Department of Fisheries & Oceans

Arctic Information Survey – Gray Literature

January 2000 Peter Devenis and Associates Spill Response & Emergency Management Specialists

Department of Fisheries & Oceans

Arctic Information Survey – Gray Literature

January 2000 DFO – Arctic Information Survey

ADDENDUM Petro-

After the electronic version of this report was prepared and submitted to DFO, we were finally able to obtain in March approval from Petro-Canada to review their materials. We met with Petro-Canada and were given a copy of their initial search results. This was provided to allow us to review and possibly provide further direction on a more detailed review at the next stage of the project.

As noted in the body of the report, Petro-Canada still maintains an interest in the Mackenzie Valley of the Northwest Territories and also had some questions about the confidential nature of some files and reports.

In addition to the search words provided earlier, Petro-Canada also conducted a search on their project areas. There were a total of 748 publications found from the combined searches. There were 551 citations found for Arctic; 48 for Beaufort; 29 for Mackenzie Delta; 89 for Northwest Territories; and 31 for Yukon.

In terms of the scope of the titles, following are some of the key topics uncovered:

· Arctic Environmental Observations · Arctic Pilot Project files · Ocean Current Research reports · Drifting Buoy reports · Ice movement studies · Marine Mammal movement reports · Whale noise studies · Environmental Impact Statements - various · Arctic Islands study files

A copy of the search printouts is now provided as a separate attachment in the Appendices.

There was no firm opinion expressed on the issue of donating further materials to the Arctic Institute of . The idea of preserving and rescuing important Arctic information though was of some interest to Petro-Canada. As with other companies, it was felt this should be discussed further at the next stage of the DFO project.

Page i DFO – Arctic Information Survey Table of Contents

Table of Contents

ADDENDUM...... i Table of Contents ...... ii 1. Summary – Findings and Recommendations ...... 1 Key Findings...... 1 Recommendations ...... 2

2. Background and Objectives...... 4 Background...... 4 Objectives and Outcomes ...... 5

3. Summary of Holdings ...... 6 Amoco Canada / Dome / Canmar...... 7 Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers ...... 7 Chevron Canada...... 8 Gulf Canada Resources / BeauDril...... 9 Husky Oil ...... 11 Imperial Oil / Esso...... 12 Mobil Oil Canada ...... 12 Petro-Canada ...... 13 Shell Canada ...... 14 Suncor / Sun Oil...... 15 TransCanada Transmission (Pipelines) ...... 16

4. Organizations Contacted ...... 17

5. Appendices...... 21

Appendix 1: Results of Company Surveys...... 22

Page ii DFO – Arctic Information Survey 1. Summary – Findings and Recommendations

1. Summary – Findings and Recommendations

The Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) has an initiative to preserve environmental, scientific, and social-cultural studies and reports for energy development in the Canadian Arctic, and more particularly the . As part of this ongoing effort, DFO wanted to determine the scope of records in the possession of energy companies, and government agencies and departments.

Under contract to DFO, PetroGlobe (Canada) Ltd. was to survey relevant energy companies regarding existing records for the Canadian arctic, and the Beaufort Sea. A further part of the project was to obtain an indication of the willingness to transfer relevant records to the Arctic Institute of North America Collection within the University of Library.

Peter Devenis of Peter Devenis and Associates was tasked to complete this preliminary survey of unpublished gray literature pertinent to oil and gas exploration in the Canadian Arctic.

This report provides a summary of the survey conducted and the results obtained.

Key Findings Various companies were contacted and the status of their Arctic information queried. The essential findings are summarized below:

à Generally there was a good deal of interest expressed in the survey work by almost all the companies à The survey is timely in that for some of the companies interest is gaining / re-emerging for Arctic energy work à There was a significant amount of files and records still being retained by some of the companies contacted – notably Gulf and Shell à There were no clear decisions made when companies were queried about donations – this would require further review and approvals

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à At the time of filing this report we were unable to access some of the company collections – due to non-response and non-authorization (Petro- Canada and Imperial Oil) à The Arctic Institute of North America and other agencies have received collections from some of the companies contacted à The in-house materials that we were able to review seems to be a mix of public and proprietary information covering a wide-range of Arctic topics

Recommendations As a result of the survey, there are some next-step recommendations that we would make. These recommendations include:

