Updated
Updated · Los Angeles Times · May 22
Fiber-Optic Crew Ruptures 16-Inch East L.A. Oil Pipeline, Spilling Up to 2,000 Gallons
Updated
Updated · Los Angeles Times · May 22

Fiber-Optic Crew Ruptures 16-Inch East L.A. Oil Pipeline, Spilling Up to 2,000 Gallons

6 articles · Updated · Los Angeles Times · May 22
  • A fiber-optic drilling crew struck a 16-inch crude pipeline around 3:20 a.m. near East Cesar Chavez and North Eastern avenues, sending oil onto the street and into storm drains in East Los Angeles.
  • The line was leaking at about 5 gallons per second before the operator shut it down within 30 minutes; later reports put the total release at less than 2,000 gallons.
  • Los Angeles County Fire crews said the spill reached the storm-drain system and the Los Angeles River, where booms were deployed as teams measured the spread and worked to protect the environment.
  • The intersection was closed in all directions for about six hours, and cleanup operations were expected to last at least eight hours after the leak was reduced to a small trickle.
With daily utility strikes costing billions, why does America lack a unified 3D underground map in 2026?
If one simple digging technique prevents 90% of utility strikes, why isn't it universally required by law?