Xcel Energy last week experienced a major gas pipeline problem in Colorado, nine days after the company had to cut natural gas to about 150 customers in Minnesota due to low pressure in its distribution system here.
Low pressure in one of Xcel's Colorado gas transmission lines Friday prompted the company to institute short-term electricity brownouts that affected 17,600 customers in the Rocky Mountains. Xcel initially suspected a breach in the gas transmission line.
"When we see pressure dropping it's an indicator — is there some kind of breach in the pipeline where gas is coming out?" said Jerome Davis, regional vice president for Xcel in Colorado.
But after an investigation, Xcel this week ruled out a pipeline rupture in Colorado. The company is still investigating the cause of the pressure drop, focusing on its own operating procedures.
Minneapolis-based Xcel is both an electricity and gas provider. Colorado and Minnesota are its largest markets.
During the last week of January, bitterly cold weather increased heating demand in Minnesota, straining Xcel's gas distribution system to the point where the company cut service to about 150 customers in the Princeton area.
Xcel also asked its nearly 870,000 Minnesota gas customers to temporarily lower their thermostats to 63 degrees to conserve fuel.
Events such as those in Colorado and Minnesota are rare, and the causes appear to be different.