Deepwell Energy Services cleans up after oil and gas firms
Recession or not, cleaning up after fossil fuels is a thriving business
The watchdog agency keeps a close watch on waste disposal. “All our Alberta sites are ERCB-approved,” Ritchie says. “We use compacted clay liners, concrete berms, groundwater monitoring, water run-off and run-on systems – it’s all self-contained. The facilities are inspected quite often and very rigorously. It’s completely random. ERCB inspectors are out there at least once a quarter.”
Deepwell vice-president Brian Johnson describes how the company deals with basic waste streams in its Alberta facilities. “We purify produced water as much as we can, then inject the cleaned-up water down our disposal wells,” he says. These are drilled into secure underground formations of porous sedimentary rock capped or surrounded by harder stone, in structures that can be used as natural vaults for permanent storage.
Crude oil waste that has value is also scoured out of industry equipment. The material comes “from such sources as tank bottoms we clean up and dry up and either credit back to our customers, keep for our own account, or do a bit of both,” Johnson reports. The recovered oil must satisfy standard quality specifications before it can be put into pipelines. Cleaned-up solids like sand used in well “fraccing” or fracturing operations are shipped off to sanitary landfill sites.
While Deepwell is a small player in the sector, CCS Corporation is big. It has 48 facilities across Canada, from northeastern British Columbia to Manitoba, plus operations in Louisiana and Texas. Greg Dickie, a senior manager, reports that CCS deals primarily with dangerous materials.
“Wastes coming into our facility are called dangerous because they have a flashpoint, and they have a flashpoint because they contain hydrocarbons. The ERCB defines oilfield wastes, and there’s a clear line between hazardous wastes and dangerous wastes, and between dangerous wastes and not-dangerous wastes, and they fall within different jurisdictions,” Dickie says.
Hazco, a CCS subsidiary, operates a network of industrial landfills, bioremediation facilities and hazardous waste transfer stations. Hazardous wastes are regulated by Alberta Environment and mostly treated at the special treatment facility near Swan Hills. “Our business is to recover hydrocarbons from the wastes and then deal with the byproducts,” Dickie says. “The solids go to landfill, while the liquids go to deepwater disposal. We separate oil from water at our sites.” CCS also has terminals. “We are connected to a pipeline. We receive a producer’s oil, clean it up and send it through the pipeline.”
As economic recession slows down drilling and development across Western Canada until energy prices and bank credit make comebacks, is waste still a growing business? The consensus among the specialists is yes. At Deepwell, Ritchie says: “Last quarter we saw a downturn in exploration activity, and that is not likely to be good for the industry. Having said that, we do get a significant portion of our business from production, and production tends to continue even in a low commodity price environment.”
At CCS, Dickie says: “Up until most recently business was growing – right through 2008, in fact. We believe our industry will continue to grow even as the conventional industry begins to deplete. The types of services we offer through our operations are services that assist people in cleaning up, remediating and managing depleting assets. We believe our business will continue to grow even if the oil industry has the occasional decline.”
In the long run, conventional oil and gas production are in decline in Western Canada as geological reservoirs deplete naturally. Does that mean there will be less oilfield waste?
At Deepwell, Johnson isn’t so sure. “The lines between conventional and nonconventional production are beginning to disappear,” he says. “More and more effort is being put into making unconventional wells produce economically. As we use more unconventional resources, there will be greater volumes of waste. It is a growth sector.” He adds that as fields age, they tend to produce more water, and the need for water disposal will continue to grow.
Dickie sees additional opportunity within areas where there is still some infill drilling to be done. “As the percentage of oil in production goes down, the percentage of water and other materials, including emulsions and some solids like silts, goes up. That’s where our facilities become valuable to producers,” the CCS executive says. Emulsions or streams of mixed liquids and solids need to be treated as oilfield wastes.
Much water is also produced with some of the newer oil discoveries including Saskatchewan’s Bakken formation. Sometimes the water is used to maintain reservoir pressure. Sometimes it’s simply re-injected into a deep rock formation, to prevent surface- and groundwater contamination. Whatever the case, the volumes are increasing, and the job of getting rid of the stuff is requiring more effort.
At the ERCB, regulatory manager Susan Halla flags another reason the waste management business is going to continue to grow. Reading from the regulations, she describes oilfield waste as “an unwanted substance or mixture of substances that results from the construction, operation, abandonment or reclamation of a facility, wellsite or pipeline.”
Based on that definition, the industry creates wastes at all stages of operation – from construction to decontamination and reclamation. So there will be wastes to manage whether an operation is in the stage of development, oilfield decline, closure, abandonment or surface land reclamation.
Environmentalism is a growth force, says Ritchie, who saw the effects of public demand for cleaner industry first-hand as a project manager for TransCanada Corp. as well as during his tenure at the helm of Deepwell. “The movement to be environmentally responsible has continued to advance. Over time it’s likely to become more stringent, and that is actually likely to help us.”
It is a widespread industry consensus that western Canadian waste management regulations are among the most stringent in the world. “Over the last 15 years Alberta has been at the forefront of waste management, even compared to Louisiana and Texas. I don’t know of another regulator that has taken the same initiative as Alberta in developing waste management regulations,” says Dickie. Where CCS operates, “the ERCB is the leader. Saskatchewan and British Columbia are close behind, and Western Canada is at the front of the pack.”
At the ERCB, Halla stresses that Canadian regulators work with each other to make sure their regulations march in step. “We work with Alberta Environment to harmonize waste management practices within the province. We also have committees to harmonize practices in Western Canada, and also we are involved in national harmonization.”
Ritchie says there is momentum for improvements within the private sector. Annual inspections of facilities became routine at Deepwell, he recalls. “I think the whole industry has a heightened awareness of the need to meet or exceed regulations. Everyone is conscious of environmental stewardship. I see the whole industry trying to advance their performance.”
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