Calgary Herald

REPORT ON OIL SPILL

Husky awarded more time

- JENNIFER GRAHAM

Husky Energy has asked for more time to submit technical reports on an oil pipeline spill into the North Saskatchew­an River in July.

The Saskatchew­an government says Husky has been granted a 30-day extension on the metallurgi­c review of the failed pipe and a geotechnic­al report on the land where the failure occurred.

Doug MacKnight is with the Ministry of Economy’s petroleum and natural gas division, which is responsibl­e for licensing pipelines and overseeing the Husky investigat­ion. He said an extension isn’t common.

“But then again, this is an uncommon incident. We haven’t had one of this scale,” MacKnight said Friday in a conference call.

Pipeline regulation­s in Saskatchew­an allow for extensions on reports. MacKnight said the rule is there specifical­ly for this kind of lengthy and complex investigat­ion.

“This a major piece of scientific and engineerin­g research that has to go on,” he said. “The pipe is located on a slope. There’s a lot of science in terms of investigat­ing the metallurgi­c failure as well as the technical environmen­t in which the pipe is operating. There is a lot of work involved here. The priority is getting a thorough report.”

Calgary-based Husky was expected to submit a full report within 90 days of the pipeline breach.

The government now expects a full assessment of the cause of the spill by Nov. 21.

A one-page update provided Friday by Husky said 225,000 litres of oil spilled into the river near Maidstone, Sask., in July and affected an area of about 41,500 square metres. It’s the first time the government has received an official report on the affected land area, said MacKnight.

The update said about 210,000 litres have been recovered.

Ash Olesen, with the Environmen­t Ministry, said that’s about 93 per cent of the oil spilled. Olesen could not say at what point officials will acknowledg­e that no further oil can be recovered.

“The expectatio­n is that if, in fact, there is anything to be retrieved, we would be actively requiring Husky to do so,” he said.

The spill forced the cities of North Battleford, Prince Albert and Melfort to shut off their water intakes from the river and find other water sources for almost two months.

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 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/ FILES ?? Chief Wally Burns of the James Smith Cree Nation surveys the North Saskatchew­an River next to an oil boom set up following a spill from a Husky pipeline in July.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/ FILES Chief Wally Burns of the James Smith Cree Nation surveys the North Saskatchew­an River next to an oil boom set up following a spill from a Husky pipeline in July.

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