National Post (National Edition)

Warning system failed to detect leak in Nexen line

- BY IAN BICKIS Nexen Energy ULC

CA LGA RY • apologized Friday for a major leak in an Alberta pipeline that was only installed last year and said a warning system didn’t detect it.

Ron Bailey, the company’s senior vice-president of Canadian operations, said it is investigat­ing what caused the pipeline to rupture and why the system failed.

“We are deeply concerned with this and we sincerely apologize for the impact that this has caused,” Bailey told a news conference.

“We will take every step that we see as reasonable and as the regulators help us decide what to do to respond to this.”

A contractor discovered the leak Wednesday near Nexen’s Long Lake oilsands facility about 35 kilometres southeast of Fort McMurray, Alta. Nexen shut down the pipeline, but not before some five million litres of bitumen, water and sand spilled into muskeg.

Nexen, which was taken over by China’s CNOOC Ltd. in 2013, says the affected area is about 16,000

We will take every step that we see as reasonable | ... to respond to this

square metres, mostly along the pipeline’s route.

Bailey said company staff have been on site to contain the spill and prevent impacts on wildlife and a nearby lake.

He said the company built an allweather road to bring in trucks to vacuum the spill.

Alberta Premier Rachel Notley, who was in St. John’s, N.L., on Friday for the annual premiers’ meeting, said she has been receiving updates on the spill.

Notley said pipelines continue to be the safest way to carry oil and gas across the country.

“So what it comes down to is we need to learn from the spill,” she said.

A spokesman for Energy Minister Margaret McCuaig-Boyd said she is in regular contact with the Alberta Energy Regulator and is monitoring the situation closely.

“We take a pipeline spill like this one very seriously,” Brad Hartle said in a statement.

John Bennett, national program director of the Sierra Club Canada Foundation, said he was worried.

“We’re always concerned when petroleum products get spilled into the environmen­t.

“There’s always damage, and it’s usually permanent of some nature,” said Bennett.

“It’s full of toxic elements that should not be released into the environmen­t.”

In March, Murphy Oil spilled about 2.7 million litres of condensate at an oilfield in northweste­rn Alberta.

Condensate is used to dilute heavy oil so it can flow through pipelines.

In 2011, about 4.5 million litres of oil leaked from a Plains Midstream pipeline into marshlands near the northern Alberta community of Little Buffalo.

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