A federal safety panel blamed a series of missteps by one of the nation’s largest gas companies for the largest pipeline accident in a decade, a suburban San Francisco explosion that killed eight people and incinerated a neighborhood.
Federal investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) concluded that the horrific gas pipeline explosion that killed eight people in San Bruno, California was the result of a “litany of failures” by Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E).
Series of missteps:
Inadequate inspection programsAn integrity management program without integrity
Ignored ample warnings that gas line welds may have had dangerous flaws
CPUC failed to detect safety flaws at PG&E
Poor emergency response plan for prolonged incidents
Lax federal and state regulations
The company was also criticized for spending too much effort lobbying to block stronger regulations that could have prevented the disaster. PG&E and industry lobbyists successfully blocked recommendations for the use of automatic shut-off valves instead of manual valves to allow rapid shut down when a problem starts. PG&E claimed the efforts would result in high costs and uncertain effectiveness. A PG&E engineer wrote federal regulators that quicker shut down of gas “may give the public a false sense of security.”