Concerns grow over CO2 pipeline safety after recent leak in Louisiana

Recent carbon dioxide leak in Louisiana exposes gaps in emergency alert systems, warns of potential dangers.

Tristan Baurick reports for Verite News.


In short:

  • A CO2 pipeline near Sulphur, Louisiana, ruptured, releasing significant quantities of carbon dioxide, leading to a local shelter-in-place advisory.
  • The emergency response relied on social media for public communication, highlighting the absence of an adequate alert system in the area.
  • The growing network of CO2 pipelines, spurred by carbon capture initiatives, raises concerns about the adequacy of current safety regulations.

Key quote:

"There should have been alarms, and the whole community should have been notified. I don’t trust the system we have at all."

— Roishetta Ozane, community organizer

Why this matters:

Carbon dioxide pipelines are crucial components of the burgeoning carbon capture and storage technologies aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions. However, incidents like this highlight the potential risks and complexities involved in handling and transporting CO2.

EHN op-ed: Those holding up carbon capture and hydrogen as new climate solutions are leading us down the wrong path.

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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