The Pig in the XL Pipeline:
Insider reveals concealed "error" in pipeline safety equipment that could blow 
away the GOP's XL pipe dream
By Greg Palast "They threatened me. Last night I got a call and they threatened me. If I talked." "Pig Man #2," a pipeline industry insider, had a good reason to be afraid.  He was about to
blow the whistle on a fraud, information that could blow away the XL Keystone Pipeline
project.

His information: The software for the crucial piece of pipeline safety equipment, the "Smart
PIG," has a flaw known to the industry but concealed from regulators.

The flaw allows cracks, leaks and corrosion to go undetected - and that saves the industry
billions of dollars in pipe replacements.  But there's a catch. Pipes with cracks and leaks
can explode - and kill.

Federal law requires the oil and gas industry to run a PIG, a Pipeline Inspection Gauge,
through big oil and gas pipelines.  The robot porker, tethered to a GPS, beeps and boops
as it rolls through, electronically squealing when it finds dangers.

But whistleblowers told us at Channel 4 Dispatches (the "60 Minutes" of Britain) that the
software is deliberately calibrated to ignore or minimize deadly problems.  They know
because they themselves worked on the software design team.

This week, President Obama refused to issue a permit for the Keystone XL Pipeline, but
invited its owner, Trans-Canada, to re-apply.  The GOP has gone wild over Obama's
hesitation, screeching that slowing the Canada-to-Houston pipe for a full safety review
is a jobs killer.

But it's the Pipeline that's the killer.  Here's what Pig Man #2 told me, on camera, his face
in shadow:

When his team found the life-threatening flaw in the program, they immediately created
a software patch to fix it.  But then their supervisor ordered them to bury the fix and
conceal the problem.

With the PIG calibrated to the danger sensitivity required by law, oil and gas companies
would have to dig up, inspect and replace pipe at a cost of millions per mile. That's not
what the oil companies wanted from their contractor that designed the PIG program.

The programmers' bosses took no chances. "We had to sign nondisclosure agreements."
They were required to conceal "any problems of this sort or the nature of the software
we worked."  It could not "be made public at all. Under threat of lawsuit." Nice.

With the error left in place, he said, "People die."

Pig Man #2 was shaking a bit when he said it. On September 9, 2010, a gas pipeline
exploded, incinerating 13-year-old Janessa Greig, her mom and six others.

A PIG - an honest PIG - would have caught the bad welds in the old pipe.

Trans-Canada says that Keystone XL won't contaminate the Ogallala Aquifer, the Plains
states' crucial water source. Keystone's permit application boasts that we can rely on
XL's "full pigging capability."
Sure.  Last summer, an ExxonMobil pipeline 
burst and poisoned parts of theYellowstone
River - only months after it had been "pigged."

The danger of a muzzled PIG goes beyond
Keystone XL. New gas fields opened by
hydraulic fracking will require over 100,000
miles of new transmission pipe.

This week, Newt Gingrich called Obama's
temporary block on the XL Pipeline,
"stunningly stupid"; and Mitt Romney said Obama's decision threatened America's
"energy independence." (Mitt, the oil is from, uh, Canada.)

But the real question is, can we trust these pigs?  And not just the ones in the pipeline.
[Greg Palast, whose reports can be seen on BBC Television Newsnight, is the author of the New York
Times bestsellers, "The Best Democracy Money Can Buy" and "Armed Madhouse."  His latest book,
Vultures' Picnic, includes Palast's investigation of the Deepwater Horizon explosion, vulture capitalism,
and "the pig in the pipeline."

Palast is "twisted and maniacal" [Katherine Harris] and "The most important reporter of our time."
[The Guardian UK.]

Support the Palast Investigative Fund and keep their work alive.]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 



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