Tag Archives: LIV

PGA Tour drops volatile LIV Golf memo to players amid Commissioner Monahan’s return – SB Nation

  1. PGA Tour drops volatile LIV Golf memo to players amid Commissioner Monahan’s return SB Nation
  2. PGA Tour denounces USGA’s Model Local Rule golf ball, still open to ‘collaborating’ Golf.com
  3. Jay Monahan informs players PGA Tour will not abide by ball rollback; announces ‘task force’ for LIV Golf discipline GolfDigest.com
  4. Tour memo addresses player compensation, ‘discipline’ team and rejects model local rule Yahoo Sports
  5. Jay Monahan returns from merger absence with explosive memo to players Golf.com
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Brooks Koepka accuses LIV teammate Matthew Wolff of quitting – ESPN – ESPN

  1. Brooks Koepka accuses LIV teammate Matthew Wolff of quitting – ESPN ESPN
  2. Brooks Koepka unleashes on LIV Golf teammate Matthew Wolff’s work ethic, attitude ahead of London event Yahoo Sports
  3. Report: Smashing heads? Brooks Koepka on Matthew Wolff: ‘I’ve basically given up on him’ Golf Channel
  4. Brooks Koepka says he’s done with LIV teammate Matthew Wolff: ‘A lot of talent, but I mean the talent’s wasted’ GolfDigest.com
  5. Brooks Koepka Has ‘Basically Given Up’ On ‘Wasted’ Talent Matthew Wolff Golf Monthly
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‘Yellowjackets’ Nonbinary Star Liv Hewson on Decision to Not Submit Themselves for Emmys Consideration: “My Issue Is So Structural” – Hollywood Reporter

  1. ‘Yellowjackets’ Nonbinary Star Liv Hewson on Decision to Not Submit Themselves for Emmys Consideration: “My Issue Is So Structural” Hollywood Reporter
  2. “I Am Not Going To Entertain Anybody’s Disgust Over My Body”: Liv Hewson Spoke About Getting Top Surgery Last Year Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Yellowjackets’ Liv Hewson Talks Top Surgery BuzzFeed
  4. Yellowjackets Star Liv Hewson Calls Out ‘Disgust Reactions’ People Have to Their Top Surgery Jezebel
  5. ‘Yellowjackets’ Star Liv Hewson Feels ‘More Alive’ After Top Surgery: ‘Never Been Happier’ Yahoo Entertainment
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Non-Binary ‘Yellowjackets’ Star Liv Hewson Won’t Submit for Emmys: ‘There’s No Space for Me’ – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. Non-Binary ‘Yellowjackets’ Star Liv Hewson Won’t Submit for Emmys: ‘There’s No Space for Me’ Yahoo Entertainment
  2. Why ‘Yellowjackets’ Nonbinary Actor Liv Hewson Benched Themselves for Emmys (EXCLUSIVE) Variety
  3. Liv Hewson’s Choice Spotlights the Limitations of Gendered Emmys Categories www.autostraddle.com
  4. Yellowjackets star Liv Hewson will NOT compete for an Emmy Award due to gendered categories Daily Mail
  5. ‘Yellowjackets’ Star Liv Hewson Opts Out of Emmy Submissions Over Gendered Categories IndieWire
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Liv Tyler Returns to Marvel for ‘Captain America 4’ – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Liv Tyler Returns to Marvel for ‘Captain America 4’ Hollywood Reporter
  2. Liv Tyler To Return As Betty Ross For CAPTAIN AMERICA: NEW WORLD ORDER CBM (Comic Book Movie)
  3. Liv Tyler to Reprise MCU Role in Captain America: New World Order ComingSoon.net
  4. Liv Tyler to Return as Betty Ross in Marvel’s ‘Captain America: New World Order’ Yahoo Entertainment
  5. Liv Tyler Joins ‘Captain America: New World Order,’ Reprising Role From 2008’s ‘The Incredible Hulk’ Variety
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Justin Thomas on difference between new-look PGA Tour schedule, LIV Golf: ‘We have an astronomically higher amount of quality players’ – Yahoo Sports

