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Apache pleads guilty to pipeline violations after multiple spills

A 2013 pipeline spill that leaked roughly 1.8 million litres of contaminated water near Zama City, Alta. Global News

CALGARY – Apache Canada Ltd. has pleaded guilty to two counts of failing to properly operate its pipelines after multiples spills on its network.

The company pleaded guilty on Sept. 30 to violating the Pipeline Act and the Environmental Protection and Enhancement Act in relation to a pipeline spill near Zama City, Alta., in 2013, and a second spill in 2014 not far from Whitecourt, Alta.

READ MORE: Calgary-based energy firm Apache Canada faces 7 charges for 2013 spill: AER 

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The Zama City spill released 1.8-million litres of produced water, generally a mix of mostly salt water with some oil, that affected about 3.8 hectares of public land. The spill about 40 kilometres northwest of Whitecourt released just under two-million cubic metres of produced water.

The court ordered the company to pay $350,000 in penalties for the two spills, with most of the funds going to a creative sentencing project where Alberta Innovates Technology Futures will research remediating salt-affected soil.

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READ MORE: Apache Canada faces up to $2.5M for 2014 pipeline spill northwest of Edmonton 

In the agreed statement of facts on the Zama City spill, the company admitted that it did not install a protective fence around part of the pipeline that stuck out of the ground, with evidence pointing to the possibility that a bison rubbed against the section and crushed the pipe.

In depth, interactive: Explore 37 years of Alberta oil spills

On the Whitecourt spill, the company agreed that it installed the wrong size of pressure valve on the pipeline and that it did not properly review reports on whether the valves were working properly.

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