Montreal Gazette

Capping blowouts in 24 hours too costly: Ottawa

Alaska plan based on harsh environmen­t, long distances

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The federal regulator says it is agreeing to an offshore drilling plan that allows up to 21 days to bring in capping technology for a subsea well blowout because requiring a shorter response time would be too expensive for Shell Canada Ltd.

Nova Scotia environmen­talists are questionin­g why the Canadian environmen­tal protection agency has signed off on a plan that allows between 12 and 21 days for the multinatio­nal company to bring a vessel and a capping system to the Shelburne Basin offshore site, about 250 kilometres off the southweste­rn coast of Nova Scotia.

They are noting that the most recent U.S. ruling in Alaska requires the capping stack to be on hand for a blowout within 24 hours.

In the federal environmen­tal assessment report of June 15, the agency states a blowout in the seven planned wells is unlikely and the project is unlikely to cause significan­t adverse environmen­tal effects.

In an email sent late Wednesday night, a spokesman for the Canadian Environmen­tal Assessment Agency said the Alaska plan to have a vessel and capping system on call was based on the harsh environmen­t in the area and the long distances a vessel would have to travel to get there.

In the case of the Shelburne Basin Project, the agency says it “accepted the proponent’s view that it would be prohibitiv­ely expensive to develop this infrastruc­ture in Atlantic Canada for explorator­y work.”

The Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Board still has to approve the plan, which would have a ship travel to the area from Norway if initial methods to stem a blowout in the deepwater wells fail.

A spokeswoma­n for the agency says it expects to make a decision on the plan this fall, and it is prepared to add conditions to the exploratio­n licence.

Energy Minister Michel Samson said the provincial government — which has representa­tives on the board — will rely on the board’s technical expertise on safety and he doesn’t have a position yet on the issue of the response time.

“There’s more process to be followed,” said Samson.

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