à Based on the amount of material uncovered, we would recommend proceeding with further cataloguing and pursuing some key company collections à The next stage of the study should focus on those companies identified that have a significant volume of collections à This next stage would involve reviewing and cataloguing in detail the major collections accessible and determining their relevance à This next stage should be focused, with clear objectives on cataloguing information and how it will be used à As the majority of companies did not explicitly say no to donating materials, we believe this issue warrants further discussion and encouragement with those companies à Pursuit of Imperial Oil and Petro-Canada collections should be continued because of the potential amount of information contained. Perhaps by restating the benefits and providing information on confidentiality and use of the results a more positive response can be obtained à Because of the interest expressed in this study, DFO should clarify and make known to those companies how this report will be used and distributed à Because of the nature of the industry at this time with renewed interest in the Arctic, there is a need for a DFO policy on sharing of information and reports uncovered. This revolves around the issue of confidentiality of the information– how to share and how to proceed further

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à Several companies mentioned their willingness to participate and they understood the needs of the study – however they felt constrained to help because of the issue of time and manpower to conduct searches. The next stage of the study should take into account this manpower need

Page 3 DFO – Arctic Information Survey 2. Background and Objectives

2. Background and Objectives

Background The Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) has catalogued and created bibliographic data bases for coastal zone planning in Cumberland Sound and Yukon North Slope (1996) and for identified issues in Hudson's Bay (1999). The department has worked with Environment Canada and contractors to assemble published and unpublished reports concerning oil spill research, spill prevention and emergency preparedness in the Canadian Arctic under the Brander-Smith Program (1996-97).

DFO has also catalogued and abstracted 900 reports on Arctic physical and biological oceanography in conjunction with the Arctic Institute of North America (1998). For the period 1999 to 2002, the DFO has hired a cataloguer to develop a database of records for integrated oceans management to provide government and the public with access to the DFO library. Since 1999, over 2600 documents have been catalogued, with 2300 entries being placed in the electronically searchable WAVES collection.

DFO is continuing this initiative to preserve records of scientific, environmental and social-cultural studies and reports for energy development in the Canadian Arctic and the Beaufort Sea. As part of this ongoing effort, DFO wanted to determine the scope of records in the possession of energy companies, and government agencies and departments.

With parties' consent, these documents would later be catalogued and made accessible in a public database such as the Arctic Institute of North America's (AINA) collection at the University of Calgary Library. The department will also assemble annotated bibliographies of published and unpublished research of scientific, environmental, and socio-cultural studies and reports for the Canadian Arctic. Experts will summarize the status of existing research. These annotated bibliographies and summaries will be made available to any interested parties, and is intended to facilitate further activities in the Canadian Arctic.

Under contract to DFO, PetroGlobe (Canada) Ltd. was to survey relevant energy companies regarding existing records for the Canadian Arctic. A further part of the project was to obtain an indication of the willingness to transfer relevant records to the Arctic Institute of North America Collection within the University of Calgary Library.

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Peter Devenis of Peter Devenis and Associates was tasked to complete this preliminary survey of unpublished gray literature pertinent to oil and gas exploration in the Canadian Arctic.

DFO provided a letter that was used to introduce the project and the request for information to companies.

By examining and developing an initial survey of what was available, DFO would be able to take the next step towards rescuing and preserving important Arctic information.

Objectives and This project was intended to identify industry collections, the scope and nature Outcomes of those collections, and whether the company would be prepared to donate a portion or all of that collection to the AINA for holding and future cataloguing.

The survey was not intended to result in a comprehensive list or bibliography at this time, except and to the extent that the industry participants were able to provide this list.

The end result was to be a report documenting the Canadian energy companies that have materials in their possession.

To meet the objectives of the study, Peter Devenis conducted interviews with company personnel and requested details on the scope of collections housed within the companies. He provided key words relevant to the project to enable computer search of existing company Arctic collections.

The results of these interviews and searches are summarized in this report. The report provides details on the scope and type of that collection; contact names of parties within that organization; and an indication whether parties were likely to transfer the materials to the AINA.

Page 5 DFO – Arctic Information Survey 3. Summary of Holdings

3. Summary of Holdings

The following section provides a summary of the collections identified within each of the companies contacted.

For each company, a summary of the information is provided as well as some general guidance notes to the collections. The Appendices contain the printouts, where applicable, for the collections identified. These run several hundred pages and have been separated out to conserve space within this main report.

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Amoco Canada / Dome / Canmar

Over the last several years Amoco/Dome/Canmar (Canadian Marine Drilling) has wound up operations in the Arctic and donated / disposed of most of it’s Arctic collections. Significant quantities were donated to the Arctic Institute of North America. Contact was made with several ex-Amoco, Dome and Canmar employees to determine what might still be around.

