BBC News, 2
April 2013
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| Rain could carry oil sheen towards a nearby lake |
Attorney
General Dustin McDaniel asked the company to keep all documents pertaining to
Friday's spill.
The rupture
in Mayflower prompted the evacuation of 22 homes, with police enforcing a
blockade around the spill.
The spill
has renewed debate over a proposal to build another pipeline from western
Canada to the US Gulf Coast.
In the wake
of Friday's release of thousands of barrels of oil from the Pegasus pipeline,
black crude was seen soaking lawns and streaming down residential streets in
the community north of the state capital, Little Rock.
'Future
litigation'
"This
incident has damaged private property and Arkansas's natural resources,"
Mr McDaniel said. "Homeowners have been forced from their homes."
He said the
request Exxon Mobil keep records on the spill was the "first step in
determining what happened and preserving evidence for any future
litigation".
The oil
company has said it will co-operate with any investigation.
Exxon Mobil
says it plans to dig up and replace the broken part of the 65-year-old line
that runs from the state of Illinois to Texas.
But rain
forecast for Tuesday afternoon could hamper the clean-up by carrying oil sheen
towards nearby Lake Conway, a popular destination for bass, catfish, bream and
crappie fishing.
Local responders
have built barriers of rock and dirt to stop the oil from contaminating the
lake, and Exxon Mobil put booms into the lake as a precaution.
The oil
company said it was putting together a plan to enable residents return home.
Until then, Mayflower police were accompanying them as they retrieved personal
belongings from their houses.
Separately,
Canadian oil company TransCanada has proposed building a 1,700-mile (2,735km)
pipeline called Keystone XL to carry crude from Alberta, Canada's tar sands region
to refineries in Texas.
The project
has encountered stiff opposition from environmental groups.
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