2013 Ports-to-Plains Alliance Energy Conference Handouts
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ENERGY SUMMIT AGENDAENERGY SUMMIT AGENDAENERGY SUMMIT AGENDA APRIL 26, 2013
ENERGY ISSUES OVERVIEW / RENEWABLE FUEL STANDARDS
Michael Whatley, Executive Vice President, Consumer Energy Alliance
KEYSTONE XL PIPELINE UPDATE
Paul Elliott, Director of Government Relations, TransCanada
TRANSPORTATION AND ENERGY
Scott Haywood, Chief of Staff, Texas Department of Transportation
Barry Brown, Vice President, Alpine Group
TAXES AND BUDGET BATTLES IMPACT ON THE ENERGY INDUSTRY
Michael Zehr, Vice President of Government Relations, HBW Resources
COMPRESSED AIR WIND ENERGY STORAGE
Alissa Oppenheimer, Managing Director, Chamisa Energy
WIND ENERGY’S FUTURE AND THE IMPACT ON US MANUFACTURING
Noel Davis, CEO, Vela Gear Systems LLC
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
Agenda: 2013 Ports-to-Plains Alliance Energy Conference ........................................................................... 1
2013 Federal Transportation Recommendations of the Ports-to-Plains Alliance ..................................... 2
ENERGY AND THE ECONOMY
Oil and Natural Gas Taxes and “Subsidies”; API ........................................................................................... 10
There Is a Fundamental Difference Between a Subsidy and a Deduction; National Taxpayer Union . 11
Hydraulic Fracturing
"Gasland" corrections from the Colorado Oil & Gas Conservation Commission ..................... 13
Frac Focus Sample Well Report ....................................................................................................... 17
Alberta Oil Sands 101
About the Oil Sands; Government of Alberta ................................................................................. 19
United States Economic Impact; Government of Alberta ............................................................ 25
Energy and Security; Government of Alberta ................................................................................. 30
Oil Sands and GHGs; Government of Alberta ................................................................................. 36
U.S. Suppliers List; Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers ........................................... 40
Oil Sands Labour Demand Outlook to 2022; Petroleum Human Resources
Council of Canada ............................................................................................................... 73
Transportation and Energy
Eagle Ford Task Force Report—Chapter 2—Infrastructure; Railroad Commission of Texas ... 75
Eagle Ford fatal crashes up 40 percent; San Antonio Express-News ......................................... 90
Highway 85 concerns move south; Dickinson Press .................................................................... 92
KEYSTONE XL PIPELINE
Ports-to-Plains Alliance Comments on Supplementary Environmental Impact Statement
for Keystone XL Pipeline; April 18, 2013 ....................................................................................... 93
NORTH AMERICA’S NORTH AMERICA’S NORTH AMERICA’S
ENERGY AND AGRICULTURAL CORRIDORENERGY AND AGRICULTURAL CORRIDORENERGY AND AGRICULTURAL CORRIDOR
North America’s
Agricultural Heartland
North America’s
Oil & Gas Corridor
United States
Wind Corridor
North America’s
Energy Pipeline Corridor
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A RURAL CORRIDOR OF NATIONAL SIGNIFICANCE
The north-south movement of goods and persons through the nine-state Ports-to-Plains Alliance Corridor relies on an existing 2,333-mile network of mostly two-lane highways. These highways are a part of the National Highway System. Moreover, in recognition of the importance of this corridor, its entire length--from the Mexico border to the Canadian border--has been designated by federal law as National Highway System High Priority Corridors: the Ports-to-Plains Corridor (#38), the Heartland Expressway (#14), the Theodore Roosevelt Expressway (#58), and the Camino Real Corridor (#27). Unfortunately, the existing north-south highway network in our corridor is inadequate to meet the current and future needs of the region and the nation and faces a number of significant challenges: The corridor needs greater capacity to carry the growing levels of traffic and commerce.
• Our corridor runs through 4 of the top 8 farm states that produce $23 billion of agricultural goods, or 19.5% of all U.S. agriculture products. The food produced in this region is destined for cities and towns throughout the United States. Truck movements along the corridor, which will grow significantly in the future, are a critical part of the agricultural distribution network.
• Our corridor also serves 7 of the top 10 oil producing states and 5 of the top 6 natural gas producing states. Development of these traditional energy resources, which are essential to our nation’s energy security, is booming up and down the corridor. This is putting tremendous pressure on the north-south highway network. For example, developing just one oil well requires an estimated 2,300 truck movements.