The consensus in discussions was that very little was still housed within Amoco’s offices and that the significant titles have been donated or loaned to various institutions. Estimates were made that 90% of what Dome/Canmar/Amoco had in the way of information had ended up at the AINA. Any remaining materials were likely to have found their way home with employees or destroyed.

Other potential contacts were provided – all though ex-employees. Again, the consensus was that since operations have wound up, there remained few if any persons with knowledge of the Arctic materials.

There was no listing provided of the documents that had been transferred and no remaining contact within Amoco provided. Reference was made to contact the AINA to determine the scope of the collection donated.

Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers

Through discussions with Ian Scott, Frontier Manager and Meg Billings – Librarian, a fair amount of information was uncovered and other key Arctic contacts identified.

CAPP through it’s former life as the Canadian Petroleum Association and when it merged with the Independent Petroleum Association of Canada, maintained a variety of information and files which have been identified and catalogued.

Some files were donated to the Arctic Institute of North America and others to the Glenbow Institute in Calgary. We were unable to obtain a listing from CAPP of what was donated. It was suggested we contact both organizations to determine what was in their collections. Due to time constraints, we were unable to follow-up with this suggestion.

A survey of the current information housed with CAPP was requested. Key words were provided and an in-house computer search completed by CAPP

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personnel. The full listings are included in the Appendices. The majority of the citations appear to be general reports and reference materials.

There were 15 citations found for Arctic; 13 for Beaufort; 5 for Mackenzie; and 25 for either Yukon or Northwest Territories.

In addition to the Library materials there were also a few publications related to the Arctic available from the CAPP Publications Catalogue.

In terms of the scope of the titles, following are some of the key topics uncovered:

· Arctic Institute of North America publications · Environmental Assessment · Transport Canada – Arctic guidelines · Arctic development books and reports · Oil Spill Reports · Western Arctic Claim – Inuvialuit Final Agreement · Land Use Guidelines and Requirements · Environmental Studies Research Funds Reports · Beaufort Sea Hydrocarbon Production and Transportation Proposal – Reports · Beaufort Sea Panel Reports · Petroleum Resource Assessments · Yukon Final Agreement · Yukon North Slope Reports · Yukon Oil and Gas information

A copy of the search printout is provided as a separate attachment in the Appendices.

There was no opinion provided on the issue of donating further materials to the AINA. It was felt this could be discussed further at the next stage of the DFO project.

Chevron Canada

Various individuals were contacted within Chevron as well as the Chevron Resources Library. Chevron is currently active in the Mackenzie Valley of the Northwest Territories and as such was reluctant to expose any of their current

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confidential files or reports. Access was provided though to their library personnel and a search was requested of available information.

A survey of the current information housed within Chevron was requested. Key words were provided and an in-house computer search completed by Chevron personnel.

There were a total of 31 publications found from the search. There were 7 citations found for Arctic; 3 for Beaufort; 8 for Mackenzie; and 13 for either Yukon or Northwest Territories.

In terms of the scope of the titles, following are some of the key topics uncovered:

· Waste Disposal in the Arctic · Land Use Guidelines and Information · Permafrost Conferences and Information · Ecological land surveys · Mackenzie River and Yukon River reports · Yukon Mammals · Beaufort Sea Mackenzie Delta Shallow Hazards Workshop · Distribution of Fish and Fish Harvests · Industry Government Working Group on Drilling Sump Fluids · Arctic Marine Oil Spill Program Reports · Toxicity of Drill Muds in the Beaufort Sea · Arctic Institute of North America publications

A copy of the search printout is provided as a separate attachment in the Appendices.

There was no opinion expressed on the issue of donating further materials to the AINA. It was felt this could be discussed further at the next stage of the DFO project.

Gulf Canada Resources / BeauDril

Contact was made with several individuals within Gulf. This included ex- Frontier personnel, the Environment and Safety group, Library and archival contacts. Although most of those individuals directly involved in the Arctic have since departed, Gulf has maintained reference to its Arctic collections.

Page 9 DFO – Arctic Information Survey 3. Summary of Holdings

Following discussions with these key people, it was determined that Gulf still maintained a significant collection of information both in its Library and in Archives. (It was noted in discussions that Gulf has donated some of their Arctic engineering reference materials to the National Research Council in Ottawa and loaned some materials to other groups).

