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Alberta Clipper (also known as Enbridge's Line 67) is an oil pipeline in North America. It is owned and operated by Enbridge and is part of the extensive Enbridge Pipeline System . The pipeline runs from Hardisty, Alberta , in Canada, to Superior, Wisconsin , in the United States, integrating the company's Canadian oil sands pipeline system ...
The construction of a second pipeline between Hinton, Alberta, and Hargreaves, British Columbia, running adjacent to the existing line, was completed in 2008. [3] In 2013, a project to loop the existing Trans Mountain pipeline—the Trans Mountain Expansion Project—was proposed to the Canadian National Energy Board. [4]
The Norman Wells Pipeline (now owned by Enbridge) was built in 1985 to carry crude oil from Norman Wells, NWT to Zama City, Alberta, where it connects with the Alberta pipeline network. The Express Pipeline was built in 1997 to carry oil from the Alberta pipeline hub at Hardisty, Alberta to the US states of Montana, Utah, Wyoming and Colorado.
According to Kinder Morgan, expanding the existing pipeline would have been cheaper than Northern Gateway and avoided opposition as experienced by the Enbridge's project. [23] As an alternative, some indigenous groups proposed Eagle Spirit Pipeline from northern Alberta to the Prince Rupert area on the BC coasts.
The Keystone XL Pipeline Project (Phase IV) revised proposal in 2012 consists of a new 36-inch (910 mm) pipeline from Hardisty, Alberta, through Montana and South Dakota to Steele City, Nebraska, to "transport of up to 830,000 barrels per day (132,000 m 3 /d) of crude oil from the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin in Alberta, Canada, and from ...
An agreement has been signed between PetroChina and Enbridge to build a 400,000 barrels per day (64,000 m 3 /d) pipeline from Edmonton, Alberta, to the west coast port of Kitimat, British Columbia. If it is built, the pipeline will help export synthetic crude oil from the oil sands to China and elsewhere in the Pacific. [151]
The Alberta Carbon Trunk Line System is the largest carbon capture, utilization and storage system in the Alberta, Canada.The system, which cost 1.2 billion Canadian dollars, captures carbon dioxide from industrial emitters in the Alberta's Industrial Heartland and transports it to central and southern Alberta for secure storage in depleting oil reservoirs as part of enhanced oil recovery ...
Pembina No. 1 is drilled marking the first use of hydraulic fracturing in Alberta. [16] October 17, 1953 Trans Mountain Pipeline enters use as the first pipeline to carry Alberta oil to the Pacific. [3] [17] November 1959 National Energy Board created to organize interprovincial energy infrastructure. [18] [better source needed] 1965