Calgary Herald

Drinkable water top concern in Sask.

Wider pipeline debate can wait, premier says in wake of oil spill

- LAUREN KRUGEL

Saskatchew­an Premier Brad Wall says his top concern right now is making sure communitie­s affected by an oil spill have enough drinking water, and the wider debate over pipelines can wait.

“We need to make sure that drinking water is available, that potable water is available to communitie­s affected by this. That’s the first challenge,” he said Wednesday.

“We’ll get into the debate on pipelines versus rail or how we move oil across this country at a later date, but for now I think we should just set it aside.”

A Husky Energy pipeline last week spilled between 200,000250,000 litres of oil into the North Saskatchew­an River.

The slick has already hit the cities of North Battleford, Prince Albert and Melfort, where water intakes have been shut down and measures to conserve drinking water have been put in place.

An incident report filed by Husky on Tuesday said a leak was discovered around 8 p.m. on July 20, a day earlier than initially believed. The company later clarified that it was alerted to “pressure anomalies” that evening, but it didn’t confirm there had been a leak until the next morning. It began shutting down the line around 6 a.m. last Thursday and informed the Saskatchew­an government around 10:30 a.m.

Wall noted Husky has said it will review what happened and why there was a delay, but added the company’s response to the spill itself appears to have followed protocol.

He also said he expects Husky to live up to its promise to cover the costs of the cleanup — and more. Car washes and laundromat­s, for example, have had to shut down as communitie­s conserve water.

“We think of the big costs, and the responsibi­lity for those are on the company,” said Wall.

He was planning to visit the affected area on Thursday. But local officials, saying they wanted to focus on their response efforts, asked the premier to wait until later.

Shelley Gordon, owner of the 6th Avenue Car Wash in Prince Albert, hasn’t been able to run her business since Monday.

On a normal summer day, cars would be lined up, she said.

“This is when car washes make their money. It makes up for the days in January and December when we’re really quiet. It’s an unfortunat­e time of the year to have a disaster like this happen.”

The cleanup effort has run into some challenges.

The oil sheen has been dispersing as it moves downstream, which makes it more difficult to skim it off the surface, said Wes Kotyk with Saskatchew­an’s Ministry of Environmen­t.

Nine booms have been placed on the river where they’re believed to be most helpful, but their performanc­e is in question.

Some of the oil has sunk, but it’s not clear how much. There is no plan yet to clean up the below-surface oil because not enough is known about how the heavy convention­al crude reacts in water.

Sam Ferris of Saskatchew­an’s Water Security Agency said North Battleford should have enough water in its reservoirs if it continues its conservati­on efforts and there is no major event, such as a major fire, to deplete the supply.

One other option being considered is to pre-treat the oil-tainted river water before it enters the plant.

In Prince Albert, the city manager said a temporary pipeline that was to be completed on Wednesday to bolster the city’s water supply wouldn’t be done until Friday.

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 ?? GAVIN YOUNG ?? Saskatchew­an Premier Brad Wall says he expects Husky to cover the costs of cleaning up after a pipeline leak spilled 200,000-250,000 litres of oil into the North Saskatchew­an River.
GAVIN YOUNG Saskatchew­an Premier Brad Wall says he expects Husky to cover the costs of cleaning up after a pipeline leak spilled 200,000-250,000 litres of oil into the North Saskatchew­an River.

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