Manitoba dairy producers dump 300,000 litres of raw milk - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba dairy producers dump 300,000 litres of raw milk

Hundreds of thousands of litres of raw milk were dumped or trucked out of Manitoba because of the TransCanada Pipeline explosion.

Pipeline explosion shuts down processing plants used to pasteurize milk

Manitoba dairy producers dump 300,000 litres of raw milk

11 years ago
Duration 2:07
Hundreds of thousands of litres of raw milk were dumped or trucked out of Manitoba because of the TransCanada Pipeline explosion.

Hundreds of thousands of litres of raw milk were dumped or trucked out of Manitoba because of the TransCanada Pipeline explosion.

Two dairy processing plants were left unusable because the natural gas service was halted.

David Wiens, board chair for the Dairy Farmers of Manitoba, saidtheir processing capacity wasalready reducedbecause two companies arein the process of amalgamating plants and moving the operations to Brandon, and a plant in Winklerrecentlyshut down.

Then the explosion happened.

About 4,000 natural gascustomers lost their supply after a section of pipelineruptured and spewed balls of flameinto the air at about 1 a.m. CT Saturday nearOtterburne, 50 kilometres south of Winnipeg.

Officials with TransCanada Pipelines are investigating the rupture and say they still don't know what caused it.

The pipeline explosion that lit up the sky south of Winnipeg on Saturday was so loud it sounded like a jet plane, witnesses told CBC News. (Courtesy Jordan McRae)
For three days after the blastgas furnaces could not be used, leavinghomeowners to relyfor the most part on electric heaters. Several schools and businesses bakeries and restaurants that use gas-powered ovens were forced to close.

Wienssaid300,000litres of milk had to be dumped because there was nowhere for it to be processed.The cost of that discarded milk is $240,000.

"There's a number of different farms that can receive the milk into their manure storage facilities and so then it's taken care of properly, but that's the way it's done," he said.

Another 200,000litres of milk have been trucked at great costs to the Dairy Farmers of Manitoba to processing plants in Saskatchewan and Alberta.By the weekend, the total amount shipped outcould be closer to 570,000 litres.

"Basically we were filling the the storage tanks at all the processing plants [that were available]in Manitoba and they were doing as much as they could," Wienssaid.

"It didn't take very long and we realized that we'd have to start moving milk further to Saskatchewan and Alberta."

'Perfect storm'

But that wasn't easy, Wiens said. There's a limited amount of equipment that can haul it that far and then sometrucks were stranded by blizzard conditions that shut down the Trans-Canada Highway going west.

Wiens said he'snever seen anything like thissituation. There's been blizzards or plant break downs, resulting inone day where the milk can't be moved, but the recent series of events was a "perfect storm."

He hopes with gas service now restored to thetwo plants impacted by the explosion, they may not have to dump any more.

The plant in Grunthal is expected to get up and running on Wednesday morning and the New Bothwellplant was operational as of Tuesdaynight.

Wiens does not expect consumers to feel any impact from what happened. The dairy organization is keepingtrack of costs incurred and will look for any available compensation.

Manitoba Hydro said its staff is continuing to work around the clock to complete restoration of natural gas service to communities affected by the pipeline explosion.

The natural gas supply to all customersin the Rural Municipalities of Ritchot, Hanover, La Broquerie and De Salaberry is now available.

Manitoba Hydro said crews worked to visit all commercial customers by the end of Tuesday and will get to all remaining rural and urban customers by the end of Wednesday.