Access was provided to their library and archived storage records and a search was requested of available information. Peter Devenis was given access to the computer listings and conducted the search himself using key words. Library files, inactive files and archival files were searched.

Gulf / BeauDril housed the largest collection of information of those companies providing access to their records. Both the Gulf and BeauDril records are co- mingled within the computer search program and Library and Archival records.

Library Search:

There were a total of 1,023 citations found from the Library search. There were 54 records found for Beaufort; 201 records for Arctic; 311 records for Offshore; 308 records for Northwest Territories; and 149 records found for Yukon. These were further subdivided for each section by adding the keyword and with Environment; Offshore; Oceanographic; Regulatory; Fisheries; Inuvialuit and Oil Spill. Summaries of these searches are provided in the Appendices.

Archives Search:

There were a total of 8,811 citations found from the Library search. There were 3,692 records found for Beaufort; 2,479 records for Arctic; 1,789 records for Offshore; 397 records for Northwest Territories; and 454 records found for Yukon. These were further subdivided for each section by adding the keyword and with Environment; Offshore; Oceanographic; Regulatory; Fisheries; Inuvialuit and Oil Spill. Summaries of these searches are provided in the Appendices.

As for the scope of the titles in both the Library and the Archived material, they are too numerous to list here; other than to say they appear to cover a wide range of Northern topics.

There was no opinion expressed by Gulf personnel on the issue of donating further titles to the AINA. Given Gulf’s past history of donating materials to

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other organizations, it was felt this request could be discussed further at the next stage of the DFO project.

Husky Oil

Various individuals were contacted within Husky as well as the Husky Library. It was expressed that it was likely very little was still available within the Library or collections. Most of the materials were likely to be of a general or reference nature. Other items have been placed in storage and were not accessible. These too were for the most part general public reports likely available elsewhere.

Nevertheless, a survey of the current information housed within Husky was requested. Key words were provided and an in-house computer search completed by company personnel

There were only 9 publications found from the search. These included citations for Arctic; Beaufort; Mackenzie; Yukon and Northwest Territories.

In terms of the scope of the titles, following are some of the key topics uncovered:

· Yukon Economic Development · Arctic Feasibility Studies · Exploration Guides · Pipeline Studies · Arctic Tide Information · Siting Hydrocarbon Facilities on the Arctic Coast

A copy of the search printout is provided as a separate attachment in the Appendices.

There was no opinion expressed at the time on the issue of donating any of the materials to the AINA. It was felt this could be discussed further at the next stage with DFO.

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Imperial Oil / Esso

Imperial Oil / Esso is still very much involved in the Arctic, particularly in Norman Wells and the Mackenzie Delta. As well they are currently reviewing information on the Frontier areas and looking at the Arctic region again.

They have a significant set of holdings both in their Calgary offices and at their Research Lab in University Research Park. Contact was made with several individuals at both locations. Several of these individuals were active during the late 1970’s and 1980’s when operations were active in the Delta and Beaufort Sea.

Because of their current renewed interest, we received little support for our survey requests.

As well, they were not prepared to conduct a survey owing to the lack of time and manpower effort available. When it was offered that Peter Devenis could conduct the search, this was rejected given the confidential and sensitive nature of their information. Their holdings consist of co-mingled sensitive information, reports and reference materials.

They have not donated information to the AINA nor were likely to do so, given their reinvigorated interest in the Mackenzie Valley, Delta and the Arctic.

It is likely further requests could be pursued as the DFO project moves into the next phase. New requests for information would be considered at that time.

Mobil Oil Canada

Contact was made with Mobil’s Frontier and Environmental personnel. Following review of the project, it was determined that Mobil had retained some reference information and files on the Arctic. It was pointed out that Mobil had for the most part been a partner in any Arctic operations – not an operator.

A survey of the current information housed within Mobil was requested. Key words were provided and an in-house computer search conducted by Mobil personnel.

There were a total of 28 publications found from the in-house search. There were 16 citations found for Arctic; 5 for Beaufort; 7 for Mackenzie. Due to time

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constraints, the key words Yukon and Northwest Territories were not searched for explicitly.

In terms of the scope of the titles, following are some of the key topics uncovered:

· Beaufort Sea Environment Information · Frontier Production Studies · Beaufort Sea Environmental Assessment · Beaufort Sea Project · Arctic Petroleum Operators Association Reports · Environment Canada – Atmospheric Environment Service Reports · Canadian Arctic Gas Studies · Porcupine Caribou Herd Studies · Arctic Gas Pipeline Information · Federal Environmental Assessment Information – Beaufort Sea · Mackenzie Valley Pipeline Research · Fish and Fish Habitat Studies

A copy of the search printout is provided as a separate attachment in the Appendices. It was pointed that although the citations were listed, it could not be guaranteed that all these titles still existed, as many of the materials are stored in archival boxes. As well since some of the materials might still be considered sensitive or confidential, it was unclear what might be made available for this study.

