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Faulty Imperial Oil aircraft gasoline could pose fuel gauge interference

FILE — Imperial Oil's Strathcona Refinery is pictured near Edmonton on Friday Sept. 2, 2005. CP Photo/John Ulan

Imperial Oil Ltd. is warning regulators and customers that aviation gasoline shipped from its Edmonton-area refinery could cause interference with aircraft fuel gauge sensors.

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The company says in a release that a product quality problem was discovered earlier this week at its Strathcona refinery and all shipments of “avgas” were immediately halted.

However, it says there were potential quality problems with fuel shipped since Dec. 28, resulting in a request to distributors to immediately stop selling the product. It says it has warned Transport Canada about the situation.

Imperial Oil’s Strathcona Refinery near Edmonton at dawn on Monday, September 5, 2005. CP PHOTO/John Ulan

Imperial said it is not aware of any safety issues as yet related to the fuel. It said its fuel warning does not extend to aircraft that use jet fuel, also known in the industry as “Jet A.”

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READ MORE: Imperial Oil reports $371-million third-quarter profit, down from 1 year ago

Spokesman Jon Harding said avgas is mainly used in smaller planes but couldn’t provide detail on how much fuel may be affected.

He said the “at-risk fuel” is predominately sold in Western Canada, with smaller volumes sold in other regions.

“We are continuing our work to understand the issue and will resume shipments of avgas as soon as we can,” said Harding in an email.

“Otherwise, refinery operations are normal and no other products are affected by this.”

Downstream vice-president Jon Wetmore said an investigation into the cause of the issue is ongoing and more information will be released as the situation evolves.

READ MORE: Nearly 500 Esso stations sold off by Imperial Oil

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