Wisconsin Reveals Oil Train Routes For First Time

International Business Times

Published Jul 09, 2014 03:41PM ET

Updated Jul 09, 2014 04:00PM ET

Wisconsin Reveals Oil Train Routes For First Time

By Meagan Clark - The sudden boom in oil production from North Dakota’s Bakken Shale deposits has fueled a nationwide increase in crude-by-rail transport and associated accidents and has prompted heated debate about publicizing rail routes companies use. The debate centers over which is more important, security for the cargos in transit or the public’s right to know.

Wisconsin is the latest state to weigh in on the matter and it chose the public’s right to know when it recently revealed the routes and counts of trains carrying the volatile Bakken oil through the state. In doing so Wisconsin rejected arguments from the rail industry, and formerly the federal government, that this information should only be released to those with a “need to know” and not the general public to prevent terrorist acts.

Last month, the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) said that details about volatile oil train shipments are not sensitive security information, ordering railroads that ship more than 1 million barrels of Bakken oil a day to report to state officials the routes and volumes of oil that trains are carrying so that emergency responders can better prepare for accidents.  

State officials in New York and North Dakota are still weighing whether the restrictions on the information would violate their state public record laws and whether disclosing the information would threaten security more than publishing it.

“I think it’s a valid argument, because if you pop some of those off in a heavily populated area, I don’t know how many lives would be lost,” Edward McConnell, mayor of Casselton, North Dakota where an oil train derailed and exploded in December but didn’t injure anyone, told the IBTimes in May. “It could be horrific.”

The Wisconsin documents, obtained first by DeSmogBlog through the state’s Public Records Act, show that of three companies shipping more than 1 million barrels a day of North Dakotan oil through the state, Burlington Northern Santa Fe (BNSF) transports the most, along the Mississippi River, the state’s western edge. For the week of June 5 to June 11, the rail company moved 39 oil trains along the river, more than 3 million barrels of oil, the documents show.