Toronto Star

Fuel delivery plan in place for pipeline closure

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The Manitoba government and Winnipeg City Hall expressed optimism Monday that there won’t be fuel shortages, despite the temporary closure of a pipeline that carries gasoline, diesel and jet fuel to the capital city and the surroundin­g area.

Plans are in place to temporaril­y use trucks and train cars as alternativ­e forms of delivery, and Premier Wab Kinew said they should be able to carry the same amount as the Imperial Oil pipeline that is undergoing repairs. “The goal is to bring in the same … quantity, about 12,000 barrels of gasoline per day when we’re talking about the Imperial terminal in particular,” Kinew said.

Kinew also said he has talked with the North Dakota government about pitching in with backup supplies if needed, and there is a week or more of supply already in the city at bulk storage facilities.

Imperial Oil announced on the weekend it is shutting down, for an estimated three months, a pipeline that brings fuel to the Winnipeg area from Gretna, Man. The company said it found “integrity concerns” in a section of pipe, and work needs to be done to replace a section under the Red River.

The chief administra­tive officer of Winnipeg, Michael Jack, wrote to council members Sunday that fuel supply could be compromise­d during the closure. But after speaking with company officials, Jack said the city received encouragin­g news. “They were able to give us a sense of all the work that is going on there, and the involvemen­t of other agencies, other companies, just to try and ensure that the Winnipeg market continues to be served properly,” Jack said.

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