Fire at Miss. Compressor Station Reduces M-U Flows to Gulf Coast

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It's interesting that a single point of failure, one compressor station, can impact an entire region. Last Friday morning around 1 am, storms moved through Alcorn County, Mississippi. Lightning struck a "vertical gas pipe" at the Columbia Gulf Transmission Corinth natural gas compressor station, releasing and igniting natural gas. One local news station characterized it as a "massive gas fire" that "prompted county-wide response." The fire burned for over four hours until firefighters could put it out. Some 2.2 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) of Marcellus/Utica molecules flow through that compressor station on their way to the Gulf Coast.

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