National Post

N.W.T. town ‘delighted’ after oilfield production resumes

-

CALGARY • The restart of crude oil production at Imperial Oil Ltd.’s Norman Wells oilfield after a two-year shutdown means both economic optimism and cleaner air for the 800 or so residents of the remote Northwest Territorie­s town.

“Obviously, a producing plant is going to require people and that creates employment, creates activity in our community,” interim town manager Darren Flynn said. “So we’re absolutely delighted that they’re back on line.”

Imperial announced Monday that an employee contractor workforce of about 100 had restored oil operations, adding it plans to increase output gradually to about 10,000 barrels a day, about the same level it was at before being shut down in December 2016.

Production was halted after slope stability concerns at the Mackenzie River crossing near Fort Simpson led to Enbridge Inc. suspending its 870-kilometre Line 21 pipeline that extends from Norman Wells into northern Alberta.

After receiving regulatory approval, replacemen­t work on a two-kilometre section of the pipeline began in May and was completed in September. Imperial began shipping oil from storage on the line last month.

The resumption of production means Imperial will resume supplying Northwest Territorie­s Power Corp. with surplus electricit­y from its power plant, it said. The plant is fuelled by natural gas produced with the oil from its wells.

The electricit­y is expected to allow the power company to withdraw diesel-fuelled generators it employed to bolster power capacity while the oilfield was off-line, Flynn said.

“They (diesel generators) make quite a bit of noise and, of course, you get the exhaust that comes off of it,” he said. “It’s my understand­ing that (Imperial) is burning off natural gas in order to produce theirs, so that definitely is a cleaner way to generate electricit­y than using diesel.”

Imperial had identified its Norman Wells oilfield as a non-core asset and was trying to sell it prior to the shutdown. In an email, spokeswoma­n Lisa Schmidt said it is still considered to be on the market.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada