Times Colonist

Alberta oil spill nets five charges for Nexen

- IAN BICKIS

CALGARY — The Alberta Energy Regulator has laid five charges against Nexen Energy for a pipeline spill two years ago that was one of the largest in provincial history.

About five million litres of emulsion — estimated to be roughly a third bitumen and twothirds water and sand — leaked into muskeg near the company’s Long Lake oilsands facility southeast of Fort McMurray.

The charges include releasing a substance that might have caused an adverse effect and disturbanc­e to public lands, failing to report the release as soon as possible, and failing to take all reasonable measures to remediate and manage the spill.

“Producing oil or gas in Alberta comes with a responsibi­lity to follow all requiremen­ts to protect the public and environmen­t,” AER president Jim Ellis said in a statement.

“When we believe that the rules are not followed, we have a variety of tools, including laying charges, that we can and do use in an attempt to ensure that potential offenders are held accountabl­e.”

The AER said the company faces a maximum fine of $3 million for the charges.

Nexen spokeswoma­n Brittney Price said in an email that the company will consider the charges, but will not make any comment because the matter is before the courts.

The AER’s investigat­ion into the pipeline spill — estimated to have contaminat­ed about 22,000 square metres — is still considered active.

AER spokesman Jordan Fitzgerald said the findings won’t be released until after court proceeding­s are finished, so as not to taint the process.

Nexen conducted its own investigat­ion into the pipeline rupture, concluding last summer that the design was incompatib­le with the ground conditions and buckled as the temperatur­e fluctuated.

When it released its findings, Nexen said that along with its own deficienci­es, it found a number of failings on the part of contractor­s and subcontrac­tors during the design, constructi­on and installati­on of the pipeline.

The company estimates that the pipeline leaked for close to a month before the spill was discovered by a field worker, saying that shortcomin­gs in the pipeline’s automated leak-detection system and its inability to manage the system delayed finding the leak.

The Long Lake operation had another major incident in January 2016, when an explosion at the plant killed two workers and knocked the upgrader out of commission. Alberta Occupation­al Health and Safety continues to investigat­e.

Nexen, a subsidiary of Chinese state-owned firm CNOOC Ltd., is scheduled to have its first court appearance on the AER charges on Aug. 16, 2017 in Fort McMurray provincial court.

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