Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
I was saddened to read this morning that a train with a load of crude oil derailed and caught fire in Lac-Mégantic, Canada, and I started writing this post. I heard during the afternoon there was one person killed, and more may still be found. In addition, the oil spilled into the Chaudière River. And most curiously, the derailment wasn’t from overspeed or failed brakes or a crash or the usual stuff. Instead, the train took off on its own and committed suicide … go figure.
The train had been parked and the conductor was not aboard when “somehow, the train got released,” Montreal, Maine and Atlantic Railway, Inc Vice President Joseph McGonigle said on Saturday.
“We’re not sure what happened, but the engineer did everything by the book. He had parked the train and was waiting for his relief,” McGonigle said. The Star
Figure 1. Derailed tank cars, Canada SOURCE
In addition to the human compassion we all feel for the folks to whom these tragedies occur, plus hoping that no train workers or hobos were hurt, the crash sparked off a boatload of thoughts about the absolute need for storable transportable energy; about the inherent dangers of concentrated stored energy; and about how we move stored energy around the planet.
First, energy is synonymous with development. Our civilization requires huge amounts of it. Without the ability to extract, move, and store immense amounts of energy, we’re literally back to the Bronze Age, where wood melted the bronze and cooked the food. I’ve tried living at that level, it’s not my idea of a good party. Plus, if everyone burns wood for energy the world will look like Haiti … so we’ll take the need for some kind of storable energy as a given.
Next, stored energy is inherently dangerous. If you accidentally drop a wrench across the terminals of a car battery, it could cost you your life … and that’s just a car battery, not a railroad tank car full of crude oil. If stored energy gets loose, it is immensely dangerous.
The materials in which the energy is stored are also often, as in this case, a danger to the environment. If you think electricity solves the problem, crack open a car battery and consider the toxicity of the chemicals and heavy metals involved.
Finally, there are more dangerous and less dangerous ways to transport energy.
Arguably the least dangerous way to transport energy is in the form of electricity. We move unimaginably large amounts of energy around the world with only occasional injuries and fatalities. Don’t get me wrong, a 440,000 volt power line is not inherently safe. But we are able to locate our electric wires in such a way that we don’t intrude into their space, and vice versa.
But that’s just moving electrons. If you have to move the molecules, the actual substance itself, things get more hazardous.
In terms of danger, railroads aren’t the most dangerous. That’d be the fuel trucks carrying gasoline, diesel, kerosene, and propane on the highways. Plus of course the stored energy in the fuel tanks of the cars and trucks involved in every crash. If you consider an electric power line transporting energy running alongside a freeway, with each vehicle transporting stored energy in the form of liquid fuel, and how often lives are lost or damage done from the power lines, versus how much damage the stored energy does when a tanker truck crashes and catches fire on the freeway, you’ll get a sense of what I’m talking about.
I’d put railroads as the second most dangerous way to move energy. This for a couple reasons. One is because people built along the railroad tracks, and cities grew up around the rail hubs. This means you’re moving things like crude oil and gasoline, each of which stores huge amounts of what was originally solar energy, through highly populated areas.
Another is that a railroad tank car stores a huge amount of energy. A tank full of crude oil hold about 820 barrels of oil, which conveniently has about the same energy as a thousand tons of TNT. Of course, normally this energy is released slowly, over time. Even if the tank ruptures and the fuel pours out, the release of energy occurs over tens of minutes.
However, the fuel is contained in enclosed tanks. As in this case, if fire is raging around an intact tank car, it heats the tank until the contents start boiling. Depending on the fuel involved, if the vapor pressure of the contents is high enough, the tank can rupture in what is called a BLEVE. That stands for “Boiling Liquid Expanding Vapor Explosion”, and it was the cause of death in boiler explosions in old-time Mississippi steamships. When a boiling liquid under pressure suddenly experiences an instantaneous pressure drop, the entire body of the liquid can directly flash into vapor. With a steam engine the liquid is water, and the resulting steam from an exploding boiler was incredibly lethal and destructive. Now, consider a BLEVE of a flammable liquid … instead of making an expanding ball of steam, you get an expanding ball of fire.
At that point, the “kilotonnes of TNT” is no longer a metaphor.
