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Canadian oil sands company evacuates workers due to wildfire threat

May 30, 2025 12:04 PM
Reuters


Canadian oil sands company MEG Energy said on Friday it evacuated all nonessential workers from its Christina Lake production facility in northern Alberta due to wildfires burning in the area.

The company said it has not curtailed its oil production at the site, which is located 150 kilometers (93 miles) south of the oil sands hub of Fort McMurray.

Wildfires burning in Canada’s oil-producing province of Alberta have affected the operations of several companies this week. Cenovus Energy said on Wednesday it was scaling back nonessential workers at its Foster Creek facility as a precaution due to wildfires in the vicinity of Chipewyan Lake.

A separate wildfire in the Swan Hills region of the province caused Aspenleaf Energy to halt operations as a precaution and shut in approximately 4,000 barrels per day of oil equivalent production, the company said on Monday.

Wildfires have hit oil and gas production in Canada several times in the past decade.

In May of 2023, companies shut in at least 319,000 boepd, or 3.7% of Canada’s total production, as more than 100 wildfires burned in Alberta.

In 2016, thousands of oil sands workers were evacuated as a monster wildfire destroyed part of the community of Fort McMurray, forcing companies to reduce their oil output by a million barrels per day.

(Reporting by Amanda Stephenson in Calgary; Editing by Bill Berkrot)

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