Calgary Herald

Deadly gas could take several days to burn off

- LAUREN KRUGEL

It could take several days to dispose of hazardous gas that mistakenly got into a major Canada- U. S. natural gas pipeline.

Alliance Pipeline, whose B. C.-toChicago system has been shut since Friday, starting burning off the gas at two locations in southeaste­rn Saskatchew­an on Sunday.

In an online notice, Alliance said flaring was the safest way to get rid of the gas that was contaminat­ed with poisonous hydrogen sulphide, or H2S. “Flaring operations are progressin­g and we are clearing the H2S contained in a small segment of our pipeline in a safe, effective manner,” Daniel Sutherland, vice- president, commercial operations, said. “Safety is our top priority and crews are following strict regulatory and safety protocols. We are working hard to resolve this matter as soon as possible to minimize the disruption being experience­d by our shippers.”

Alliance said people in the Alameda and Arcola areas of Saskatchew­an might see and hear the gas being burned, but it shouldn’t have any odour. Residents are being asked to avoid the immediate area as a precaution.

Natural gas processor and transporte­r Keyera Corp. said Friday that the toxic gas got into the Alliance pipeline after a “brief operationa­l upset” at its Simonette gas plant in northweste­rn Alberta two days earlier.

Among the services Simonette provides to customers is “sour gas sweetening,” or handling gas from deposits that naturally contain H2S.

Keyera spokesman Nick Kuzyk said some of its customers’ gas has been diverted to a different system operated by TransCanad­a, but there’s a limited amount of room.

It’s not known yet what caused the problem at Simonette or how much H2S got into the Alliance system as a result, said Kuzyk.

“There’s some data that we are able to extract from the detection equipment that we can analyze over the course of this week, once everything’s back up and running,” he said. “That’s still to be determined, but priority No. 1 is getting Alliance back up and running.”

A number of producers have had their operations hampered by the Alliance closure, most recently Athabasca Oil, which has suspended some output while shifting other production onto the TransCanad­a system. Athabasca said the disruption has affected about 4,200 barrels a day of its light oil production.

Other affected producers include Seven Generation­s Energy, RMP Energy, Cequence Energy and Crew Energy.

The Alliance Pipeline is jointly owned by an Enbridge affiliate and Veresen. The line runs 3,848 kilometres and ships 1.6 billion cubic feet of gas per day.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/ ALLIANCE PIPELINE ?? Flare stacks at Alliance Pipeline’s main line block valve site near Arcola, Sask., might need take several days to dispose of hazardous gas that got into a major Canada- U. S. natural gas pipeline. Alliance, whose B. C.- to- Chicago system has been...
THE CANADIAN PRESS/ ALLIANCE PIPELINE Flare stacks at Alliance Pipeline’s main line block valve site near Arcola, Sask., might need take several days to dispose of hazardous gas that got into a major Canada- U. S. natural gas pipeline. Alliance, whose B. C.- to- Chicago system has been...

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