• Our corridor serves the top 6 nationwide and 8 of the top 10 installed wind generation states,
generating over 6,000 MW, or nearly 77.8 percent of the U.S. total. A single wind tower requires 126 trucks for major parts, including the crane, concrete or rebar. One planned wind farm in West Texas would install more than 2,600 towers, and put more than 21,000 trucks and 42,000 pilot cars on the highways in and out of the site. Developing the growing renewable energy industry is critical to our national security and economic growth. This energy generated in our corridor will feed into the national grid benefitting all Americans.
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• Our corridor serves 27.6 percent of the Nation’s ethanol refining capacity. Production of renewable fuels is expected to increase significantly over the coming decades, putting additional stress on the corridor’s transportation network. Again, the ethanol produced in our corridor will benefit all Americans.
• Our corridor is home to some of our most popular national parks. The travel and tourism
associated with these parks is growing, putting additional traffic on the corridor’s highway network. The result has been seasonal bottlenecks and “hot spots” leading to these parks.
• Our corridor is also feeling the effects of increased international trade with Canada and Mexico.
We are a major U.S. trading region, generating $280.4 billion in trade with Canada and Mexico, nearly 25.4% of total U.S.-North America trade. Much of this trade results in freight movement up and down the corridor, including spillover traffic from heavily-congested parallel corridors.
• The bottom line: To promote economic security and prosperity throughout America's energy and
agricultural heartland, the north-south highway network in our corridor must be upgraded and modernized.
The corridor must be modernized to safely accommodate today’s trucks.
• The two-lane highways that make up most of the existing north-south network in the corridor are simply not designed to carry the number of trucks, especially heavy trucks, currently being experienced up and down the corridor.
• Moreover, these roads are not geometrically designed to accommodate large trucks, especially
the trucks carrying energy-related equipment.
Picture sequence above is a wind turbine blade being transported around the courthouse in Boise City, Oklahoma
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The corridor must be upgraded to keep U.S. agriculture competitive.
• The crops produced by the farms along the corridor are a key international export. Canada is the leading destination for agricultural exports, followed by Mexico. With expected growth in United States and world populations, assisting the competitiveness of U.S. agriculture is vitally important.
The corridor must have greater connectivity for its communities.
• The two-lane, antiquated highways in the corridor have resulted in a lack of adequate connectivity, which is impeding the potential for economic growth in the region. This region needs a four-lane modern north-south highway.
• A modern, efficient and safe transportation facility will promote economic development in a
region of the country that has the highest rate of population loss over the last decade and ensure that America’s heartland and its communities are connected to America.
The corridor must be safe.
• From a safety perspective, the current situation on the north-south highway in the corridor is unsatisfactory. The mix of vehicles travelling up and down the corridor is frightening: large agricultural vehicles, oversized flatbeds carrying wind turbine components, local residents heading to work or school, heavy trucks serving the energy-extraction industries, out-of-state visitors from across America heading to the national parks, and trucks carrying international freight to or from Canada or Mexico. And all of this on two-lane, narrow roads that were not designed for this type of traffic or these types of vehicles.
• Accidents will be significantly reduced on current two-lane segments of the corridor when they are upgraded to four-lane-divided highway. Rural roads are dangerous and improving them saves lives. Each year, more than 42,000 Americans are killed and nearly 3 million are injured on our nation’s roadways. The total economic cost of these crashes exceeds $230 billion annually.
• Unfortunately, nearly 60 percent of highway fatalities typically occur on two-lane rural roads.
When adjusted for vehicle miles traveled, according to the GAO, some rural roads have a fatality rate over six times greater than urban interstates. These facts are extremely troubling since only 40 percent of all vehicle miles are traveled on two-lane rural roads.
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A STRONG FEDERAL ROLE
The Ports-to-Plains Alliance supports modernizing our Nation’s surface transportation network, including the upgrading of multi-state rural highway corridors, to meet the challenges of the 21st century. Given the urgency and magnitude of this undertaking, it is imperative that the Federal Government be the strong partner that it has been in the past. From the First Congress' support of lighthouses, buoys and public piers to make navigation "easy and safe;" to Henry Clay's support for internal improvements; to President Lincoln's support for the transcontinental railroad; to President Teddy Roosevelt's support of the Panama Canal; to President Franklin Roosevelt's support for a cross-country, high-level road system; to President Eisenhower's support of the Interstate Highway System and the Federal Highway Trust Fund; and to President Reagan's support for increased motor fuel user fees to preserve and modernize the Federal-aid highway network; the Federal Government has been instrumental in the development of our Nation's surface transportation system. This system unifies our country by providing for the easy movement of people and goods. As President Eisenhower noted, without it, "we would be a mere alliance of many separate parts.” The Federal Government must provide the leadership and resources to help preserve and modernize the national surface transportation network for the 21st century.
