The Telegram (St. John's)

Better measures needed

Environmen­t groups wait for charges in year-old Husky oil spill in Saskatchew­an

- BY JENNIFER GRAHAM

A year after a major oil spill along the North Saskatchew­an River fouled the water source for three Saskatchew­an cities, an environmen­talist says the company involved should get more than just “a slap on the wrist.”

Peter Prebble with the Saskatchew­an Environmen­tal Society says he hopes Husky Energy will be held to account after one of its pipelines leaked 225,000 litres of heavy oil mixed with diluent onto the riverbank near Maidstone, Sask. About 40 per cent of the spill reached the river.

The oil plume flowed hundreds of kilometres downstream and forced the cities of North Battleford, Prince Albert and Melfort to shut off their water intakes for almost two months.

Saskatchew­an’s Ministry of Justice isn’t commenting. It is still reviewing Husky’s response to alarms before the spill to decide whether charges should be laid.

“If it was just a matter of deciding on a fine, then I would think it wouldn’t be all that complicate­d at this point in time,” said Prebble. “If the department is actually working on a larger settlement that involves upgrades to the safety of the oil pipeline system that Husky operates in the province, then that’s something that could take more time.

“If we don’t see that, I’ll be really concerned because Husky is a big company and the fine could just end up being a slap on the wrist.”

Husky (TSX:HSE) could face fines of up to $1 million a day under the Environmen­tal Protection Act and $50,000 a day under the Pipelines Act in Saskatchew­an.

There could also be federal charges under the Fisheries Act, said Dale Marshall, national program manager with the group Environmen­tal Defence.

“It remains to be seen whether fines will be levied or not,” said Marshall, noting he would be surprised if they weren’t.

Marshall said it often takes more than a year for charges. He suggested they should be laid more quickly “in the interest of accountabi­lity and to send a clear message to other pipeline operators and oil companies that these matters are taken seriously and will be dealt with quickly.”

Marshall noted it took a couple of years before charges were laid in spills in Alberta.

Earlier this month, the Alberta Energy Regulator laid five charges against Nexen Energy (TSX:NXY) for a pipeline spill two years ago that was one of the largest in provincial history.

In June 2014, Plains Midstream Canada was fined $1.3 million after pleading guilty to environmen­tal charges related to two spills: one in April 2011 and the other in June 2012.

In Saskatchew­an, the statute of limitation­s for charges under The Environmen­tal Management and Protection Act is three years. Marshall couldn’t say why it takes so long.

“There’s almost no doubt that if charges are laid, they will be determined through some sort of negotiatio­n with the oil industry. I think that’s almost a given. They’ll have certain charges that will be laid in exchange for a guilty verdict.”

Part of the concern in the Husky spill is over how it was reported.

The government was first told by a member of the public who spotted oil on the river - not Husky. Government investigat­ors later determined that the leak began July 20, the day before the spill was discovered.

They found that the pipeline’s alarms were warning of potential problems and continued until the line was shut down for scheduled maintenanc­e at 7:15 a.m. on July 21.

Husky Energy has said pipeline monitoring indicated pressure anomalies at 8 p.m. on July 20 and the company started a shutdown at 6 a.m.

 ?? Cp Photo/jason Franson ?? Crews work to clean up an oil spill on the North Saskatchew­an River near Maidstone, Sask., on July 22, 2016. A year after a major oil spill along the river fouled the water source for three Saskatchew­an cities, an environmen­talist says the company...
Cp Photo/jason Franson Crews work to clean up an oil spill on the North Saskatchew­an River near Maidstone, Sask., on July 22, 2016. A year after a major oil spill along the river fouled the water source for three Saskatchew­an cities, an environmen­talist says the company...

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