  1. Justin Thomas on difference between new-look PGA Tour schedule, LIV Golf: ‘We have an astronomically higher amount of quality players’ Yahoo Sports
  2. Players 2023: Justin Thomas takes flamethrower to LIV with one quote GolfDigest.com
  3. Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm Credit LIV Golf for PGA Tour’s Changes, ‘It Is What We Needed’ Sports Illustrated
  4. Jay Monahan defends new PGA Tour schedule changes, pushes back on LIV Golf comparison Yahoo Sports
  5. Rory McIlroy, PGA Tour commish explain eliminating cuts, implementing smaller fields at designated events CBS Sports
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Keystone cleanup turns remote Kansas valley into a small town

WASHINGTON, Kan., Dec 18 (Reuters) – Farmer Bill Pannbacker got a call earlier this month from a representative from TC Energy Corp , telling him that its Keystone Pipeline, which runs through his farmland in rural Kansas, had suffered an oil leak.

But he was not prepared for what he saw on his land, which he owns with his wife, Chris. Oil had shot out of the pipeline and coated what he estimated was nearly an acre of pasture uphill of the pipe, which is set into a valley.

The grass was blackened with diluent bitumen, one of the thickest of crude oils, which was being transported from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico.

The rupture on Dec. 7 is the third in the last five years for the Keystone Pipeline, and the worst of the three – more than 14,000 barrels of crude has spilled and cleanup is expected to take weeks or months.

TC has not said when repairs could be completed and a 96-mile (155-km) segment of the pipeline will restart. Crews will remain busy on site through the holidays and completion of the cleanup depends on weather and other factors, the Canadian company said in a statement.

“We are committed to restoring the affected areas to their original condition or better.”

BEEHIVE OF WORKERS

Keystone’s two previous spills happened in unincorporated areas in North Dakota and South Dakota. And while the city of Washington, Kansas, is small with just over 1,000 residents, it is surrounded by farms where wheat, corn, soybeans are planted and cattle are raised. The spill in Washington County affected land owned by several people.

The once-quiet valley is currently a construction site buzzing with some 400 contractors, staff from pipeline operator TC Energy, and federal, state and local officials. They are working into the night, leaving a glow from the high-intensity lamps seen from miles away.

Cranes, storage containers, construction equipment and vehicles stretch for more than a half mile from the site of the rupture. The valley has become almost a small town, with several Quonset-style huts erected for workers.

Aerial photos showed a large, blackened swath of land that almost looks like an airborne object is throwing a shadow over the land. Pannbacker said that pasture was used for cattle grazing and calving, but with calving season over, there were no livestock there at the time.

The oil-blackened grass on the land, which is owned by Pannbacker and his sisters as part of a family trust, is now completely gone. It was scraped away and is now confined to a giant mound of dirt that is noticeably darker at the bottom. But oil droplets on plants further up the hill were still visible.

WIDER GROUP AFFECTED

Living in rural Kansas, the Pannbackers are used to preparing for harsh weather, but not an oil spill. Residents have been largely unconcerned despite the accident, even as the area will resemble a work site for the near-future.

“How many people have experienced an oil spill? Who knows what it’s like?” said Chris Pannbacker. “It’s not like a tornado or a natural disaster.”

Kansas State Representative Lisa Moser in a Facebook post said there are 14 landowners who are being compensated for either the spill or the use of their property during cleanup.

TC said it is discussing compensation with landowners but would keep details private. The company said it has stayed in regular contact with landowners. Pannbacker said TC has not yet discussed compensation with them yet.

Pannbacker says he does not expect the grass on the pastureland to return for at least two or three years; there is a well site on the pasture used for the cattle that they will not be using either.

Reporting by Erwin Seba in Washington, Kan.; additional reporting by Rod Nickel; writing by David Gaffen
Editing by Marguerita Choy

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Kansas residents hold their noses as crews mop up massive U.S. oil spill

WASHINGTON, Kan., Dec 10 (Reuters) – Residents near the site of the worst U.S. oil pipeline leak in a decade took the commotion and smell in stride as cleanup crews labored in near-freezing temperatures, and investigators searched for clues to what caused the spill.