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PORTS-TO-PLAINS RECOMMENDATIONS
With the Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP-21) set to expire on September 30, 2014, the 113th Congress will need to reauthorize the program by that date. While we recognize that much of the reauthorization work will take place next year, we offer at this time our thoughts on the direction that the reauthorization should take. Recommendation #1: Aggressive Oversight of MAP-21 MAP-21 made many important policy reforms. The cumulative impact of these reforms were intended to give states greater flexibility to address priority needs on the national surface transportation network and allow them to deliver projects more efficiently and more quickly. The Ports-to-Plains Alliance supports aggressive congressional oversight to ensure that the Administration implements MAP-21 in accordance with congressional intent and that increased state flexibility does not undermine investment in the national surface transportation network, especially multi-state rural corridors. Recommendation #2: Fix the Highway Trust Fund There is a looming Highway Trust Fund deficit. The challenge will be to develop a long-term fix for the Trust Fund that provides a stable, adequate revenue stream sufficient to facilitate the modern, efficient, and safe national surface transportation system that America needs. In Roll Call, House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chairman Bill Shuster described the challenge as follows:
With the Highway Trust Fund facing its own version of a fiscal cliff in the coming years, we must find a way to pay for transportation improvements without borrowing from our children. We cannot borrow our way to a better future. We must work together, listen to all ideas and opinions, and build a consensus on what is best for America and our future prosperity.
The Ports-to-Plains Alliance agrees. Forging a consensus on a long-term solution is critical. Recommendation #3: Increase Overall Investment It is not enough to simply make the Highway Trust Fund solvent. Virtually every study, including studies by two bipartisan national commissions established by Congress, has concluded that there must be a significant increase in investment from the federal, state, and local governments, as well as the private sector. Recognizing that preserving and upgrading our national transportation infrastructure will be costly, we support significantly increased transportation investment and continued user financing through the Highway Trust Fund. We agree that a consensus must be forged on the best way pay for the increased investment. We are prepared to support a reasonable solution that addresses the needs of rural transportation corridors like the Ports-to-Plains Corridor in a fair and equitable manner.
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Recommendation #4: Focus Resources to Achieve Network Benefits The Federal program should go back to its roots by focusing its resources on upgrading our national highway system on a network basis. There is no greater example of the benefits that can accrue to the Nation from system-wide transportation improvements than the Interstate Highway System. It is a big reason why America is as prosperous as it is today. The challenge for the future will be upgrading the key portions of the National Highway System, including rural freight/energy corridors, to meet the challenges of the 21st Century. This would require sustained, adequate investment that produces network effects, as opposed to ad hoc local improvements. The investment should raise the productivity of the system as a whole, as was the case with the Interstate Highway System. The Interstate Construction Program, built on a federal-state partnership and a cost-to-complete basis, could serve as a model.
Recommendation #5: Ensure Focused Resources For Critical Rural Freight/Energy Corridors Rural freight corridors, especially rural corridors that are critical to energy development, like the Ports-to-Plains Alliance Corridor, must be a key focus of the next reauthorization bill. This could be accomplished in a number of ways:
• A cost-to-complete type of system-wide improvement program as discussed above; • A separate freight highway program, with adequate resources set aside for rural freight/energy
corridors; or • A targeted rural freight/energy corridor investment program backed up by adequate resources.
To the extent the next bill relies on innovative financing (PPPs, tolling, pricing, enhanced-credit facilities), it is important to remember that these options do not generally help rural corridors. Most of these options require that the project generate a revenue stream (usually tolls) to repay the investment, which is not an option in most rural corridors. Therefore, to the extent the bill gives urban areas increased financing flexibility, it should also take steps to require that states give priority to rural corridors in obligating its federal highway grants.