So what is safer than a railroad? Well, on land there are pipelines, and at sea there are tankers. The tankers are dangerous for the environment, but given the amount of energy moved per year, the spills are not numerous. Obviously, as a sailor and a commercial fisherman I’d prefer there’d be no spills … but energy is synonymous with development, and stored energy is inherently dangerous. So all we can do is continue to improve the safety of the tankers, and stay aware of the dangers. Having worked in the industry, I know the many safety regulations surrounding tanker ships. These regulations are indeed numerous and cover the situation well … and despite that, there is always more to learn.
On land, pipelines have an excellent safety record. People are generally unaware of how many pipelines there are in the US. Here are the trunklines that just move crude oil, including from Canada:
Figure 2. Crude oil trunklines SOURCE
Figure 3 shows the major pipelines for “refined products”, meaning gasoline, diesel, and the like:
Figure 3. Pipelines carrying refined products. SOURCE
Finally, Figure 4 shows the pipelines carrying gas, both within and between the states:
Figure 4. Gas pipelines, from the EIA
Considering the very large number and length of the pipelines, the number of accidents per year is very, very small. Like electrical lines, we generally don’t notice (or even know) that these pipelines exist, but they move huge amounts of many kinds of both crude and refined products all over the US.
Which brings me to the final thought brought up by the Canadian train derailment.
There is a proposed expansion of the KeystoneXL Pipeline, to handle an increased amount of heavy crude from Alberta. Opponents of the expansion think that stopping the pipeline expansion will somehow stop the flow of Canadian heavy crude into the US. This is not true for two reasons.
First, the existing Keystone pipeline is already bringing Alberta heavy crude into the US. The expansion will just, well, expand that amount.
More to the point, however, is the fact that large amounts of Alberta heavy crude is also being moved into the US by railroad. And not by just any railroad. It’s mostly coming in on the Burlington Northern Railway.
And by what can only be considered an amazing coincidence, the Burlington Northern Railway is owned by a major Obama donor. And by an even more amazing coincidence, the major donor bought the BNR just three years ago.
And this was not just any major Obama donor, but Mr. Warren Buffett, a key money supplier for the Obama re-election effort …
Now of course, the longer that Mr. Obama can delay approving the Keystone Pipeline, the longer the oil will be moved by Mr. Buffet’s railroad. I’m sure you can predict what Mr. Buffet wanted for his investment in the Obama campaign, those guys don’t pitch in the big bucks without wanting something …
And very likely Buffett learned early on, during Obama’s first administration, that Obama would block the pipeline, which is probably why he bought it. Buffett is many things but he’s no fool. Will we ever be able to prove that chain of events? Don’t be naive, Buffett is immensely wealthy for a reason. He doesn’t leave tracks, he doesn’t show his cards, he plays everything close to the vest. We won’t find any smoking guns on this one.
I find it quite amazing. In the late 1800s, the railroads were major players in the political scene, and no one made an important decision without first kissing the rings of the railroad barons.
And now, more than a hundred years later, we still have a President kissing the ring of a railroad baron before making his decision.
So … don’t expect any quick resolution by President Obama of the Keystone Pipeline issue. Every day it is delayed, hundreds of thousands of dollars flow into Warren Buffet’s pockets.
And US politics continues to fashion in the old, time-tested way … money talks. And even in this modern time of emails and smartphones, I’m glad to know some of the most valuable hoary, ancient US political traditions have been kept alive.
And when I say valuable traditions … I mean very, very valuable. These days, being a friend of Obama is worth big bucks.
Finally, we see that the claims by the opponents of the pipeline that they are trying to “protect the environment” are simply not true. If they were really concerned about the environment, they’d want the KeystoneXL pipeline expansion. It is much more dangerous to the environment to move the Alberta heavy crude by railroad tank car than by pipeline … and the tragedy in Canada is an excellent example of why.
And a happy Independence Day weekend to all,
w.
PS—In any case, if the pipeline is blocked, the Alberta heavy crude will still be burned, either shipped to China, or shipped to the US and Buffett will be even richer, or burned in Canada, but it will be burned. That’s the crazy part—the opposition to the pipeline, even if successful, will achieve nothing … welcome to the crazy world of modern environmental NGOs and their followers …
Ack – forgot the link:
http://www.airliners.net/photo/Asiana-Airlines/Boeing-777-28E-ER/2011573/M/
Maine protesters arrested for trying to block oil train to Canada
http://www.pressherald.com/news/Protesters-in-Fairfield-block-train-carrying-oil-to-New-Brunswick.html
FAIRFIELD — Police arrested six people Thursday night after a group protesting “fracked oil” tried to block a train that was expected to pass through town by erecting a makeshift wooden scaffold on the tracks.
