Friday, November 15, 2024

Work stops on Trans Mountain pipeline over safety concerns

BOE Report 

Work on expanding Canada’s Trans Mountain oil pipeline has halted for more than two weeks due to safety concerns, the government-owned corporation said.

Trans Mountain Chief Executive Ian Anderson cited multiple worker safety incidents during the past two months and said the shutdown was voluntary. Construction was scheduled to halt on Friday and resume Jan. 4.

The Canada Energy Regulator said a worker was seriously hurt at a Trans Mountain site in Burnaby, British Columbia on Tuesday. In October, a worker was killed near Edmonton, Alberta.

The pipeline carries oil from Alberta to the British Columbia coast, where it is loaded and shipped to U.S. refineries.

Expansion of the pipeline, which the Canadian government owns, is 20% complete. It will twin the existing 1,150-kilometer pipeline and nearly triple capacity to 890,000 barrels per day.

The project is expected to finish in late 2022.

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