There was no opinion expressed at the time on the issue of donating any of the materials to the AINA. It was felt this could be discussed further at the next stage of the DFO project.

There was keen interest expressed in the results of this report and how the information might be shared among companies. It was felt this study was quite timely with renewed interest in the North by several companies.

Petro-Canada

Various individuals were contacted within Petro-Canada as well as the Corporate Library regarding this project. The company still has interests in the North and is also evaluating its future plans.

Page 13 DFO – Arctic Information Survey 3. Summary of Holdings

A survey of the current information housed within Petro-Canada was requested. Key words were provided and an in-house computer search completed by the Library group.

Over the last three weeks, we have been seeking final approval to obtain this listing. The Library group has sought out the appropriate persons for approval, however the authority to approve has been slow to come. We are still hopeful that approval to view the listing will be provided shortly. Once this is given, we will provide the listing as an Addendum to this Report.

We were given no indication as to the size or scope of the results of the listings, nor a definitive answer on the issue of donating materials to the AINA.

Shell Canada

Contact was made with Shell personnel in their Environment and Frontier groups as well as within their Library. As with other companies, Shell has maintained an interest in the North.

As with the other companies who have an active interest in the North, there was concern expressed with the proprietary information that the collections contain. As a result some of the citations uncovered would be deemed confidential in nature. Questions were also raised as to how this report would be utilized and distributed.

A quick search of the current information housed within Shell was requested. Key words were provided and an in-house computer search completed by Shell personnel. Because of the extensive collections that Shell has maintained, time permitted only a search on the key word Beaufort Sea. The full listing summary is included in the Appendices.

There were a total of 254 publications found from the in-house search on the key word Beaufort Sea. This is a potential indication of the significant collection housed within Shell

In terms of the scope of the titles, following are some of the key topics uncovered:

· Hydrology Surveys · Regional Gravity and Seismic Data · National Energy Board Applications

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· Northwest Passage Arctic Data Compilation · Arctic Oil Spills · Arctic Pipelines · Beaufort Basin Studies · Beaufort Delta Oil Project · Beaufort Environmental Monitoring Project · Beaufort Sea Wave Studies · Land Use Planning · Wildlife and Wildlife Habitat Restoration · Tanker Traffic and Bowhead Whales · Offshore Pipelines · Ice Scour Data

A copy of the search printout is provided as a separate attachment in the Appendices. It was pointed here as well that although the citations were listed, it was not verified whether these titles still existed as many of the materials are stored in archival boxes. Manual verification would have to be done for the titles. As some of the materials might still be considered sensitive or confidential, it was unclear what titles might be made available for the study.

As indicated in the cover letter provided with the listing, Shell is willing to allow access to review the materials and to conduct further searches. They are interested in the results of this work and any further work. For the time being Shell indicated they would be unlikely to transfer any materials to the AINA as the Arctic is considered to be still of potential interest.

Suncor / Sun Oil

Various individuals were contacted within Suncor to determine the collections that they may still have from their previous work in the Arctic. In discussion with them, they indicated that would likely provide some information on their records. It would likely include Land Use studies and some environmental work. The information is housed in archive boxes and not easily accessible nor catalogued electronically.

The information held by Suncor would be related to their activities in the early to late 1970’s in the Mackenzie Delta and the Sverdrup Basin areas.

There was no opinion expressed at the time on the issue of donating any of the materials to the AINA. It was felt this could be discussed further at the next stage of the DFO.

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TransCanada Transmission (Pipelines)

TransCanada was contacted both within their Operations group and within their Library to determine the collections that they may still have. It was expressed by personnel that their remaining collection was indeed very small. Almost all of it had been weeded out over the past few years due to lack of storage space and ultimately donated to the AINA and other institutions.

Owing to the extremely small Arctic offshore titles that might be available it was determined it was not worth conducting any form of a search.

There was no opinion expressed at the time on the issue of donating any of the remaining materials to the AINA. It was felt this could be discussed further at the next stage of the DFO.

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4. Organizations Contacted

The following tables provide a summary of the companies and organizations contacted for this review.