Authorities arrest a protester from 350 Maine and Earth First after the group blocked the railroad track crossing at Lawrence Avenue in Fairfield on Thursday night during protest of the transport of allegedly fracked oil on railroads. About 9:30 p.m., six protesters were arrested.
Michael G. Seamans / Morning Sentinel
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The scaffold, with a banner that read “Stop fracked oil. Maine earth first,” was put up to call attention to climate change and prevent about 70,000 barrels of crude oil from reaching New Brunswick, said Meaghan LaSala, one of the protest’s organizers and a member of 350 Maine, a group that’s concerned about climate change.
“We believe the moment we’re in, in terms of climate change, is a dramatic one and it calls for dramatic action,” said LaSala, 26, a Portland resident who works in Unity.
About 30 protesters gathered at the intersection of Route 201 and Route 139, many of them wearing white in an effort to look like workers at an oil spill, bearing signs that read, “Trains for people, not oil.”
Police closed both highways because the protesters refused to move. Police told the crowd by megaphone that blocking the rails and roads is illegal.
No train had arrived by 9:15 p.m.
At 9:40 p.m., the protesters who manned the scaffold had been taken into custody. The scaffold fell shortly afterward, and additional protesters, who were not blocking the tracks, cheered the arrested people.
Police were dismantling the scaffold at 9:50 p.m. Protesters were in the area but no longer blocking the tracks, and were speaking with police.
Trains carry crude oil through Maine from the Bakken oil fields of North Dakota, where it is “fracked” — extracted by blasting chemicals deep into the ground at high pressure to release the oil from shale rock.
LaSala said the process pollutes air and water in surrounding communities. She said the protest Thursday was part of a national movement called Fearless Summer, with a goal to expose the dangers of extreme forms of energy extraction.
The protesters’ chants called for an end to fracking in North Dakota and explained their reasons for the protest action.
Officers from the Kennebec County Sheriff’s Department, Maine State Police, the Fairfield Police Department and other law enforcement agencies responded to the protest.
——–
Note: Earth First damaged logging equipment and facilities in Maine a few years ago. Law enforcement had to work overtime watching facilities.
Further information – this from the BBC
The Montreal, Maine & Atlantic train had five locomotive engines and 73 cars filled with light crude oil, and was parked in the village of Nantes – about 7km (four miles) from Lac-Megantic – during an overnight driver shift-change, a company spokesman told Canada’s La Presse newspaper.
The railway’s chairman, Edward Burhardt, quoted by CBC, said an engineer had parked the train and put the brakes on “properly” before going to a local hotel for the night.
The cars filled with fuel somehow became uncoupled, causing them to roll downhill into the town and derail, said the spokesman, Joe McGonigle.
“It seems that the brakes were tight on locomotives,” Mr McGonigle told La Presse. “We found the locomotives higher up, half a mile (800m) away.”
That implies that the train started to run away with the locos attached. The train then split somewhere down the track which should have caused an emergency brake application. It looks as though this probably happened since the locos were found 800 metres from the derailment with the brakes hard on. Once the train split, if the systems were working properly, the brakes would also have come on hard on the wagons. However, with the best will in the world, 73 loaded wagons going down an incline are going to take a long time to stop, even with a full emergency brake application.
For comparison (and from memory!) in the UK an emergency brake application on a 500t passenger train travelling at 125 mph on level track will cause the train to stop in around 800m. This train will have been many times heavier and travelling down hill so it’s no surprise that it was still travelling after 800m. Also, if I’m right, that lends a little more credence to my supposition that any train fire could have been started by overheating brakes.
geoff (July 7, 2013 at 4:30 am) suggests that in a situation like that “one of the rail car brakes were also supposed to be manually set as a safeguard”. That is highly probable but one set of wagon brakes would not hold 73 fully loaded tankers on an incline. That set would simply have overheated sooner.
Incidentally, it looks as though it came to grief at a set of points (switches to you guys in the US/Canada) according to a little diagram on the BBC website. Google seems to confirm that there are points etc. in the area of the derailment.
Keystone XL will be approved when we get a President in the White House who cares about the future of America and not actively trying to bring her down. Too bad what is happening in Egypt wouldn’t happen here.
