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1 Partners Symposium Edmonton, Alberta Terry Peck Emergency Response Coordinator February 2009

Partners Symposium Edmonton, Alberta

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Partners Symposium Edmonton, Alberta. Terry Peck Emergency Response Coordinator. February 2009. Objectives and Scope. Provide Overview of ERCB Mandate Discuss Mitigation and Preparedness ERCB Emergency Activation Process ERCB Emergency Response Process - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Partners Symposium Edmonton, Alberta

1

Partners SymposiumEdmonton, Alberta

Terry PeckEmergency Response Coordinator

February 2009

Page 2: Partners Symposium Edmonton, Alberta

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Objectives and Scope

Provide Overview of ERCB Mandate Discuss Mitigation and Preparedness ERCB Emergency Activation Process ERCB Emergency Response Process What are ERCB Deployable Resources Discuss Criteria for Re-Deployment

Page 3: Partners Symposium Edmonton, Alberta

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ERCB Mandate Starts w/Legislation

Coal Conservation Act Energy Resources Conservation Act Gas Resources Preservation Act Oil and Gas Conservation Act Oil Sands Conservation Act Pipeline Act

Page 4: Partners Symposium Edmonton, Alberta

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ERCB Regulates 159,500 operating natural gas and oil wells 33,700 oil and gas batteries, plants & facilities 392,000 km of pipelines 12 producing coal mines 38 commercial oil sands plants

Page 5: Partners Symposium Edmonton, Alberta

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Petroleum Industry Incident Support Plan Otherwise known as PIISP (no I’m not swearing at you!)

Alberta Government plan administered by AEMADeveloped for response to significant oil & gas

emergenciesIdentifies ERCB as the “lead agency”Clarifies “supporting agency” rolesJoint multi-agency exercise held every 4 yearsLast activated during the Pembina Pipeline

incident on the Red Deer River in June 2008

Page 6: Partners Symposium Edmonton, Alberta

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Mitigation & PreparednessEmergency Planning & Assessment (EPA) is

Responsible for administering Directive 071 Requirements :

o Pre-Approval Audit (ERP Application Process)o Post-Approval Audito Emergency Response Assessmento Enforcement

Technical Supporto Hearings (advising panel and decision report)o Stakeholder (RHA/Industry/Public etc)

Page 7: Partners Symposium Edmonton, Alberta

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Public Safety Management System

INVESTIGATIONFollow-up

Lessons learned

VIGILENCESurveillance ComplianceEnforcement

EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT

Emergency Planning, Preparedness, and

ResponseResponse Capability

PREVENTIONStandardsTraining

CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT

Risk Reduction

HazardMitigation

Page 8: Partners Symposium Edmonton, Alberta

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ERCB Emergency Activation ProcessDuring normal working hours calls from the public/industry

usually come directly into the Field CentreAfter hours/weekend calls come through the CIC and are

then directed back to the Field Centre 24/7 On-call PersonEmergencies that are Level 1 or greater require the Field

Centre to engage the Emergency Response Group (ERG)Some Level 1’s, all Level 2 and Level 3 emergencies will

activate the Field Incident Response Support Team (FIRST)Level 2 and Level 3 may require a GEOC activation

Page 9: Partners Symposium Edmonton, Alberta

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ERCB Emergency Response ProcessThe Field Centre (9 throughout the Province) is

responsible for providing a physical response to an emergency 24 X 7 - 365 days/year

Level 1 and above will engage the ERG, which will provide ERCB expertise from within the department and will provide situational awareness to our external partners

For complex Level 1, and Level 2/3, FIRST will engage and Support in the areas of air monitoring, ICS, media relations, safety, and investigation.

If the GEOC is activated, the CMO will play a lead role

Page 10: Partners Symposium Edmonton, Alberta

10Deployable ResourcesThe greatest asset the ERCB has are “our people”.

Due to the close working relationship our Field Centre staff have with the oil & gas industry, when an emergency happens, the Field Centre will likely know the company and potential hazards associated with the site.

Field Centre staff trained to ICS 200 and equipped with Personal Protective Equipment

Subject matter experts throughout the department that can be called on to assist in an emergency.

Very good air monitoring program with deployable units and knowledgeable and experienced technicians to operate them. Work closely with our ER Partners to ensure situational awareness. Presently developing an air monitoring protocol with AENV, Health, and Industry.

Page 11: Partners Symposium Edmonton, Alberta

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Criteria for Re-Deployment As per PIISP, the ERCB is the “lead agency” on upstream oil & gas emergencies and will remain so until the release is under control and the free liquid has been removed. Once the “lead agency” changes hands, i.e. environmental issues are the main focus, ERCB will stay engaged as a “supporting agency” until there is agreement by partner agencies that no further involvement by ERCB is necessary. Investigation activity will likely continue well beyond the emergency response phase

Page 12: Partners Symposium Edmonton, Alberta

12 Questions?