Fire Halts Production at Canadian Oil Sands Syncrude
Canadian Oil Sands Ltd, the biggest shareholder in the Syncrude oil sands project, said it has halted crude oil production after a fire damaged equipment at its processing facility in northern Alberta on Saturday.
The company said the main coker conversion units were not damaged and Syncrude continues to operate. However, it suspended synthetic crude oil production and is currently developing a recovery plan, Canadian Oil Sands said late on Sunday.
The operator of Canada's largest synthetic crude project said on Saturday it was investigating the causes of an early morning fire at an upgrading plant.
The fire broke out a few hours after the province's energy regulator announced it was shutting in 95 pipelines operated by Nexen, one of the partners in the project, because of safety issues identified following a large oil-related spill in July.
Syncrude is a 326,000 barrel-per-day mining and upgrading project, where mined oil sands bitumen is upgraded into refinery-ready synthetic crude.
The operations are a joint venture of seven partners: Canadian Oil Sands Ltd, Suncor Energy Inc, Imperial Oil Ltd, Nippon Oil subsidiary Mocal Energy Ltd, Murphy Oil Corp, China's Sinopec , and CNOOC subsidiary Nexen.
Reporting by Supriya Kurane