire, burned the area mainly downstream and across a public highway



Appendix C ­ Burstall, Saskatchewan, Canada 15/02/1994
Substance Natural gas
Diameter of pipeline 1067mm (42")
Wall thickness 12mm (0.469")
Pressure 83.22 bar (8322 kPa)
Depth of cover 1.5m
Cause of failure Ductile fracture from atomic hydrogen inclusions
Area of burn 8.5 Ha
Minimum duration of fire 4 hours
Distance to pipe fragments 125m
Crater depth Unknown
Description Possible fire ball of 200m height, followed by a grounded jet fire, observed from a distance of 80km (50 miles)
Appendix D ­ Cartwright, Louisiana, USA 09/08/1976
Substance Natural gas
Diameter of pipeline 508mm (20")
Wall thickness 6.35mm (0.25")
Pressure 55 bar (770 PSIG)
Depth of cover Bare cover
Cause of failure Gouged by road grader machine
Area of burn 4.6 Ha (9 acres)
Minimum duration of fire 40 mins
Distance to pipe fragments Unknown
Crater depth 3.05m (10¹)
Description 45m long jet flames engulfed woodland, completely destroyed several dwellings and damaged a brick house 45m away with radiated heat



Appendix E ­ Cideville, Normandy, France 28/07/1994
Substance Natural gas
Diameter of pipeline 457.2mm
Wall thickness 5.2mm
Pressure 45 bar
Depth of cover 1.2m
Cause of failure Lightning strike
Area of burn 30 to 50m radius
Minimum duration of fire 7 hours
Distance to pipe fragments na
Crater depth na
Description Buried pipeline struck by lightning (not uncommon) in two places, resulting fire burning grass and a maize field



Appendix F ­ Edison, New Jersey, USA 23/03/1994
Substance Natural gas
Diameter of pipeline 914.4mm (36")
Wall thickness 17.1mm (0.675")
Pressure 69.2 bar (970 PSIG)
Depth of cover 3.7m (12¹)
Cause of failure Gouge grew into crack through metal fatigue
Area of burn 135m x 290m
Minimum duration of fire 2.5 hours to shutdown
Distance to pipe fragments Over 244m
Crater depth 4.3m (14¹)
Description 400-500 foot high flames, ignited 8 houses in a nearby apartment complex



Appendix G ­ Erlangen, Bavaria, Germany 25/03/1984
Substance Natural gas
Diameter of pipeline 700mm
Wall thickness 7mm assumed
Pressure 67.5 bar
Depth of cover 1m assumed
Cause of failure Unknown
Area of burn 125,000 sq metres (200m radius)
Minimum duration of fire Unknown
Distance to pipe fragments unknown
Crater depth 3 ­ 4m
Description Burned an area of 200m radius, possibly a fireball followed by a vertical jet fire



Appendix H ­ Houston, Texas, USA 09/09/1969
Substance Natural gas
Diameter of pipeline 355mm (14")
Wall thickness 6.35mm (0.25")
Pressure 56.5 bar (789 PSIG)
Depth of cover Unknown
Cause of failure Unknown
Area of burn 99m x 91m
Minimum duration of fire 6.5 hours
Distance to pipe fragments Unknown
Crater depth Unknown
Description Destroyed 13 houses up to 250 feet from the rupture, 8 to 10 minutes after the rupture occurred



Appendix I ­ La Salle River Crossing, Manitoba, Canada 15/04/1996
Substance Natural gas
Diameter of pipeline 864mm
Wall thickness 12.7mm
Pressure 50 bar (5000 kPa)
Depth of cover Over 1.3m, on river bed
Cause of failure Unknown
Area of burn Unknown
Minimum duration of fire 45 mins
Distance to pipe fragments 40m
Crater depth 5m
Description Trees and vegetation on both sides of the river damaged or destroyed, a house burned 178m south of the rupture



Appendix J ­ Lancaster, Kentucky, USA 21/02/1986
Substance Natural gas
Diameter of pipeline 762mm (30")
Wall thickness 9.5mm (0.375")
Pressure 70.4 bar (987 PSIG)
Depth of cover 1.8m (6¹) assumed
Cause of failure Pipe corrosion from insufficient protection
Area of burn Over 6 Ha (15 acres)
Minimum duration of fire 1.83 hours
Distance to pipe fragments Unknown
Crater depth 1.8m (6¹)
Description Houses and sheds, 15 acres of pasture and woodland, and two people 160m from the rupture, all burned from three jet fires



Appendix K ­ Latchford, Ontario, Canada 23/07/1994
Substance Natural gas
Diameter of pipeline 914mm
Wall thickness 9.14mm
Pressure 68.95 bar (6895 kPa)
Depth of cover 0.914m
Cause of failure External wall corrosion
Area of burn 47,000 sq metres (122m radius)
Minimum duration of fire 84 mins
Distance to pipe fragments 350m minimum
Crater depth 2 ­ 4 m
Description Probable dome-fire and explosion, scattered debris and ignited trees and undergrowth



