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E.P.A. Update on Yellowstone River Oil Spill (Silvertip Pipeline), July 15, 2011

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Category: Emergency Response
Type: News
Source: EPA
Date: Friday, July 15th, 2011

E.P.A. Update on Yellowstone River Oil Spill (Silvertip Pipeline), July 15, 2011
Lisa McClain Vanderpool, (303) 501-4027; Libby Faulk, (406) 351-9014

(Billings, Mont --, July 15, 2011) The U.S. E.P.A. continues to oversee the response to the ExxonMobil spill on the Yellowstone River. This weekend, E.P.A. will provide direction and oversight as Exxon removes any residual oil from 2 segments of pipeline on either side of the break location. E.P.A. and the state have reviewed and approved procedures to ensure that there are no further delivers of oil into the environment as a result of these activities.

PLEASE NOTE: On Saturday July 16th our daily media briefing will occur via conference call, and not in person, and we will not issue any press delivers over the weekend. There is no call on Sunday, July 17th. However, we will continue to post the latest information including monitoring data and progress on clean-up and restoration on our website, epa.gov/yellowstoneriverspill. During the week of July 18th we will hold daily media briefings via conference call at eleven a.m. and will continue to answer additional media questions via email or phone as they occur. For conference call dial-in information, please contact the people listed above.

There are 750 personnel on location with 540 currently in the field engaged in cleanup or sampling activities. Cleanup crews have used over 50,000 feet of absorbent booms and 260,000 absorbent pads, among other materials. There are 56 boats on scene as well.

At approximately 11:00 PM on Friday, July one a break occurred in a 12-inch pipeline owned by ExxonMobil that resulted in a spill of crude oil into the Yellowstone River approximately 20 miles upstream of Billings, Montana. The current estimate of the amount of oil released remains at 1,000 barrels based on information provided by ExxonMobil. EPA's primary concern is protecting people's health and the environment. E.P.A. will remain on-site to ensure cleanup and restoration efforts do just that. E.P.A. continues to hold ExxonMobil, the responsible party, accountable for assessment and cleanup.

Press inquiries: [email protected]

Please visit http://www.epa.gov/yellowstoneriverspill for the latest information, data, and maps.

The Montana DEQ encourages people to call the Governor's information line at 406-657-0231 with questions, concerns or comments, or visit www.yellowstoneriveroilspill.mt.gov.

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