Updates
July 20, 2019: a breath of fresh air. After the misleading headline and poor writing regarding a recent "pipeline leak/spill" (see original post), The Bismarck Tribune did a thousand-percent better with report of a second, similar leak, again east of Williston. Story here. Marked improvements:
- headline clearly states it was "produced water," not oil
- the lede provides very good description of location in general (3 miles southwest of Epping, and specifically (pastureland)
- in the lede includes owner of the pipeline
- leads with amount of leak in barrels (which we like but is not the industry standard) and then provides the industry standard (in gallons)
- really, really good reporting with perfect headline
Original Post
The Bismarck Tribune has a headline today: "Williams County pipeline leak spills into Missouri River tributary." Two things the headline conveniently left out:
- it was a "produced water" pipeline, not an oil pipeline (but yes, produced water probably has some oil in it)
- the name of the tributary (all we got was "about 20 miles east of Williston; in this day and age, someone would have the exact GPS coordinates)
I'm glad these stories still make headlines: it tells me such spills are incredibly rare, to still get a headline above the fold on the front page.
This particular pipeline was owned by a midstream company involved in wastewater disposal; it was reported the same day it happened; and, regulators are already in place to observe the clean-up and mitigation.
My hunch: it will be a non-story by tomorrow, and we will be fortunate to get some type of follow-up through the Tribune.
Another thing they do, especially on smaller spills, is to report the size in gallons, versus barrels. 21,000 gallons sounds a lot worse than 456 barrels.
ReplyDeleteYes, that's always irritate me also. I always thought this "smoke and mirrors" and/or "apples/oranges" shenanigans was the work of faux environmentalists but years ago I learned that this was the norm in the industry -- to report spills in gallons.
DeleteIt's still irritating but at least it was going on well before faux environmentalists and fake news came along.