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Sable Offshore Energy Project permanently shuts down after nearly 20 years 

Friedrich Krispin, Sable Offshore Energy Project decommissioning manager from ExxonMobil Canada, addresses a business conference in Halifax on Wednesday, April 26, 2017.
Friedrich Krispin, Sable Offshore Energy Project decommissioning manager from ExxonMobil Canada, addresses a business conference in Halifax on Wednesday, April 26, 2017. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Andrew Vaughan

A government agency says all production from the Sable Offshore Energy Project off the coast of Nova Scotia has been permanently shut down.

The Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Board says production from all of the Sable project’s fields ended on Monday, as planned.

READ MORE: Change would see Nova Scotia regulator eyeball gas shipping costs for consumers

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The natural gas field, about 300 kilometres southeast of Halifax, started producing in late 1999 and consists of seven offshore platforms in five different fields with 21 wells.

Board spokeswoman Stacy O’Rourke says well plugging and decommissioning activities will continue throughout 2019.

On its website, ExxonMobil Canada says it submitted a formal application to abandon the site in March 2018.

READ MORE: Nova Scotia gets no bids for offshore exploration for 3rd time in 4 years

The company has said it would “ensure decommissioning activities are planned and managed to mitigate any associated risks to safety or environment.”

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