Huge oilfield fuels hope, fear
Resource has potential to benefit first nations, but is also a threat

By Lauren Krugel, Canadian Press
August 13, 2012 2:03 AM
http://www.vancouversun.com/technology/Huge+oilfield+fuels+hope+fear/7081327/story.html

A potentially enormous shale oil prospect in the Northwest Territories is 
giving some communities hope the resource-driven economic boost they've long 
been waiting for may finally be close.

But development of the shale oil find, known as the Canol, has also raised 
concern over the use of hydraulic fracturing, also known as fracking, in a 
remote, ecologically fragile part of the central Mackenzie Valley that is new 
to that oil and gas extraction technique.

"If they're going to do fracking, at least let us be involved so that we can 
watch the process, we can make sure it's nice and clean because we do need 
economics around this area," said Chief Wilfred McNeely Jr. of the Fort Good 
Hope Band.

McNeely said some residents are concerned about how much water would be drawn 
from the Mackenzie River for the fracking process, in which producers inject 
water, sand and chemicals into the rock at high pres-sure in order to free the 
oil and gas. He said some have also expressed concern over chemicals 
contaminating the river.

But unemployment in the community of 567 is high, so he'd welcome the jobs and 
investment that would come from oil development.

In June two parcels of land around Fort Good Hope were leased for $92 million - 
one to Royal Dutch Shell PLC, and another to Shell and MGM Energy Corp. in 
partnership.

"To me that adds up to a lot of money," said McNeely.

Those leases are in addition to 11 more that were awarded else-where in the 
central Mackenzie last year for a total of $535 mil-lion to major players 
including Husky Energy Inc., Imperial Oil Ltd. and ConocoPhillips.

The Canol stretches from around the Fort Good Hope region south to the hamlet 
of Tulita, between the Mackenzie River and the mountain range to the west - a 
"massive piece of real estate," according to David Ramsay, the Northwest 
Territories' minister of industry, tourism, investment and transportation.

He said there could be between two and three billion barrels of recoverable oil 
in the Canol, putting it the same league as the Bakken, a major shale oil 
region that underlies parts of North Dakota, Montana and Saskatchewan.

The economic upswing was evident last winter while some seismic work was taking 
place around Normal Wells, N.W.T. Hotel rooms were virtually unobtainable, 
store sales doubled and takeoffs and landings at the local airport tripled, he 
said. "It's that kind of activity that's going to drive the economy. We have 
always struggled with employment levels in smaller aboriginal communities in 
the Northwest Territories."

This winter Husky is planning to evaluate two vertical wells it drilled in the 
area a year earlier, and is seeking regulatory approval to build an all-weather 
access road around its leases.

Ramsay acknowledges there are concerns over fracking. He and other members of 
his government will be in Calgary the week of August 20 to meet with industry, 
regulators and environ-mental groups to learn more.

"People want to know, and people have every right to know, what the impact on 
the water will be, the chemicals that would be used."

Environmental lawyer Stephen Hazell, who participated in lengthy regulatory 
hearings into the Mackenzie natural gas pipeline, said shale oil development in 
the North should be rigorously studied.

Fracking in and of itself has concerns, he said, but heavy equipment moving 
over permafrost raises a whole host of other environmental issues.

"It needs to be a review that has hearings, that invited people who've got 
experience with shale oil and fracking in other parts in North America to come 
up and testify," said the founder of Ecovision Law in Ottawa. "They need to be 
serious about it and not do a quick and dirty internal review."

The Mackenzie gas pipeline, which would carry gas from fields near the coast of 
Beau-fort Sea south to Alberta, has been proposed in various proposals for 
decades, but has yet to come to fruition. The project, led by Imperial, was 
awarded a federal permit last year, but the companies behind the proposal 
haven't committed to building it. Fiscal talks between Ottawa and the 
proponents are on ice for now.

Energy consultant Doug Matthews, who organized the trip for Northwest 
Territories politicians next week, said oil development will be good for the 
people of the Northwest Territories. "While (the Mackenzie pipeline) may not be 
officially dead, it's certainly in a very deep sleep and there's not going to 
be any activity flowing to the people in the North from the project, certainly 
for the foreseeable future."

There is already an oil pipe-line owned by Enbridge that runs from Norman Wells 
to northern Alberta that has a lot of capacity to spare. But if the Canol ends 
up being as big as some are predicting, another pipeline may need to be built - 
and that won't be easy in light of recent concerns over spills.


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