Louisiana pipeline blast kills 1, injures 1
HOUSTON, Dec 14 (Reuters) - A motorist was killed and another was injured when the Columbia Gulf natural gas pipeline in northeast Louisiana exploded on Friday afternoon near an interstate highway, said a Louisiana State Police spokeswoman.
All three natural gas lines that make up Columbia Gulf Pipeline, which carries natural gas to the Midwest, Northeast and Southeast United States, were shut at the blast site near Delhi, Louisiana, pipeline operator NiSource Inc (NI.N) said in a posting on its Web site.
Corbin Fawcett, 47, of Haleyville, Alabama, and George McCaleb, 58, of Fayetteville, Alabama, were traveling east in a pickup truck on Interstate Highway 20 when the pipeline exploded at about 1 p.m. CST (1900 GMT), said Sgt. Julie Lewis of the Louisiana State Police.
Earlier media reports said the deceased man was fishing near the pipeline when it exploded, but those were incorrect, Lewis said.
Fawcett was killed and McCaleb was taken to a hospital for treatment of second-degree burns to his hands.
In the Web site posting, NiSource said it expected to resume moving gas through one of the lines that make up the pipeline Friday night.
NiSource declared force majeure for the line on which the explosion occurred. Force majeure is invoked when a company cannot comply with the terms of a contract for reasons beyond its control.
"It's too early to say what impact this will have on the price of gas," said Rand LaVonn, spokesman for Dallas-based Atmos Energy Corp (ATO.N), the nation's largest natural gas-only distributor serving a dozen states. Atmos also procures gas for industrial and municipal customers in 22 states.
"It will impact the supply of gas as Atmos and others reroute gas from one pipeline to another," LaVonn said. "We'll have to wait and see."
The Columbia Gulf pipeline stretches 4,200 miles (6,759 kilometers) across Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee and Kentucky. It interconnects with every major pipeline system on the Gulf Coast and moves gas to markets in the U.S. Midwest, Southeast and Northeast.
About six miles of Interstate 20 will remain shut until Louisiana officials determine that the highway and nearby bridges were not damaged in the blast and following fire.
The two lines next to the line that blew up were shut for evaluation to determine if they were damaged in the blast, NiSource said.
Natural gas is sold to utilities for home-heating and to produce electricity, as well as to municipalities and industrial and manufacturing companies. (Reporting by Erwin Seba, Joe Silha, Eileen O'Grady, Bruce Nichols, Anna Driver and Robert Campbell, writing by Erwin Seba; Editing by Marguerita Choy)
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