A heavy odor of oil hung in the air as tractor trailers ferried generators, lighting and ground mats to a muddy site on the outskirts of this farming community, where a breach in the Keystone pipeline discovered on Wednesday spewed 14,000 barrels of oil.

Pipeline operator TC Energy (TRP.TO) said on Friday it was evaluating plans to restart the line, which carries 622,000 barrels per day of Canadian oil to U.S. refineries and export hubs.

“We could smell it first thing in the morning; it was bad,” said Washington resident Dana Cecrle, 56. He shrugged off the disruption: “Stuff breaks. Pipelines break, oil trains derail.”

TC Energy did not provide details of the breach or say when a restart on the broken segment could begin. Officials are scheduled on Monday to receive a briefing on the pipeline breach and cleanup, said Washington County’s emergency preparedness coordinator, Randy Hubbard, on Saturday.

OIL FLOWS TO CREEK

Environmental specialists from as far away as Mississippi were helping with the cleanup and federal investigators combed the site to determine what caused the 36-inch (91-cm) pipeline to break.

Washington County, a rural area of about 5,500 people, is about 200 miles (322 km) northwest of Kansas City.

The spill has not threatened the water supply or forced residents to evacuate. Emergency workers installed booms to contain oil that flowed into a creek and that sprayed onto a hillside near a livestock pasture, said Hubbard.

TC Energy aims to restart on Saturday a pipeline segment that sends oil to Illinois, and another portion that brings oil to the major trading hub of Cushing, Oklahoma, on Dec. 20, Bloomberg News reported, citing sources. Reuters has not verified those details.

It was the third spill of several thousand barrels of crude on the 2,687-mile (4,324-km) pipeline since it opened in 2010. A previous Keystone spill had caused the pipeline to remain shut for about two weeks.

“Hell, that’s life,” said 70-year-old Carol Hollingsworth of nearby Hollenberg, Kansas, about the latest spill. “We got to have the oil.”

TC Energy had around 100 workers leading the cleanup and containment efforts, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency was providing oversight and monitoring, said Kellen Ashford, an EPA spokesperson.

U.S. regulator Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Administration (PHMSA) said the company shut the pipeline seven minutes after receiving a leak detection alarm.

CRUDE BOTTLENECK

A lengthy shutdown of the pipeline could lead to Canadian crude getting bottlenecked in Alberta, and drive prices at the Hardisty storage hub lower, although price reaction on Friday was muted.

Western Canada Select (WCS), the benchmark Canadian heavy grade, for December delivery last traded at a discount of $27.70 per barrel to the U.S. crude futures benchmark , according to a Calgary-based broker. On Thursday, December WCS traded as low as $33.50 under U.S. crude, before settling at around a $28.45 discount.

“The real impact could come if Keystone faces any (flow) pressure restrictions from PHMSA, even after the pipeline is allowed to resume operations,” said Ryan Saxton, head of oil data at consultants Wood Mackenzie.

Reporting by Erwin Seba in Washington, Kansas, and Nia Williams in Calgary, Alberta;
Additional reporting by Arathy Somasekhar in Houston, Rod Nickel in Winnipeg and Stephanie Kelly in New York
Editing by Gary McWilliams, Stephen Coates and Matthew Lewis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Liv Morgan & Tegan Nox vs. Ronda Rousey & Shayna Baszler: SmackDown, Dec. 9, 2022 – WWE

  1. Liv Morgan & Tegan Nox vs. Ronda Rousey & Shayna Baszler: SmackDown, Dec. 9, 2022 WWE
  2. New WWE SmackDown Match, WWE Does Parking Lot Injury Angle Before SmackDown Wrestling Headlines
  3. Rousey and Baszler smash Shotzi’s hand in a car door: SmackDown Exclusive, Dec. 9, 2022 WWE
  4. WWE News: Shotzi Gets Hand ‘Broken’ By Ronda Rousey & Shayna Baszler On Smackdown, LA Knight Has Enough Of Bray Wyatt 411mania.com
  5. Ronda Rousey and Shayna Baszler suffer embarrassment on WWE SmackDown because of a distraction by an injured female superstar Sportskeeda
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Oil removal effort for Keystone pipeline spill to extend to next week, U.S. EPA says

Dec 9 (Reuters) – The effort to remove oil from the largest crude spill in the United States in nearly a decade will extend into next week, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said on Friday, making it likely that the Keystone pipeline shutdown will last for several more days.