Janice Moore says: @ur momisugly July 7, 2013 at 12:55 am
“I suspect this is more than an unfortunate accident.” [P. Bradley 11:30PM, 7/6/13]
I do too….
Only a person familiar with starting locomotives can start one once it is properly secured. Accidental engine departure is virtually impossible. Unless there was some highly improbable (but, of course, possible) mechanical failure (including the throttle stuck open) or the engineer was grossly incompetent
(“Drivin’ that train, high on cocaine”, perhaps? — that will be quickly known, for the Transportation Safety Commission(?) will have had the man give them a sample to drug test ASAP),
it almost certainly was deliberate…..
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
To add to that, Do not forget that PETA will have recruits go ‘Undercover’ to work in the targeted industry so this method for gaining the required information is KNOWN. Activists also target government bureaucracy, for example my local USDA inspector (a veterinarian) is an Animal Rights Activist. She has shutdown every single petting farm in her area that I know of and actually told the operators that was her intent.
So yes, my first thought was also SABOTAGE. – The FBI vs. the Monkeywrenchers : The Eco-Guerrillas of Earth First!
It’s awful hard for a modern locomotive to just “run away”. Dead-man switches should prevent it. But there it is.
Hard to understand.
Pipelines are the obvious answer. Well, obvious to anyone other than a so-called “Progressive.”
“geoff says:
July 7, 2013 at 4:30 am”
Two stroke “Deltics” being a classic example of “clag” and eventual fire on start up.
Willis, check you math. I have that 820 bbl of oil equivalent is approximately equal to 1 ton of TNT, not a kiloton.
Gail Combs says:
July 7, 2013 at 6:24 am
Gail, you’d probably be surprised at how easy it is to start a locomotive, and to drive one. All you need is a key to get in and the appropriate piece of equipment to switch it on. Keys are very easily found. Driving it competently is a different matter, however. (I could drive one but couldn’t possibly stop it in the right place!)
As to your supposition of sabotage, of course it can’t be ruled out. Malicious operation will overcome any safety systems. As a non-conspiracy theorist, however, I personally put it down the list. I have to say that incompetent operation seems to me to be more likely, especially if there was a minor technical malfunction as well.
beng says:
July 7, 2013 at 6:29 am
You point re the ‘dead-man’ is accurate as far as it goes but a fully loaded 73 wagon freight train with brakes slowly bleeding off on an incline would overcome the effect of the device.
Incidentally, in the UK, it is no longer a handle which the driver has to hold in position. This changed after a driver suffered a heart attack and collapsed on the handle. What we use nowadays is a foot operated switch which has to be pressed and released every minute. It cannot be overridden by putting a heavy object on it so it’s safer than thehandle. I don’t know what type of device was in use in this case.
Patrick says:
July 7, 2013 at 6:41 am
Deltics – lovely locos.
I once saw an HST power car in flames at Reading Station. Some incompetent was going to move it to the local depot until it was pointed out that that was also the loco fuelling point. Cue hurried change of plan!
I don’t know if this might be too far off topic but Obama and Buffett, or as I call them, the firm of Obama, Buffett, & Associates (sarc), was mentioned so perhaps these thoughts are appropriate.
Most of the founders of this country were wealthy; either inherited or self-made. When, in the Declaration of Independence, they pledged to support the ideals expressed with their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor, well, it was the gosh darned truth. That was quite unlike our current political class which, instead, enriches itself in the support of their, shall we say, personal ideals.
Buffett’s purchase of BNSF always looks to have been very conveniently timed. And, needless to say, his purchase of Goldman Sachs looks to have been very conveniently timed. I mean, who would’ve thought such a savvy investor would’ve bought the then bankrupt financial giant, and during a recession and financial meltdown. Ah, but then the taxpayer bailout came. How fortuitous.
Perhaps Obama meant something else when he elicited those famous words last year, “You didn’t build that.” Something he could not consciously comprehend. Perhaps he was talking about Buffett. And perhaps he was talking about himself.
Not only Keystone, but reversing Line 9 and approving Gateway through British Columbia. It is ironic that US billionaire Foundations are flooding Canadian “charities” and activist groups, including buying off First Nations against the pipelines. Incredible also that freshly reelected BC Premier Clark is against the Gateway and is now promoting more carbon tax BS.
The tragedy of this oil derailment should be a warning to these people in Canada and the US, that victims will hold them responsible.
Buffett bought Moody’s to downrate the credit of companies he wanted to acquire.