Appendix L ­ Manassas and Locust Grove, Virginia, USA 06/03/1980
Substance Kerosene and fuel oil
Diameter of pipeline 813mm (32")
Wall thickness 7.1mm (0.281")
Pressure na
Depth of cover na
Cause of failure Pressure surge causing two pipeline failures
Area of spill Bullrun River, Occoquan Reservoir
Minimum duration of pollution 14 days
Distance to pipe fragments na
Crater depth na
Description 336,000 american gallons of kerosene and 91,980 american gallons of fuel oil released; waterfowl, small animals and 10-15,000 fish killed by pollution over 2 weeks



Appendix M ­ Mounds View, Minnesota, USA 08/07/1986
Substance Gasoline
Diameter of pipeline 203mm (8")
Wall thickness Unknown
Pressure 102 bar (1,434 PSIG)
Depth of cover Unknown
Cause of failure Unknown
Area of burn 15m x 670m (10,000 sq metres)
Minimum duration of fire 3.25 hours
Distance to pipe fragments na
Crater depth na
Description Gasoline spill in residential area ignited by passing vehicle, damaged buildings, killed 600 fish and other animals, polluted shallow ground water aquifer and caused two human fatalities



Appendix N ­ Palaceknowe, Moffat, Scotland 22/12/1993
Substance Natural gas
Diameter of pipeline 914mm (36")
Wall thickness 19.05mm
Pressure 48 bar (718 PSIG)
Depth of cover 3m
Cause of failure Excessive longitudinal stress and differential movement
Area of burn na
Minimum duration of fire na
Distance to pipe fragments na
Crater depth 4m
Description Pipeline failed where it passed under a road, due to concentrated stresses by topsoil around protective concrete raft, causing differential movement. Did not ignite



Appendix O ­ Natchitoches, Louisiana, USA 04/03/1965
Substance Natural gas
Diameter of pipeline 610mm (24")
Wall thickness 6.35mm (0.25")
Pressure 54.6 bar (762 PSIG)
Depth of cover 1m (40")
Cause of failure Cracked stress corrosion
Area of burn 55,850 sq metres (13.8 acres)
Minimum duration of fire Over 60 mins
Distance to pipe fragments 107m maximum
Crater depth 4.5m (15¹)
Description Two horizontal jet-fires burned buildings, vehicles, pine woods and a section of public road



Appendix P ­ Pine Bluff, Arkansas, USA 01/10/1982
Substance Natural gas
Diameter of pipeline 560mm (22")
Wall thickness Possibly 12mm (0.5")
Pressure 19 bar (260 PSIG)
Depth of cover 8¹ trench
Cause of failure Temporary end cap blew off
Area of burn 28m of trench
Minimum duration of fire Short flash fire
Distance to pipe fragments na
Crater depth na
Description 7 welders and workmen engulfed in flash fire in pipeline trench, 4 admitted to intensive care, all survived



Appendix Q ­ Rapid City, Manitoba, Canada 29/07/1995
Substance Natural gas
Diameter of pipeline 1067mm and 914mm
Wall thickness 8.74mm and 9.42mm
Pressure 60.68 bar (6068 kPa)
Depth of cover 4m
Cause of failure Cracked stress corrosion
Area of burn 19.62 Ha
Minimum duration of fire 2.37 hours
Distance to pipe fragments 90m
Crater depth 5m
Description Two pipeline failures in close proximity, producing two jet-fires that cut trenches into the surrounding terrain


#Corrib Offshore EIS November 2001

Proposed Corrib upstream pipeline, Erris, County Mayo, Ireland
#Substance Untreated natural gas, hydrate and corrosion inhibitors
#Diameter of pipeline 500mm (20")
#Wall thickness 25.4mm (1")
#Pressure 345 bar(g) (design pressure)
150 bar(g) (region of normal operating pressure)
#Depth of cover 1.2m (4¹)
Cause of failure ?
Area of burn ?
Minimum duration of fire ?
Distance to pipe fragments ?
Crater depth ?
Description High possibility of differential settlement; significantly higher operating pressures than standard treated gas pipelines; incorporated umbilical, adjacent dwellings and public road traffic likely sources of ignition in event of failure

author by Rexpublication date Tue Mar 08, 2005 14:41author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Thanks, excellent story, research, photos and interview

author by Johnpublication date Tue Mar 08, 2005 17:55author address author phone Report this post to the editors

So, do you have electricity connected to your house? Would you consider doing without it? If your answers are 'yes' and 'no', how do you propose that Ireland generate enough electricity for every house and business in the country? Ireland only produces 20% to 30% of its energy needs. Its the greatest weakness in an otherwise highly successful economy. We need to produce as much energy as possible from our own resources. People like you want the benefits of a modern industrial economy while opposing development that makes such an economy possible. Perhaps the solution is to stop this development, but also disconnect Mayo from the national grid and let them fend for themselves energy-wise.

author by Terrypublication date Tue Mar 08, 2005 18:25author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Hmmmm maybe gas treated and refined off-shore like in Kinsale, and everywhere else in the world, John...or maybe even the totally radical idea that perhaps some of the wealth generated by the development might..just might...be put to social use..as in say Scotland.

