Rover Pipeline

From Global Energy Monitor
This article is part of the Global Fossil Infrastructure Tracker, a project of Global Energy Monitor.
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Rover Pipeline is an operating oil pipeline in Ohio and Michigan, USA, with laterals into Pennsylvania and West Virginia, USA, and Ontario, Canada.[1]

Location

The pipeline runs from Ohio, USA to Howell, Michigan, USA, with laterals into Pennsylvania and West Virginia, USA.[2]

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Project Details

Phase 1

The pipeline received approval from U.S Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) for the Phase 1A and Phase 1B of the project in August and December 2017, respectively. [3][4][5]

  • Operator: Rover Pipeline[6]
  • Owner: Energy Transfer Equity[6]
  • Capacity: 1,700 million cubic feet per day[6]
  • Length: 1,144.2 kilometers / 711 miles[6]
  • Diameter: 42-inches[6]
  • Status: Operating[6]
  • Start Year: 2017[6]
  • Cost: US$3 billion[6]

Phase 2

The second phase of the pipeline project was approved by the U.S Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) in May 2018. [7][8] Phase 2 of the project included setting up Mainline Compressor Station 3 located in Crawford County, Ohio, and a section of the line between Mainline Compressor Station 2, in Wayne County, Ohio, and Mainline Compressor Station 3.[7]

  • Operator: Rover Pipeline[6]
  • Owner: Energy Transfer Equity[1]
  • Capacity: 1,550 million cubic feet per day[6]
  • Length: 0.0 new kilometers, capacity expansion only[6]
  • Diameter: 42-inches[6]
  • Status: Operating[6]
  • Start Year: 2018[6]
  • Cost: US$1.22 billion[6]

Background

The Rover Pipeline is a 711-mile pipeline which transports up to 3.25 billion cubic feet per day of domestically produced natural gas from the Marcellus and Utica Shale production areas to markets across the U.S. as well as into the Union Gas Dawn Storage Hub in Ontario, Canada, for redistribution back into the U.S. or into the Canadian market. Rover pipeline gathers gas from processing plants in West Virginia, Eastern Ohio and Western Pennsylvania as well as various dry gas-gathering systems for delivery to the Midwest Hub near Defiance, Ohio, where about 68 percent of the gas is delivered via interconnects with existing pipelines in Ohio and West Virginia for distribution to markets across the U.S. The remaining 32 percent of the natural gas is delivered to markets in Michigan through an interconnect in Livingston County, Michigan, with the existing Vector Pipeline.[9]

Opposition

Grassroots groups in Michigan and Ohio filed a complaint in May of 2017 asking the FERC to halt construction of Energy Transfer's Rover Pipeline through the two states and reopen an environmental impact review because of recent environmental incidents. Michigan Residents Against the ET Rover Pipeline and Ohio-based non-profit FreshWater Accountability Project are asking FERC to revoke the certificate issued to the company in February that allowed it to start building the 42-inch natural gas pipeline, which was not yet in operation. Critics cited concerns over several environmental violations that have occurred in Ohio, including a spillage of about 2 million gallons of drilling fluid when the company was drilling under the Tuscarawas River near Navarre in Stark County, about 60 miles south of Cleveland. The state's Environmental Protection Agency fined the company $431,000 for the spill. One of several concerns outlined in the grassroots groups' complaint to FERC is that pipeline construction near waterways in Michigan could result in similar incidents. The complaint specifically mentions the risk pipeline construction could pose to a creek that flows into Portage Lake near Hell, Michigan, along the line between Livingston and Washtenaw counties. The creek is home to endangered species. The environmental impact statement FERC approved required the company to use turbine engines, however, critics say more recent documents show the company is planning to use "unapproved" reciprocating engines. [10] FERC ordered a civil penalty of $40 million on Energy Transfer Partners for alleged violation during construction of the pipeline in Ohio. The violations included adding diesel fuel and other toxic and unapproved additives in drilling mud during its horizontal directional drilling (HDD) operation under the Tuscarawas River in Stark County, Ohio.[11]

Also in May of 2017, documents filed with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) show that Energy Transfer Partners is in the midst of a dispute with the Ohio State Historic Preservation Office over a $1.5 million annual payment owed to the state agency as part of a five-year agreement signed in February. Energy Transfer Partners was set to pay the preservation office in exchange for bulldozing the Stoneman House, a historic home built in 1843 in Dennison, Ohio, whose razing occurred during construction of the Rover pipeline. The pipeline owner initially bulldozed the historic home, located near a compressor station, without notifying FERC, as the law requires. In May 2015, Energy Transfer Partners purchased the Stoneman House from the Ohio State Historic Preservation Office for $1.3 million and bulldozed it just two weeks later, according to FERC documents. The $1.5 million annual payment owed to the Ohio State Historic Preservation Office was in addition to the initial cost of purchasing the home. The annual payments were supposed to go toward history education programs administered by the office, as agreed upon by FERC, the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, Energy Transfer Partners, and the Ohio State Historic Preservation Office.[12]

In July of 2017, a hundred protestors near Silver Lake, Michigan, marched in opposition to the pipeline. Critics of the pipeline argue there's a better alternative route further east within an existing ITC power line corridor which was considered by Rover but ultimately rejected. If the pipeline is going to pass close to homes and a summer camp for children, local activists argue the gas at least should be odorized so leaks can be detected before there's a major disaster. Some local residents and officials, including the county board, are hoping the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will revoke the permit for the project.[13]

