Ottawa Citizen

`Zombie fires' threaten oil drillers in Alberta

Last year's blazes smoulder beneath layers of snow

- ROBERT TUTTLE

Leftover blazes from last year's record wildfire season in Canada are threatenin­g to knock out almost three per cent of the country's natural gas production.

A total of 50 so-called zombie fires still smoulderin­g beneath layers of snow are located near oil and gas wells and other production facilities, according to government data analyzed by Bloomberg News. Those sites yield natural gas equivalent to about 80,000 barrels a day of oil in Canada's energy heartland of Alberta alone, in addition to almost 14,000 barrels a day of crude.

Companies most at risk of disruption­s include Tourmaline Oil Corp., the country's biggest gas driller, as well as oilsands giant Cenovus Energy Inc. and Paramount Resources Ltd. Smaller explorers could also be affected, including closely held Westbrick Energy Ltd.

The residual blazes underscore how Canada's energy industry — underpinne­d by an oilsands sector that produces some of the world's dirtiest crudes — is increasing­ly imperilled by climate change. Unusually hot, dry weather contribute­d to the country's worst wildfire season last year, darkening skies over New York and other U.S. cities. And with over 65 per cent of Canada abnormally parched or in drought at the end of March, the nation is bracing for another smoke-filled summer.

Canada could be facing another catastroph­ic fire season this year as dangerousl­y dry conditions combine with higher-than-normal temperatur­es buoyed by the El Niño weather pattern, according to a government forecast. Alberta declared the start of its wildfire season on Feb. 20, the earliest in recent years. Zombie fires, along with new ones, could flare up as temperatur­es rise throughout the spring.

The leftover fires burn into organic matter in the earth including into peat, which smoulders easily and is difficult to extinguish. The blazes from 2023 aren't generally as much of a threat as new conflagrat­ions that emerge, but the large number of carry-over fires this year is a problem, Alberta Wildfire spokeswoma­n Josee St-onge said by phone.

“The advantage is we know them and we have been working on them for a year,” she said.

A representa­tive for Cenovus said the company is building on what it learned last year to prepare for wildfires this season, including updating its fire program and completing risk assessment­s to ensure areas with excess vegetation are identified and mitigated. Spokespeop­le for Tourmaline and Paramount didn't immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

For Westbrick, which shut in as much as 30,000 barrels of oil equivalent last year, the leftover fires are not a reason to be “overly concerned,” chief executive Ken Mccagherty said by phone. Much of the vegetation that fuelled last year's wildfires has been burned off, he said.

“We're in a far, far better position this year than last year,” Mccagherty said.

Chevron Corp., Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. and Baytex Energy Corp. at times shut production equivalent to about 300,000 barrels of oil a day combined last year as blazes encroached on wells and processing infrastruc­ture, mostly in the western shale oil and gas producing regions along the British Columbia and Alberta border. The fires scorched about four per cent of the country's forests.

That damage was dwarfed by the fire season of 2016, when more than one million barrels of daily oil output was shut during a devastatin­g blaze that razed sections of Fort Mcmurray — the largest city near most producers' oilsands operations — and caused about $3.7 billion in insured losses, making it Canada's costliest natural disaster.

 ?? HANDOUT/ALBERTA
WILDFIRE/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? There are 50 so-called zombie fires still smoulderin­g beneath layers of snow are located near oil and gas wells and other production facilities, according to government data analyzed by Bloomberg News.
HANDOUT/ALBERTA WILDFIRE/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES There are 50 so-called zombie fires still smoulderin­g beneath layers of snow are located near oil and gas wells and other production facilities, according to government data analyzed by Bloomberg News.

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