• In late 1957, during a high pressure line test on the section of the line from Winnipeg to
Port Arthur (today called
Thunder Bay), about five and a half kilometres of pipeline blew up near
Dryden. After quick repairs, the line delivered Alberta gas to Port Arthur before the end of the year, making the entire trip on its own wellhead pressure. • On 30 May 1979 an explosion caused evacuations in
Englehart, Ontario, about 200 kilometres north of
North Bay, Ontario • On 1 December 2003, a rupture in the pipeline occurred at approximately (120 km south of
Grande Prairie, Alberta). 14 hours later, another rupture and fire occurred 15 km downstream from the initial incident. According to TransCanada PipeLines, the breaks were immediately isolated, and any already escaped gas was allowed to burn off. • On 20 July 2009, the Peace River Mainline in
northern Alberta exploded, sending 50-metre-tall flames into the air and razing a two-hectare wooded area. According to
CBC News, reports about the causes and actual extent of the explosion were redacted from a January 2011 government report and were only fully revealed after a media inquiry in 2014. • On 13 September 2009 a similar explosion to that of 1979 occurred, in
Englehart, Ontario, leaving a hole at the explosion site. • On 19 February 2011, a pipeline explosion occurred just outside
Beardmore, Ontario, 190 kilometres northeast of Thunder Bay. • On 25 January 2014, a fire broke out around 1:15 a.m. local time on the Canadian Mainline natural gas pipeline about 25 kilometres south of Winnipeg near
St. Pierre-Jolys, Manitoba. Five homes were evacuated as a precaution after the explosion. ==See also==