In August 2017 the pipeline was partially commissioned,[14] and FERC approved commissioning of the full pipeline in November 2018.[15]

Spills

Construction of the Rover pipeline began in March 2017. Within weeks, a pair of spills related to the project released more than 2 million gallons of drilling fluid into Ohio wetlands. That project became fully operational late in 2018.[16]

Energy Transfer Partners, the Texas-based pipeline operator that owns the controversial Dakota Access Pipeline, came coming under renewed scrutiny for two spills that released more than 2 million gallons of drilling fluid into Ohio wetlands in April of 2017. A violation notice made public this week indicates about 50,000 gallons of drilling fluid — a thick gel-like substance used to cut through rock during pipeline construction — was released near Richland County, Ohio. The spill was discovered April 14, according to the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. An estimated 2 million gallons spilled in another incident discovered April 13 near the Tuscarawas River south of Navarre. Both spills were connected to the company’s construction of the Rover Pipeline, a $4.2 billion dollar project. An Ohio Environmental Protection Agency filing notes that the spills “impacted water quality.” Both spills contain bentonite, a mineral used to help cat litter clump when it gets wet and does not break down easily in water, making it difficult to remove large clumps from aquifers.[17]

Expansion Projects

Rover Expansion Project

According to the U.S.'s Energy Information Administration (EIA), no new construction or additional pipeline length was required in the expansion project. The project added a capacity of 175 million cubic feet per day from 2020.[6]

  • Operator: Rover Pipeline[6]
  • Owner: Energy Transfer Equity
  • Capacity: 175 million cubic feet per day[6]
  • Length: 0 new kilometers / miles[6]
  • Status: Operating[6]
  • Start year: 2020[6]


The construction of the project was completed in April 2020 and began service the same year.[6]

Wick Meter Station Expansion Project

According to the U.S.'s Energy Information Administration (EIA), the expansion project will increase takeaway capacity out of the Marcellus Formation and add a new interconnection with the Equitrans gas pipeline system, both within West Virginia.[6]

  • Operator: Rover Pipeline[6]
  • Owner: Energy Transfer Equity
  • Capacity: 300 million cubic feet per day[6]
  • Length: 0 new kilometers / miles[6]
  • Cost: US$5 million[6]
  • Status: Operating[6]
  • Start Year: 2020[6]


The construction of the project was completed in July 2020 and began service the same year.[6]

Articles and resources

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Ongoing Projects, Pipeline News, accessed October 2018
  2. National Energy and Petrochemical Map , FracTracker, February 28, 2020
  3. "Phase 1B of the Rover Pipeline Can Begin Operations". undergroundinfrastructure.com. Retrieved 2023-08-05.
  4. "Energy Transfer Announces FERC Approval to Place Rover Pipeline's Phase 1B into Service". Business Wire. 15 December, 2017. Retrieved 05 August, 2023. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |access-date= and |date= (help)
  5. "Energy Transfer Announces FERC Approval to Put Phase 1A of the Rover Pipeline in Service". Business Wire. 31 August, 2017. Retrieved 05 August, 2023. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |access-date= and |date= (help)
  6. 6.00 6.01 6.02 6.03 6.04 6.05 6.06 6.07 6.08 6.09 6.10 6.11 6.12 6.13 6.14 6.15 6.16 6.17 6.18 6.19 6.20 6.21 6.22 6.23 6.24 6.25 6.26 6.27 6.28 6.29 Natural Gas Data, Pipeline Projects Energy Information Administration, accessed August 05, 2023
  7. 7.0 7.1 "Energy Transfer announces FERC approval to place additional facilities on the Rover Pipeline's Phase 2 into service". Energy Transfer News. 01 May, 2018. Retrieved 05 August, 2023. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |access-date= and |date= (help)
  8. "FERC approves facilities on Rover Pipeline's Phase 2 into service". Oil & Gas Journal. 02 May, 2018. Retrieved 05 August, 2023. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |access-date= and |date= (help)
  9. Rover Pipeline Project, Rover Pipeline, accessed April 2019
  10. Activists ask feds to halt ET Rover pipeline over environmental concerns, Livingston Daily, accessed April 2019
  11. "U.S. energy regulator proposes $40 mln civil penalty for Rover Pipeline". Reuters. Retrieved 2023-08-05.
  12. Rover Pipeline Owner Disputing Millions Owed After Razing Historic Ohio Home, DeSmog, accessed May 2019
  13. 100 protesters march against Rover gas pipeline near Silver Lake, Michigan Live, accessed April 2019
  14. Energy Transfer Announces FERC Approval to Put Phase 1A of the Rover Pipeline in Service, Energy Transfer Partners, Aug 31., 2017
  15. ENERGY TRANSFER ANNOUNCES FERC APPROVAL FOR FINAL TWO LATERALS ON THE ROVER PIPELINE, Energy Transfer Partners, Nov. 2, 2018
  16. Dakota Access company bought up dozens of anti-pipeline URLs, Grist, accessed May 2019
  17. The Rover Pipeline leaked millions of gallons of drilling fluid into Ohio wetlands, PBS News Hour, accessed May 2019

Related GEM.wiki articles

External resources

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