If the US would let our high-energy, low-sulfur coal be exported to China, there would be plenty of energy transport by rail to go around, even with the Keystone pipeline extension. But no, coal trains are “death trains” to the raving lunatic Hansenites.
Dumping burning ethanol into the river not an ecological problem.
http://www4.whdh.com/news/articles/national/BO31703/
Investigators at site of Pa. train crash, ethanol tankers burning
Posted: 10/21/06 at 11:17 pm
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NEW BRIGHTON, Pa. — The blast shook houses, woke neighbors and sent a fireball into the night sky.
Word spread quickly that several ethanol tanker cars had exploded after two dozen train cars derailed while crossing a half-mile bridge spanning the Beaver River late Friday.
Though no one was injured, residents of this former industrial town were evacuated because of concerns about new explosions. Federal investigators arrived Saturday morning to begin an investigation, even as the tanker cars continued to burn.
Officials with the state Department of Environmental Protection, Norfolk Southern and Beaver County were determining whether to let the fire burn itself out or extinguish it, said Robert Sumwalt, vice chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board.
New Brighton borough manager Larry Morley said that the explosion shook his house as if “lighting struck in the front yard” and that a fireball rose in the air.
Barbara Huddy, 41, was asleep at her home about five blocks away when the 24 cars tumbled off the tracks, some to the river and banks below.
“It woke me up,” said Huddy, a United Airlines customer service employee. “It was bad. It was really frightening.”
More than 50 residents stayed overnight at the New Brighton Middle School, said John Stubbs, executive director of a Red Cross chapter. About 150 others checked in with authorities at the school Saturday morning.
The derailed cars were in the train’s midsection, and nine caught fire on the bridge in New Brighton, about 25 miles northwest of Pittsburgh.
The train — 83 tanker cars pulled by three locomotives — was traveling from Chicago to New Jersey. Sumwalt could not say how fast it was traveling. The condition of the bridge was not clear Saturday afternoon.
Ten NTSB experts were on the scene, but they did not expect to inspect the crash site until the fire was out. They will investigate mechanical issues, human factors, track and engineering issues, and the emergency response, among other things, Sumwalt said.
The presence of incompetence or worse notwithstanding (what was that arrest for similar plans, Paul Coppin?), thanks for pointing out the financial aspect of the politics. It could use some more publicity/awareness because it is interfering with doing something that is better for everyone except crusaders who want to kill oil more than anything and the specific companies that get left behind. After all, if they just want to stop the pipeline, they would develop the Saudi Arabia of the Unitied States – California.
As usual, here Eschenbach provides dozens of blanket statements with no citations.
Oh wait…I forgot. Providing citations does not apply to Willis the Wonderful.
More regarding earth first.
http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=886&dat=19900527&id=v1IdAAAAIBAJ&sjid=wVwEAAAAIBAJ&pg=5589,5760659
http://www.pressherald.com/opinion/earth-first_s-vandals-should-be-resisted_2010-07-18.html
http://s2.excoboard.com/The_Porch/79918/602785
Vandals started targeting Plum Creek’s offices after the company unveiled plans last spring to develop thousands of acres around Moosehead Lake. But the attacks reached a new level Monday night.
Vandals damaged three private homes and three office buildings in five Maine communities. They splattered orange paint and spray-painted “scum creek” and other messages on some of the buildings. They also poured a foul-smelling chemical and left parts of a raccoon carcass and animal feces at some targets. And they threw rocks through the windows of the home where Plum Creek’s top Maine official lives with his family.
Maine State Police and the FBI stepped in to coordinate the investigation, and state officials, environmentalists, business leaders and others loudly condemned the actions.
“All they are is terrorists,” said Sen. Paul Davis, R-Sangerville. “We’ve had cases in the past, but nothing like this.”
Davis was a state trooper in 1990 when extremists hammered long metal spikes into trees and logs in an effort to stop logging of an old-growth timber tract near the Big Reed preserve west of Ashland. The spikes made it difficult and dangerous to saw the wood, and forced loggers to scan with metal detectors.
In 1998, protesters spray-painted graffiti on buildings at the Lincoln Pulp and Paper Mill to draw attention to dioxin pollution.
About five years ago, vandals damaged Maine fish and game clubs, and tried to blow one up. There also are periodic reports of damaged logging equipment in northern Maine, said Patrick McGowan, commissioner of the state Department of Conservation.
