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Shoal Point Energy Ltd C.SHP

Alternate Symbol(s):  SHPNF

Shoal Point Energy Ltd. is a Canada-based oil and natural gas exploration and development company. The Company is engaged in the acquisition, exploration and development of oil and natural gas properties. The Company’s projects include Humber Arm Allochthon. It has the rights to the exploration lands covering approximately 220,000 acres in the near offshore of the west coast of Newfoundland. The Company holds exploration license 1070 (EL 1070) off the west coast of Newfoundland which totals approximately 150,000 acres. The EL 1070 in Newfoundland is considered to be an exploration and evaluation asset, as it is still in the exploration stage. The Company’s Pratt County project is considered a developed oil and natural gas property. The Company’s subsidiary is Shoal Point U.S.A. Inc.


CSE:SHP - Post by User

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Post by tickerhiton May 12, 2020 1:39pm
55 Views
Post# 31017979

As Canadian oil sands site fights infections, some want

As Canadian oil sands site fights infections, some want
fewer fly-in workers
2020-05-12 12:23:45 PM ET (Reuters)
   
   

By Rod Nickel and Jeff Lewis

WINNIPEG, Manitoba/TORONTO, May 12 (Reuters) - A coronavirus outbreak at a Canadian oil sands site has spread across five provinces and sparked calls to limit the use of fly-in workers in the remote locations.

Any restrictions would upend a labor model that the high-cost industry depends on. Projects that use fly-in workers represent more than half of the region's crude production capacity.

There are 106 known infections associated with Kearl, Imperial Oil's mine near Fort McMurray, Alberta, according to Alberta Health Services. Cases have been found in four provinces besides Alberta, and triggered an outbreak in northern Saskatchewan.

"Bad enough trying to manage an infection when employees are working and living shoulder-to-shoulder in work camps. It’s even more difficult to manage when those workers are jumping on planes and flying home to hundreds of communities across the country," said Gil McGowan, presid ent of the Alberta Federation of Labour, whose members include unions representing oil sands workers.

McGowan said he wrote in April to the Alberta government asking for a ban on fly-in workers and did not receive a response.

The practise of flying in workers to stay in remote camps expanded in the mid-2000s as the booming oil sands looked for cost-efficient ways to deploy labor, finding that paying workers living allowances to commute from Fort McMurray was too costly, said Bruce Inglis, a councillor with the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo.

Fifteen oil sands projects use fly-in workers, representing 60% of the region's crude capacity, according to a 2018 report for Oil Sands Community Alliance, an industry group.

The sites are located an average of 110 kilometres (68 miles) from Fort McMurray, the region's hub.

Many of the workers arrive during maintenance periods that require extra labor.

Using workers from across the country is "a benefi t for all of Canada," Alberta Energy Minister Sonya Savage said. Her spokesman, Kavi Bal, said cases linked to the Kearl outbreak have remained relatively low due to effective control measures.

Some 1,450 people are working at Kearl, a drop of nearly half from normal levels, said Imperial spokesman Jon Harding.

Some sites are so remote that it does not make sense to ban fly-in workers, said Walter Ticas, a heavy equipment operator and union president representing workers at several Suncor Energy projects.

Even so, the pandemic illustrates the need for oil sands companies to permanently reduce the use of fly-in workers, which would support the local economy and reduce outbreaks, Inglis said.

"These camps are like a cruise ship. You've very confined to them and it's very hard to keep them clean," he said.

The outbreak's long-term impact on demand for remote camps is an open question, said Trevor Haynes, chief executive of Black Diamond Group, which operat es some camps.

Since the Kearl outbreak, all employees and contractors on site are eligible for COVID-19 testing. Imperial has established an isolation wing and gauges workers' temperatures daily, among other measures.

Some operators have extended shift rotations to 14-day periods, from seven days, to match the virus's incubation period, said Robert Skinner, an executive fellow at University of Calgary's School of Public Policy.

Buses running to Suncor's base plant are running half full while face masks and gloves are now common, though not mandatory, Ticas said.

"They're doing the best they can with what they've got." (Reporting by Rod Nickel in Winnipeg, Manitoba and Jeff Lewis in Toronto Editing by Denny Thomas and Marguerita Choy)


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