Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Natural Gas In B.C. Limited Through The Winter After Pipeline Blast: FortisBC

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Oct, 2018 12:27 AM
    SURREY, B.C. — A British Columbia natural gas supplier is warning its one million customers to expect reduced supplies and "challenges in times of high demand" as winter looms.
     
     
    FortisBC says in a statement that the Oct. 9 rupture and explosion of the Enbridge natural gas pipeline northeast of Prince George will mean a reduced supply for months.
     
     
    Although Enbridge says it expects to have the ruptured pipeline in service by mid-November, it also advises that the pressure in that line, and in a smaller natural gas pipeline nearby, will remain below maximum levels until spring.
     
     
    FortisBC says that means natural gas supplies provincewide will be limited to 50 to 80 per cent of normal levels during the coldest months of the year.
     
     
    Company vice-president Doug Stout says more gas is being routed through a pipeline across southern B.C., which feeds the Interior from Alberta, and Fortis is working to provide enough fuel to keep logging, mining and other industries operating. 
     
     
    Fortis says it is also seeking additional natural gas in the open marketplace, but urges all customers to turn down thermostats, cut back on hot water and conserve wherever possible.  
     
     
    "We will have a shortage of gas compared to what we would normally have to operate with during the cold periods," says Stout in a video statement.
     
     
    He says conservation will ensure all British Columbians are able to access natural gas for essential uses, and he thanks those whose efforts had reduced natural gas consumption by about 20 per cent within a week of the fiery blast on the Enbridge pipeline.
     
     
    There were no injuries when the pipeline exploded earlier this month and the RCMP says it does not suspect criminal activity, but the cause of the blast has yet to be determined.
     
     
    Investigators from the Transportation Safety Board and the National Energy Board continue to investigate a cause.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    16-Yr-Old Boy Hospitalized In Surrey Stabbing

    16-Yr-Old Boy Hospitalized In Surrey Stabbing
    A 16-year-old male is in hospital after he was stabbed in Surrey Monday night.

    16-Yr-Old Boy Hospitalized In Surrey Stabbing

    Foreign Nationals Seeking Indian Visas Must Reveal All Criminal Records Now

    Foreign Nationals Seeking Indian Visas Must Reveal All Criminal Records Now
    Foreign nationals applying for Indian visas will now have to declare their criminal records as part of the new visa format approved by the Government to check child sexual abuse and a range of other crimes by travellers.

    Foreign Nationals Seeking Indian Visas Must Reveal All Criminal Records Now

    Surrey Man Arrested, Charged With Wife's Murder

    Surrey Man Arrested, Charged With Wife's Murder
    Rizig Bona was charged Oct. 19 with the slaying of 42-year-old Anida Magaya.

    Surrey Man Arrested, Charged With Wife's Murder

    Canadian Rapper Jon James McMurray Dies After Falling Off Airplane Wing In Failed Stunt

    Jon James McMurray died Saturday filming a project he had been working on for months, a statement from the team said. He trained "intensively" for the stunt, it said.

    Canadian Rapper Jon James McMurray Dies After Falling Off Airplane Wing In Failed Stunt

    Air Canada Jet Damaged While On LaGuardia Taxiway By Another Jet

    Airport officials in New York say an Air Canada flight that had just landed at the city's LaGuardia Airport late Monday afternoon was damaged as it sat on the taxiway by another passing plane.

    Air Canada Jet Damaged While On LaGuardia Taxiway By Another Jet

    Alberta's Rachel Notley Proposes Ottawa Get Into The Crude-By-Rail Business

    Alberta's Rachel Notley Proposes Ottawa Get Into The Crude-By-Rail Business
    Alberta Premier Rachel Notley is proposing Ottawa get into the crude-by-rail business — at least temporarily — so that producers in her province can get a better price for their oil.

    Alberta's Rachel Notley Proposes Ottawa Get Into The Crude-By-Rail Business