author by Terrypublication date Tue Mar 08, 2005 18:26author address author phone Report this post to the editors

and in any case John this gas is to be exported....

author by Jesspublication date Tue Mar 08, 2005 22:48author address author phone Report this post to the editors

shame about the end there (as the info about the Shell gasline was exelent thanks), but yes it does make us look at how we keep our modern industrial society afloat, and surely make us wonder; Is it worth it?? This Shell-job is appalling, like all the other Shell-jobs. Like all the other oil/coal/mineral/lumber extractions accross the planet.
This needs to be fought here, like we need to fight against this mess everywhere else too.

author by jacpublication date Tue Mar 08, 2005 23:40author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Where does Mayo's son and Fianna Fail "Fall Guy" Ray Burke come into the equation?

author by Terrypublication date Tue Mar 08, 2005 23:43author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Jac follow some of the links up there - lots on that angle, which is a VERY important one.

author by Michelle Clarke - Social Justice and Ethics - Pleasepublication date Mon Mar 14, 2005 01:43author address author phone Report this post to the editors

This is an excellent site and worth attention.

Today's papers provided more interesting information. Today, the focus was Tara and the number of developers set to make a 'killing' on a development that basically raises the the ground our heritage yet again....This time it is the site of the High Kings of Ireland and pagan times in Ireland.

Mayo: How; why; is it greed?; who benefits and what do we lose? Do we need to lose our unusual heritage at the hands of oil companies willing to exploit resources that people still don't grasp that oil is a finite resource. The supply and demand is about prices being fixed at the supply side and other resources exploited. Opec dictated this in the 1970's and to date still hold a tight reign on supply to manipulate price.

Thanks for the website leads.

I will give a brief outline of a most informative article published in Magill magazine in March 2002. Sandra Mara wrote this and the heading reads:-

Gas Lads: The Politicians who sold Ireland's silver......and gas give-away.

A few votes.....the US$ and our gas resources a trade-off. This is about the Irish Politics of the 1980's and 1990's.

The findings revealed that Ireland contains 'thousands of oil and gas bearing zones in kilometres of water' . This includes a lucrative finding in the North Corrib gas fields.

The 1980's Ireland was about harsh times. Unembployment was two digit and kept rising; and unlike the 1950's, the newly educated Irish people were having to emigrate. For certain people 'in the know' the dream was Oil, property gains, tax breaks, horse interests...

Now we have the Trinbunals and enquiries into corruption in the 1980's: I ask: Is the Price Tag we pay for the Celtic Tiger just too much? Ethics, Justice, Equity, Core Values appear to have been swept aside for certain people or companies or corporates to have money, excessive money at the expense of the vulnerable.

In the 1960's the Government held export licences for Irish territorial waters. By the 1990's, long after the Sea finds had been realised, it was decided to introduce an oil tax regime of 25%. (one of the most favourable in the world). This is the time of the tax breaks to the financialcompanies in the Financial Services Centre, the time of the Section 23 breaks to people buying second homes to let; etc.

What a coincidence?: Surely this eeks of Department of Finance policy (Minister McCreevy) time. Yes and Ray Burke, Taoiseach Ahern etc.

It didn't stop there. The next benefit to come was that ALL costs could be written off against profits. This decision again merits examination. Why?

An then....to place the icing on the cake, the Government agreed to abolish Royalities.

Yes, the oil companies and in this case Shell is the benefactor. The loss is to the people of Ireland, to the wild heritage of our western region, to pollution, to the interruption of peat land that stretches for miles; to the wildlife that in centuries gone by was sought out by then capitalists for grouse hunting and shoots!!!!

Did anyone realise that Norway over a century ago was one of the poorest Nations in Europe? Norway in the 1970's recognised their resources and negotiated a market position in offshore production......Review this in the light of the foregoing......Ireland in fact chose to sell off their 'family silver'.

Who was responsible? Is the price tag too high? Did the government exceed their 'powers' in selling off these resources.

Is there an Integrity about this transaction?

What about other Oil companies who come to Ireland to establish oil fields? Would the 'Hello' deal stand for them also and if so why?

This law is intricate. In the 1940's, there were mines established in Clare employing some 500 people for phosphate. The then Government under De Valera seized the mines and the sole owner, in his eighties, won his case in the High Court and regained the rights and compensation for the mines.

I like Art and I particularly like Art using scenes from the Burren and Mayo.

I love the paintings of Alan Kenny; of Mr. Flack; of the Webb family. Why do we need to risk what can be associated with such Environmental Risks? and worse, for a cheap financial pay-off that is now out of date.


Michelle Clarke.

author by Rick.Bpublication date Fri Dec 30, 2005 04:12author email deepdiver4866 at yahoo dot comauthor address author phone Report this post to the editors

Is anybody aware of the North-South Gasline which will be commencing in 2006 on the east side (Dublin-Belfast) I am enquiring about whos got the contract to do this project? As i have interest.

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