Copyright Scott Olson, Getty Images
Smoke fills the air as a police officer stands guard at a roadblock leading into Fort McMurray on May 8, 2016. Wildfires have forced the evacuation of tens of thousands residents from the town.

Majority of Canada's Oil-Sands Plants Emerge Unharmed from Wildfire

May 10, 2016
The industry’s safety precautions included the evacuation of workers from camps and the shutdown of pipelines and power supplies.

Canadian oil-sands facilities representing more than 90% of production taken offline during a wildfire in northern Alberta have emerged unscathed and are expected to restart within days to a couple of weeks.

Mines and drilling projects north of Fort McMurray are already bringing back some of the roughly 1 million barrels a day of supply that was curbed, Steve Williams, chief executive officer of the nation’s largest energy company  Suncor Energy Inc., said Tuesday, speaking for the industry. Facilities south of the energy hub that represent much less of the lost supply and were more affected by the fire may take longer, he said.

“It’s that quick -- some facilities are turning back up the volumes now,” Williams said at a media briefing in Edmonton, flanked by his peers at companies including Imperial Oil Ltd. and Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. Other projects to the south may take longer. “South, where there have been a few more direct impacts from the fire, we have to go in and evaluate and put the plans in place.”

Companies took oil-sands production offline as a fire that’s ripping across northern Alberta forced the evacuation of more than 80,000 residents of Fort McMurray and destroyed about 10% of the community’s buildings. The industry’s safety precautions included the evacuation of workers from camps and the shutdown of pipelines and power supplies. The fire -- now 2,290 square kilometers (884 square miles), according to the latest provincial estimate -- is primarily moving east of the region toward Saskatchewan.

Back to Normal "As Quickly As Possible"

Williams was among a dozen energy executives who met with Alberta Premier Rachel Notley on Tuesday to make plans to bring back the oil production that drives the provincial and national economy. Supplies taken offline by projects north of Fort McMurray represent an estimated 93% of volumes curbed during the fire, according to data compiled by Bloomberg from RBC Capital Markets research and company statements.

“We will get back to normal as quickly as possible,” Notley said at the briefing. Movement of goods on the roads north of Fort McMurray restarted on Tuesday, she said. “While thousands of lives will never be the same, we can take small steps to getting back the rhythm in northeast Alberta.”

While the lost production has helped to buoy oil prices, ample supplies of crude across the continent have aided in cushioning the blow to refineries. Volumes of crude moving on the Capline pipeline from the U.S. Gulf Coast to the Midwest have jumped 27% from a week ago, according to Genscape data. That indicates refiners have started to secure alternatives to curtailed Canadian supply, John Auers, executive vice president at Turner Mason & Co. in Dallas, said Tuesday in a phone interview.

Oil-sands companies are working with pipeline and power providers to bring back necessary infrastructure and don’t expect any hiccups that would hinder restarts, Williams said. Individual plants were shut down in a safe way to allow output to come back as quickly as possible, he said. And while the flames came closer to facilities south of Fort McMurray, including Cnooc Ltd.’s Long Lake and Athabasca Oil Corp.’s Hangingstone sites, the plants are largely fireproof, he said.

The Long Lake site operated by Cnooc’s Nexen unit suffered minor damage, officials have said, and some of Enbridge Inc.’s above-ground facilities had limited damage, the company said on Tuesday.

Support for Displaced Workers

Companies have given displaced workers advance pay to support them and have enough on-site lodging to accommodate staff who have lost their homes in order to restart, Williams said.

“We have enough camps in place to be able to start the operations up,” and also staff major maintenance expansion work under way, Williams said. “One of the things we’ve been working on this morning is how we can collaborate and make sure we have the right supply chain, the right logistics to get people in safely, so they can be housed safely and we can feed and look after them.”

Even as oil-sands operations will largely get going again in the days and weeks ahead, the community of Fort McMurray will need support for much longer for reconstruction, said Tim McMillan, president of the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers, at the briefing.

“This will be a long-term rebuild and that commitment and that recognition from other Canadians is appreciated,” McMillan said.

By Rebecca Penty

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