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PORTS-TO-PLAINS ALLIANCE MISSION STATEMENT
The Ports-to-Plains Alliance is a non-profit, non-partisan, grassroots alliance of communities and businesses whose mission is to advocate for a robust transportation infrastructure to promote economic security and prosperity throughout North America's energy and agricultural heartland. Today, we collaborate with our federal and state leaders, partners in Canada and Mexico, and industry partners, to deliver the infrastructure, food and fuel to secure the quality of life of America's great cities. At the same time, we embrace America's new energy economy, and are capitalizing upon oil, gas, wind power, biofuels and other innovation sectors to renew one of America's greatest legacies, the rural heartland.
ALLIANCE HEADQUARTERS
5401 N MLK Blvd. #395 Lubbock TX 79403 Ph: 806-775-3373
PORTS-TO-PLAINS ALLIANCE STAFF
Michael Reeves President Ports-to-Plains Alliance Ph: 806-775-2338 michael.reeves@portstoplains.com Joe Kiely Vice President of Operations Ports-to-Plains Alliance Ph: 303-586-1787 joe.kiely@portstoplains.com Duffy Hinkle Vice President of Membership & Marketing Ports-to-Plains Alliance Ph: 806-755-3373 duffy.hinkle@portstoplains.com
Jacque Daly Executive Assistant Ports-to-Plains Alliance Ph: 806-775-3369 jacque.daly@portstoplains.com Cal Klewin Executive Director Theodore Roosevelt Expressway Ph: 701-523-6171 cal@trexpressway.com Marlin Johnson Communications Director Heartland Expressway Association Ph: 307-331-9313 mjohnson@scottsbluff.org
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Fact Sheet
1220 L Street, NW | Washington, DC 20005-4070 www.api.org
Oil and natural gas taxes and “subsidies” The U.S. oil and natural gas industry does not receive “subsidized” payments from the government to produce oil and gas. However, there are many provisions in the tax code that allow companies to recover their costs. The oil and gas industry are eligible for these deductions, which are similar to, if not the same as, deductions available to many other industries. Tax deductions should in no way be confused with subsidies. A fundamental pillar of the U.S. income tax system is that businesses are taxed only on net income. This means that there needs to be some practical and fair method for businesses to recover costs. The policies underlying cost recovery provisions in the tax code legitimately utilized by the oil and natural gas industry are no different than those for any other industry, and are necessary to insure that our industry is treated no differently than any other. In fact, deductions allowed for the U.S. oil and natural gas industry are often more restrictive when
compared with other industries. For example, Section 199 (the manufacturing tax deduction), which
some in Congress have proposed eliminating just for the oil and gas industry, is already one-third lower
on a percentage basis than for other industries.
Here are the facts about industry taxes and “subsidies”:
In 2009, according to the Compustat North American Database, U.S. oil and natural gas
companies paid income taxes at an effective rate (48.4 percent) that was 70 percent higher than
the effective rate (28.1 percent) of the S&P Industrial companies.
U.S. oil and gas companies pay on average almost $100 million every single day to the federal
treasury in rents, royalties, and lease payments – these do not include excise tax payments.
U.S. Energy Information Administration data show the major U.S. oil and natural gas producers
paid $300 billion in income taxes between 2004 and 2008. This does not include another $60
billion in production, sales, use, property and other non-income taxes or $350 billion in excise
taxes paid on petroleum products.
In 2008, 2009, and 2010, Congress has provided over $65 billion in grants, credits, and other
taxpayer subsidized incentives to renewable energy and conservation programs.
The oil and natural gas industry supports more than 9.2 million U.S. jobs, contributes 7.5% to GDP, supplies most of the nation’s energy, invests hundreds of billions in new energy projects annually – all while paying our fair share of taxes. For more information, visit www.api.org/policy/tax.
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Energy Fact Sheet There Is a Fundamental Difference Between a Subsidy and a Deduction • In order to have an honest and fully informed debate about the future of energy tax policy, it’s
important to accurately portray the tax treatments in question. • The provisions targeted are not, in fact, subsidies. They are standard business accounting practices
and deductions created in the hopes of making American companies more effective, economical, and competitive. To paint provisions like dual capacity or Section 199 as “subsidies” is factually inaccurate and misleading.
• A subsidy is characterized by a direct payment from the government to a company in hopes of propping it up or otherwise boosting its prospects, as has been done with the solar industry.
• A deduction, however, is in place to assure that an American firm is taxed only on its real income. Such provisions enable businesses to write off legitimate expenses and calculate tax liability based on net income, as opposed to revenue.
