Medicine Hat News

PIPELINE SPILL

Some of 400,000 litres enters N. Sask. River – A5

- DAN HEALING

Contaminat­ed water that leaked from an oilfield pipeline on Christmas Day has entered the North Saskatchew­an River but has had no detectable impact on it, says a spokesman for Calgary-based oil and gas producer ARC Resources Ltd.

The spill was reported by a local landowner at about 2 p.m. last Friday, said Sean Calder, ARC’s vice-president of production, in an interview on Tuesday.

“We had guys on site within about an hour and then the pipeline was shut in by 4 p.m., I believe,” he said.

He said the leaked produced water flowed into an unnamed creek and then into the North Saskatchew­an River, a glacier-fed major waterway that flows east through Edmonton and into central Saskatchew­an, where it joins with the South Saskatchew­an River and eventually flows into Hudson Bay.

“All of our testing to date shows there’s no impact to the North Saskatchew­an at all,” Calder said.

“We sampled it as soon as we got there and there’s no sign of any impact and no impact to wildlife at this time.”

The Alberta Energy Regulator said on its website the spill is estimated at about 400 cubic metres (400,000 litres or 2,500 barrels) of salty produced water.

It says the spill took place near Drayton Valley, a community about 130 kilometres southwest of Edmonton, adding the line has been isolated and cleanup is underway by the company and its environmen­tal consultant­s.

AER spokeswoma­n Cara Tobin confirmed Tuesday that no contaminan­ts from the spill have been identified in the North Saskatchew­an, which she said is about 12 kilometres from the pipeline spill site.

The unnamed creek wasn’t thought to be fishbearin­g, but fish have been found living there, she added, which means the company must do more to mitigate effects from the spill. She said AER staff are on-site and continuing to work with the company.

“Produced water” is water that is separated at surface from the oil and natural gas from a well. It is often contaminat­ed with salt and oil or other substances.

Calder said the water that leaked contained relatively low levels of salt and other contaminan­ts. He said it was being transporte­d to a site where it would be reinjected into a producing undergroun­d formation as part of a waterflood enhanced oil recovery operation.

In November, ARC Resources reported third quarter production of 158,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, of which about 80 per cent was natural gas and 20 per cent petroleum liquids, and announced a 2021 capital budget of about $400 million.

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