But, McGowan said, those acts were “nothing as scary as this, where people’s homes were targets.”
No group has claimed responsibility, police said. That’s not unusual, according to Arnold, who works with the Center for the Defense of Free Enterprise and tracks eco-terrorism around the country.
Groups such as the Earth Liberation Front and the Animal Liberation Front will sometimes take credit, but often do not. They are the leaders of the trend and may well be linked to what’s happening in Maine, he said.
Earth First!, which took credit for spiking the trees 15 years ago and held a protest at Plum Creek offices this summer, is less likely to be involved in the vandalism, Arnold said. The group decided years ago to focus on civil disobedience and leave the criminal activity to ELF, he said.
ELF and ALF are loosely organized. Their actions are led by itinerant activists who travel the country and stop in different states to recruit young sympathizers and then attack a corporation, he said.
Targeting the homes of employees and company lawyers already is commonplace in other parts of the country, especially out West in places like California, Arnold said. And eco-terrorism also has become more dangerous and violent in parts of the country, with buildings burned to protest development and Hummers burned to object to the practices of automakers.
“Arson is pretty much the signature,” he said.
I would say instead of the “railroad barons” that it’s the “Wall Street” barons that are pulling the strings. Buffet doesn’t give a damn about railroads per se, only about the money. He’d destroy his railroad in an instant if he thought it would increase his Berkshire stock. It’s been blatantly obvious about who’s been pulling the strings in this and the former administration (and even farther back).
As far as transporting dangerous fuels go, the one that scares me are the LNG ships. If one of those went up I wonder what the equivalent kilotons of TNT t would be?
Paul Coppin says:
July 7, 2013 at 4:54 am
While I appreciate the discussion of the unfortunate events….
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
I usually sum it up as ‘Life is Lethal’™
Too bad those with the Bambi Syndrome never seem to figure that out.
Pointman has an excellent essay that drives home that point.
Regarding brakes–on locomotives/wagons and highway trucks they are always “applied”–it takes air pressure to release them.
This is the opposite of how automobile brakes are configured–if they required power to pressurize and release, it would be safer as far as runaways, but makes it very difficult to manually push one out of the way or to tow it to a garage for repairs.
For trucks and locomotives/wagons, it’s safer to have brakes applied as the default.
A unit train of Bakken crude leaves BNSF’s Minot, ND yard at 6 AM every morning, this unit train alone makes BNSF and it’s investors .25M$ each day (or 91.25 M$ / yr.) that’s big enough to be a line item in Buffets annual budget. It would be interesting to see a map of the route Buffet’s Oil travels by rail as the only direct north/south rail lines in the US are on the east and west coasts. But it’s clear from John’s comment at 5:48 above, that some is routed through Maine.
Obama wants infrastructure? That’s easy, approve Keystone and widen the the Right of Way to include a central continental north south rail line, and a 4 lane highway from Houston to Edmonton. Now that would be a legacy.
We have all the technology to prevent a BLEVE in a tank in a pool fire, no matter if the tank contains oil, gasoline or liquid petrol gas. The answer is filling the tank with an aluminum mesh called Explocontrol. The mesh only takes 1.5% of the tank volume and it prevents the sloshing of the liquid so you no longer need slosh barriers. We should not only have this material in rail tanks but also our road trucks, even our reserve cannister and our BBQ gas bottle. This solution has been tested many times but nobody wants to pay the price despite the fact that it is a really cheap and effective solution.
Yes, pipelines are safer than trains but also pipelines should be protected with this material.
john says: @ur momisugly July 7, 2013 at 8:12 am
More regarding earth first…..
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Thanks John.
It only takes a couple of nutters to do a lot of damage and unfortunately there are a lot of nutters around now a days thanks to the brainwashing in our schools. My tiny business was targeted seven times in 3 consecutive years until they succeeded in harming over 200 people and killing two. A friend of mine in the same business was blamed even though the facts say he couldn’t have been responsible without ‘Help’. It has been over ten years and I haven’t seen hide nor hair of them now that the target bill has become law. The last time I was targeted was within five days of them hitting the ‘Jackpot’ and making national headlines.
That is why I smell sabotage as a possibility.
Note: Sabotage was never considered by the authorities but the facts rule out the scapegoat (my friend) as the cause. (Multimillion dollar lawsuits still going on so I can not say more.)
Well, well, well. Look who’s here paid by Big Oil.