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Alberta Energy Regulator sets steam restriction at Canadian Natural Resources’ Primrose project after 2013 leak

Oil on a marsh after it seeped up through a fissure under the water near Canadian Natural Resources' Primrose oilsands project in 2013.

CALGARY – The Alberta Energy Regulator said on Monday it is implementing additional requirements at Canadian Natural Resources Ltd’s Primrose oilsands project after concluding excessive steaming caused a 6,648-barrel bitumen emulsion leak in 2013.

The requirements include permanent limits around the steam volumes the company is permitted to use to extract bitumen from underground reservoirs and a requirement that CNRL seek approval for every steaming cycle at its Primrose East site.

“The restrictions do add up to a lasting ongoing decrease in the intensity of the company’s operations. The organization will not be able to pursue its original operating strategy at Primrose,” said Kirk Bailey, executive v . p . of operations in the AER.

CNRL continues to be operating under steam restrictions at Primrose because the seepage is discovered.

Bitumen emulsion – a combination of bitumen, sand and water – was discovered oozing towards the surface at two locations at CNRL’s Primrose project in northern Alberta in May 2013. Two more leaks were found over the next month, prompting the AER to impose restrictions on the site and launch a study.

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