Are residents right to be worried about a plan to update the valves on an oil pipeline that was so badly corroded it burst in 2015, spilling more than 120,000 gallons of crude oil along the Gaviota coastline?
If you ask the company that proposed the project, itās just a matter of bringing the coastal pipeline into compliance with state law requiring the best available technology in said pipeline. If you ask the folks who appealed staff approval of the project to the Santa Barbara County Planning Commission, there are ulterior motives afoot.Ā
āThe valves are being installed in order to utilize the existing pipeline,ā said Ana Citrin, an attorney representing the Gaviota Coast Conservancy.
Sheās probably right. The oil companies surrounding that particular pipeline have been trying to figure out how to get oil coursing back through it since 2015. Not only is the pipeline shut down, it also stopped operations at the Santa Ynez Unit, which includes at least three nonoperating offshore oil platforms and a nonoperating onshore processing facility.Ā
ExxonMobilās been making a big fat zero off that set of oil properties for almost eight years. But it doesnāt own the pipeline, or does it?Ā
Who knows, all of this oil company mumbo-jumbo is super confusing and hard to follow. So letās start with the spill. Plains All American, which owned the pipeline (and a bunch of others that had major problems), didnāt propose the valve project. Plains Pipeline L.P. did. Iāll give you one guess as to who owns that.Ā
However, when the Sun reached out for comment on all of the recent hullabaloo, Plains told us that they no longer own the pipeline anymore so the company wasnāt going comment on the issue. So, even though Plains All Americanās logo was plastered all over the applicantās presentation at the March 1 Planning Commission appeal hearing on the project, Plains is no longer in charge.Ā
Instead, the pipeline now belongs to Pacific Pipelineāwell, almost belongs to, because the sale isnāt finalized yetāwhich is a subsidiary of ExxonMobil. Jesus. How can I keep all this straight? But wait, thereās more.Ā
ExxonMobil sold that Santa Ynez Unit to Sable Offshore Corporation, a company that ExxonMobil holds interest in. So who owns what? Sounds like ExxonMobil still owns or will at least profit off everything and is betting on itself with this valve thing.
ExxonMobil has tried to restart the Santa Ynez Unit several times. Initially, Plains proposed replacing the existing pipeline with a new pipeline, but that project is still in its infancy with the county. Exxon tried a proposal to truck oil from the facility to various pump stations and got denied. Now, weāve got the same corroded pipeline with updated valves.Ā
So is it as simple as replacing valves? Sounds like valves are a step toward flipping the offshore oil switch.Ā
I guess people arenāt as dumb as the oil companies hope they will be.Ā
āThere [are] a lot of ifs and uncertainties out there that are surprising to the public,ā 3rd District Planning Commissioner John Parke said. āThey certainly woke up and made a lot of noise at the hearing.ā
And theyāll probably make more noise in April, when the commission is set to discuss the project again.
The Canary is staying tuned. Send radio dials to canary@santamariasun.com.
This article appears in Mar 16-23, 2023.


