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|    Welcome to Canada's tarsands, China . .     |
|    07 Nov 14 17:58:51    |
      XPost: can.politics, ab.politics, calgary.general       XPost: edm.general, bc.politics       From: Panca@nyet.ca              And to the growing list of foreign companies who are turning our land into a       fetid wasteland.       And where is Harper right now? . . . . Yeah . . . . looking to invite more of       the same.       ____________________________________       CALGARY — The Canadian Press - Friday, Nov. 07 2014              Chinese-owned company Sinopec fined $150K over Alberta pipeline spill                     A Chinese-owned company has been fined after a contractor’s mistake led to a       pipeline spill that contaminated a creek flowing into the Athabasca River in       northern Alberta.              Sinopec Daylight Energy is to pay $150,000 for a spill near Fox Creek in       northwestern Alberta between Feb. 2 and Feb. 4, 2012.              According to an agreed statement of facts, the spill happened as a result of a       contractor’s attempts to restart compressors at two wells, which produced a       mix       of natural gas, hydrocarbon liquids and salty, contaminated water.              In order to restart compressors at the second well, the contractor had to       temporarily bypass emergency shutdown devices, which stop production if       internal pressure exceeds the pipeline’s capacity to safely handle it.              The contractor then forgot to reset the device, leaving it in a bypass state,       the statement says.              Two days later, the contractor realized that no water was flowing into a       disposal well, despite the fact the well was producing.              “(He) then realized the pipeline must be leaking,” the statement says.       “He       immediately shut the pipeline down and notified his foreman.”              The spill sent 391,000 litres of contaminated, salty water into Marsh Head       Creek, a tributary of the Athabasca River.              That was enough to exceed allowable levels of those contaminants 7.4 kilometres       downstream of the spill.              “No dead fish were actually observed because Marsh Head Creek was covered       with       snow and ice at the time of the release,” says the statement.              The Alberta Energy Regulator said the cleanup took until March. Final       remediation wasn’t complete until June 2013.              The cleanup cost nearly $10 million, the regulator said.       ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^       _________________________________________________________________              What are the details of the cleanup costs? WHO paid them? And in what       amounts?              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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