Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Nexen Halts Production At Oilsands Plant Following Fatal Explosion

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jan, 2016 01:38 PM
    CALGARY — A senior executive with Nexen Energy ULC says the company's upgrader near Fort McMurray remains shut down while investigators examine the cause of an explosion that killed one worker and critically injured another.
     
    Ron Bailey, the company's senior vice-president of Canadian operations, told a news conference in Calgary on Saturday that it's too soon after the blast to speculate how long the shutdown at Long Lake will last.
     
    Bailey says the facilities are being kept warm to prevent damage from the cold, which dipped to -29 C in Fort McMurray on Saturday afternoon.
     
    The explosion happened Friday in a building that's part of the upgrader's hydrocracker, which Bailey says breaks hydrocarbon molecules into smaller pieces to make a lighter oil product for shipping.
     
    Nexen Energy said in a statement Friday night that there is no immediate danger to the neighbouring community or to personnel still on site at the plant.
     
    Bailey says the worker who was injured has been transported to a burn unit in Edmonton.
     
    "Our employees, contractors and neighbouring communities are our primary concern at this time and we can confirm that we have taken steps to ensure their well-being and safety and we continue to provide them with timely information," Bailey said.
     
    "We notified the regulatory bodies immediately and we're fully co-operating and working through the investigation of the incident, and we've already begun our internal investigation to really understand the cause of this."
     
    Both Alberta's Occupational Health and Safety department and the Alberta Energy Regulator have dispatched staff to the site.
     
    Calgary-based Nexen Energy ULC was acquired by China's state-owned CNOOC Ltd. more than two years ago.
     
    Nexen CEO Fang Zhi told the news conference that the incident marked "one of the toughest days in Nexen's history."
     
    "Our motto at CNOOC is that there is nothing so important that it cannot be done safely. Yesterday, we did not live up to that standard and I deeply regret it," he said.
     
    Bailey said the worker who died and the worker who was injured were the only two people who were hurt. He said they were conducting maintenance at the time of the explosion.
     
    Anywhere from 100 to 500 employees can be at the site, Bailey said, depending on what sort of maintenance is being done.
     
    A pipeline rupture at the plant last summer leaked five million litres of a mixture of bitumen, produced water and sand into muskeg. The company shut the plant down while it complied with a pipeline suspension order from the AER, which had determined Nexen was not complying with pipeline maintenance and monitoring regulations.
     
    The suspension order was lifted in September and the plant returned to full operations.
     
    Bailey said the explosion happened in a part of the plant that was not involved in the leak.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Urged To Fund Anti-human Trafficking Task Force And Help Rape Victims

    Ontario Urged To Fund Anti-human Trafficking Task Force And Help Rape Victims
    The report by a provincial legislative committee is calling on the Liberal government to increase funding for the justice system and create a co-ordinated, province-wide strategy.

    Ontario Urged To Fund Anti-human Trafficking Task Force And Help Rape Victims

    Old Convent In Rural Nova Scotia Ready To Welcome Family Of Syrian Refugees

    Old Convent In Rural Nova Scotia Ready To Welcome Family Of Syrian Refugees
    ST. ANDREWS, N.S. — The old convent in rural St. Andrews, N.S., had been for sale for more than a year when the Sisters of St. Martha concluded that fate or something more powerful was telling them the big, empty home had a higher purpose.

    Old Convent In Rural Nova Scotia Ready To Welcome Family Of Syrian Refugees

    85-Year-Old Delta Woman Dies Following Collision In Marked Crosswalk

    85-Year-Old Delta Woman Dies Following Collision In Marked Crosswalk
    A vehicle turning left (near the 1200 block of 56th Street) struck an 85-year-old woman passing through a marked crosswalk.

    85-Year-Old Delta Woman Dies Following Collision In Marked Crosswalk

    Ferry Cancellations, Blackouts As Winter Storm Lashes B.C. South Coast

    Ferry Cancellations, Blackouts As Winter Storm Lashes B.C. South Coast
    Environment Canada has issued wind warnings for all of Vancouver Island as well as Metro Vancouver, the Sunshine Coast, Fraser Valley and Howe Sound.

    Ferry Cancellations, Blackouts As Winter Storm Lashes B.C. South Coast

    BC Hydro Misled Utilities Commission On Information-technology Costs: NDP

    BC Hydro Misled Utilities Commission On Information-technology Costs: NDP
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's hydro utility intentionally misled a regulatory agency over the spending of hundreds of millions of dollars on information technology, says the New Democrat opposition.

    BC Hydro Misled Utilities Commission On Information-technology Costs: NDP

    Second Planeload Of Syrian Refugees To Arrive In Canada Saturday

    Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard is expected to be on hand to greet the refugees when they arrive less than 48 hours after a government aircraft brought 163 refugees to Toronto.

    Second Planeload Of Syrian Refugees To Arrive In Canada Saturday