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Possible damage is being downplayed in latest Alberta oil pipeline leak

“Produced water” is a byproduct of oil and gas extraction and sometimes contains residual petroleum and chemicals and on its website, the Alberta Energy Regulator estimated the Christmas Day spill at about 400 cubic metres (400,000 litres or 2,500 barrels). A pump jack located near the town of Drayton Valley is pictured in this file photo. (Kory Siegers/CBC) The water first flowed into a creek before moving to the North Saskatchewan River, which flows east through Edmonton and into central Saskatchewan, where it meets the South Saskatchewan River and eventually flows into Hudson Bay. A spokesperson for the Calgary-based oil and gas producer that owns the pipeline, ARC Resources Ltd., told reporters Tuesday the leak has had no detectable impact on local waterways and wildlife.

Alberta: un déversement de 400 000 litres d eau salée de production le jour de Noël

Alberta: un déversement de 400 000 litres d eau salée de production le jour de Noël
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Pipeline spills about 400,000 litres - PLANT

Pipeline spills about 400,000 litres Some enters North Saskatchewan River December 29, 2020   by Dan Healing, The Canadian Press, Calgary Contaminated water that leaked from an oilfield pipeline on Christmas Day has entered the North Saskatchewan River but has had no detectable impact on it, says a spokesman for Calgary-based oil and gas producer ARC Resources Ltd. The spill was reported by a local landowner at about 2 p.m. last Friday, said Sean Calder, ARC’s vice-president of production, in an interview on Tuesday. “We had guys on site within about an hour and then the pipeline was shut in by 4 p.m., I believe,” he said.

Pipeline spills about 400,000 litres, some enters North Saskatchewan River | iNFOnews

Dan Healing December 29, 2020 - 12:38 PM CALGARY - Contaminated water that leaked from an oilfield pipeline on Christmas Day has entered the North Saskatchewan River but has had no detectable impact on it, says a spokesman for Calgary-based oil and gas producer ARC Resources Ltd. The spill was reported by a local landowner at about 2 p.m. last Friday, said Sean Calder, ARC s vice-president of production, in an interview on Tuesday. We had guys on site within about an hour and then the pipeline was shut in by 4 p.m., I believe, he said. He said the leaked produced water flowed into an unnamed creek and then into the North Saskatchewan River, a glacier-fed major waterway that flows east through Edmonton and into central Saskatchewan, where it joins with the South Saskatchewan River and eventually flows into Hudson Bay.

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