TC Energy (TRP.TO) shut the largest oil pipeline to the United States from Canada on Wednesday after it leaked 14,000 barrels of oil into a Kansas creek. It said on Friday it is still determining when it will be able to return the line to service.

The outage on the Keystone, which carries 622,000 barrels of Canadian crude per day (bpd) to various parts of the United States, could affect inventories at the key Cushing, Oklahoma, storage hub and cut crude supplies to two oil refining centers, analysts said. Crews in Kansas continued clean-up efforts on Friday from the breach, the cause of which remained unknown.

“We’re beginning to get a better sense of the clean up efforts that will need to be undertaken in the longer-term,” said Kellen Ashford, spokesperson for the EPA Region 7, which includes Kansas.

TC Energy aims to restart on Saturday a pipeline segment that sends oil to Illinois, and another portion that brings oil to Cushing on Dec. 20, Bloomberg News reported, citing sources. Reuters has not verified those details.

This is the third spill of several thousand barrels of crude on the pipeline since it first opened in 2010. A previous Keystone spill had caused the pipeline to remain shut for about two weeks.

TC Energy remained on site with around 100 workers leading the clean-up and containment efforts, and the EPA was providing oversight and monitoring, Ashford said. TC is responsible for determining the cause of the leak.

A corrective action order from the U.S. Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Administration (PHMSA) to TC on Thursday said the company shut the pipeline down seven minutes after receiving a leak detection alarm. The affected segment, 36 inches (91 cm) in diameter, was Keystone’s Phase 2 extension to Cushing built in 2011.

Washington County, a rural area of about 5,500 people, is about 200 miles (320 km) northwest of Kansas City.

The oil spill has not threatened the local water supply or forced local residents to evacuate, Washington County Emergency Management Coordinator Randy Hubbard told Reuters. Workers quickly set up a containment area to restrict oil that had spilled into a creek from flowing downstream.

“There is no human consumption drinking water that would come out of this,” Hubbard said.

Livestock producers in the area have been notified and have taken their own corrective measure to protect their animals, he added.

The EPA is the main federal agency that oversees inland oil spills. If the EPA finds TC Energy liable for the spill, the company would be responsible for the cost of cleanup and repairing any harm to the environment, as well as potential civil and criminal penalties.

Pipeline operators are typically held accountable for breaches by the EPA through the Clean Water Act (CWA) and the related Oil Pollution Act, among others, according to Zygmunt Plater, an environmental law professor at Boston College Law School.

Those federal acts restrict the discharge of pollutants such as oil into waterways and hold pipeline operators responsible for the costs associated with containment, cleanup and damages from spills.

CRUDE BOTTLENECK

A lengthy shutdown of the pipeline could also lead to Canadian crude getting bottlenecked in Alberta, and drive prices at the Hardisty storage hub lower, although price reaction on Friday was muted.

Western Canada Select (WCS), the benchmark Canadian heavy grade, for December delivery last traded at a discount of $27.70 per barrel to the U.S crude futures benchmark, according to a Calgary-based broker. On Thursday, December WCS traded as low as $33.50 under U.S. crude, before settling at around a $28.45 discount.

PHMSA has to approve the restart of the line. Even once the pipeline starts operating again, the affected area will have to flow at reduced rates pending PHMSA approval.

“The real impact could come if Keystone faces any pressure restrictions from PHMSA, even after the pipeline is allowed to resume operations,” said Ryan Saxton, head of oil data at Wood Mackenzie.

Additional reporting by Arathy Somasekhar, Rod Nickel, Stephanie Kelly and Clark Mindock; Editing by Marguerita Choy

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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