TWO short crude oil pipelines in China operated by Sinopec Group are shutting temporarily due to worries over safety, Chinese authorities said.
Sinopec has been ordered to shut the 179-kilometer Linyi-Cangzhou pipeline and a 40-kilometer pipeline from the Tanggu oil depot to Dagang in Tianjin by Nov. 20, the State Administration of Work Safety said on its website late last week.
Authorities said that unannounced inspections had found numerous problems, including “stress corrosion and fatigue damage.”
Sinopec said Friday through its official social media account that the two pipelines had earlier been closed for repairs and the work safety regulator had approved the shutdowns in September.
However, it was unclear whether they had been reopened since then and would need to be closed again. Sinopec was not immediately available for comment yesterday.
Refinery throughput in northern China had not been affected, the firm said Friday.
The Linyi-Canzhou pipeline passes through populated urban neighborhoods. The Tianjin pipeline is mostly near water and was corroded.
Sinopec will have until Dec. 10 to address the issues, authorities said.
China in December launched a nationwide safety probe in the oil and gas sector after a pipeline blast killed 62 people.
Checks on some 3,000 petrochemical firms and oil storage sites found nearly 20,000 potential hazards. (SD-Agencies)
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