The table includes the company or organization surveyed, the key contacts and contact numbers and addresses.

Page 17 DFO – Arctic Information Survey 4. Organizations Contacted

COMPANY KEY CONTACTS PHONE ADDRESS COMMENTS Amoco / Dome John Ward 403-282-6085 _ Ex Dome/Amoco Environment and Frontier

Canadian Association of Petroleum Ian Scott 403-267-1132 2100, 350 – 7 Ave. SW Manager Pipelines, Producers Calgary AB T2P 3N9 Environment & Frontier

Canadian Association of Petroleum Meg Billings 403-267-1100 2100, 350 – 7 Ave. SW Librarian Producers Calgary AB T2P 3N9

Canadian Marine Drilling Nick Vanderkooy 403-239-5145 _ Ex Canmar Frontier (Canmar) Environment

Chevron Canada Ted Spearing 403-234-5184 500 – 5th Ave. SW Manager Environment, Calgary AB T2P 0L7 Safety & Regulations

Chevron Canada Janine Clarkson 403-234-5961 500 – 5th Ave. SW Resource Library Contact Calgary AB T2P 0L7

Gulf Canada Dennis Seidlitz 403-233-4005 401 – 9 Ave. SW Manager responsible for Calgary AB T2P 2H7 Frontier collections

Gulf Canada Dawn MacDougall 403-233-3878 401 – 9 Ave. SW Librarian responsible for Calgary AB T2P 2H7 materials and Archives

Gulf Canada Lin Callow 403-233-3924 401 – 9 Ave. SW Manager Environment Calgary AB T2P 2H7

Gulf Canada Terry Antoniuk 403-266-6363 401 – 9 Ave. SW Ex Frontier Environment Calgary AB T2P 2H7

Husky Oil Barry Worbets 403-298-6163 707 – 8th Ave. SW Manager Environment, Calgary AB T2P 3G7 Health & Safety

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COMPANY KEY CONTACTS PHONE ADDRESS COMMENTS Husky Oil Wanda Oleszkiewicz 403-298-7057 707 – 8th Ave. SW Corporate Library Calgary AB T2P 3G7

Imperial Oil / Esso Andy Teal 403-237-3872 237 - 4 Ave. SW Manager Environment, Calgary, AB T2P 0H6 Safety & Regulations

Imperial Oil / Esso Randy Ottenbrite 403-284-7444 3535 Research Road NW Frontier Group Calgary, AB T2L 2K8

Imperial Oil / Esso Ron Goodman 403-284-7489 3535 Research Road NW Esso Research Centre Calgary, AB T2L 2K8

Mobil Oil Canada Peter Thomas 403-260-7167 330 - 5 Avenue SW Frontier Geologist Calgary, AB T2P 2J7

Petro-Canada Doug Gardner 403-296-6592 150 - 6 Avenue SW Frontier Contact Calgary, AB T2P 3E3

Petro-Canada Betty McLean 403-296-4385 150 - 6 Avenue SW Corporate Library Calgary, AB T2P 3E3

Petro-Canada David Friendly 403-296-6720 150 - 6 Avenue SW Emergency Preparedness & Calgary, AB T2P 3E3 Loss Control

Petro-Canada Dennis Kohlman 403-296-8926 150 - 6 Avenue SW Environment & Safety Calgary, AB T2P 3E3

Shell Canada Ric Young 403-691-2312 400 - 4 Avenue SW Coordinator, Technology Calgary, AB T2P 2H5 Transfer

Shell Canada Elizabeth 403-691-3111 400 - 4 Avenue SW Library Malinowsky Calgary, AB T2P 2H5

Shell Canada Pim Van de (403) 691- 400 - 4 Avenue SW Frontier & Safety Pypekamp 3128 Calgary, AB T2P 2H5

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COMPANY KEY CONTACTS PHONE ADDRESS COMMENTS Shell Canada Doug Mead 403-691-2312 400 - 4 Avenue SW Environment Calgary, AB T2P 2H5

Suncor Ken Barrie 403-269-8695 112 – 4 Ave. SW Frontier Contact Calgary, AB T2P 2V5

Suncor Al Mok 403-269-8765 112 – 4 Ave. SW Environment Calgary, AB T2P 2V5

TransCanada Transmission Anna Stefanowich 403-290-7057 801 - 7 Avenue SW Business Information Calgary, AB T2P 3P7 (Library)

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5. Appendices

Appendix 1: Results of Company Surveys

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Appendix 1: Results of Company Surveys

(Provided in Separate Binders)

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