• Both businesses and individuals routinely employ this method. • As lawmakers seek to take the ax to “subsidies” throughout the tax code, it is critical that they
recognize the damage that can be done by incorrectly utilizing the term.
Oil and Gas Is the Lifeblood of the American Economy
• Lawmakers must avoid any tax changes that disadvantage a single industry – let alone one so vital to the American economy.
• The oil and gas industry supports more than 9.2 million American jobs and counting. o In 2011, the industry accounted for 148,000 new jobs. o That number represents nine percent of the total number of new jobs created in the U.S. – across
all sectors – for the year. • Oil and gas is investing heavily in the future of the American economy – and is doing so at a rate far
beyond that of most other industries. o According to the Progressive Policy Institute, oil and gas companies invested more than $36
billion in the American economy in 2011 alone – enough to be labeled one of the group’s “Investment Heroes.”
The Economic Consequences of Increased Taxes on Oil and Gas Are Severe
• Increasing taxes on the oil and gas industry would trigger significant negative repercussions for the American economy. o According to Professor Joseph Mason of LSU, the repeal of Section 199 and dual capacity
provisions would result in 155,000 lost jobs and $341 billion in lost economic output.
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• Repealing these provisions will increase energy costs for American consumers already struggling with the lingering problem of high gas prices.
• Tax proposals in circulation would impact only American companies while leaving state-run foreign competitors – like Hugo Chavez’s CITGO or China’s CNOOC – unscathed. o The competitive disadvantage created by such policy would serve as a de facto subsidy for
foreign firms at the expense of American companies. • Repealing provisions for the oil and gas industry would reduce the industry’s ability to compete and
invest domestically, ultimately resulting in less incoming revenue for the Treasury. o The tax hikes would result in an $83.5 billion reduction in long-term incoming revenue – far
beyond the approximately $30 billion that the proposals seek to generate. • Lawmakers need to recognize the counter-productive nature of efforts to increase taxes on the oil
and gas industry.
Increasing Taxes on the Oil and Gas Industry Does Not Constitute Tax Fairness
• Tax fairness cannot be accomplished when so many are focused on policies that punish a single industry.
• Calls to hike taxes on oil and gas are predicated upon the assumption that the companies in question are not carrying their fair share of the burden under the current structure. Nothing could be further from the truth. In reality, the oil and gas industry pays its fair share – and a great deal more. o ExxonMobil has paid three dollars in taxes for every one dollar in profits since 1999 – more
than $1 trillion versus $352 billion in profits. o In 2011 the reported tax burdens of the five major oil and gas companies added up to $95 billion
for the year, or $261 million per day. o The oil and gas industry pays an average tax rate of more than 41 percent. The rest of the S&P
industrial average pays just 26.5 percent. • Efforts to tax oil and gas based on assertions of fairness are, therefore, either ill-informed or
disingenuous.
Tax Reform Is Happening. Let’s Do It Right.
• Reforming our tax code is no small task, and it won’t be accomplished quickly. But the terms of the debate are already being set. Actions taken today will frame the discussion for tomorrow.
• Reform negotiations must be focused across-the-board on policy that accomplishes the goals of simplifying the law, broadening the tax base, stabilizing our deficit and assuring that the U.S. remains a desirable place to do business.
• Targeting one industry is contrary to these goals, and will leave us even worse off than we were when we started.
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The documentary Gasland has attracted wide attention. Among other things, it alleges that the hydraulic fracturing of oil and gas wells has contaminated nearby water wells with methane in a number of states including Colorado. Because an informed public debate on hydraulic fracturing depends on accurate information, the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission (COGCC) would like to correct several errors in the film’s portrayal of the Colorado incidents.
Background
Methane is a natural hydrocarbon gas that is flammable and explosive in certain concentrations. It is produced either by bacteria or by geologic processes involving heat and pressure. Biogenic methane is created by the decomposition of organic material through fermentation, as is commonly seen in wetlands, or by the chemical reduction of carbon dioxide. It is found in some shallow, water-bearing geologic formations, into which water wells are sometimes completed. Thermogenic methane is created by the thermal decomposition of buried organic material. It is found in rocks buried deeper within the earth and is produced by drilling an oil and gas well and hydraulically fracturing the rocks that contain the gas. In Colorado, thermogenic methane is generally associated with oil and gas development, while biogenic methane is not. The analytical methods use to differentiate between the two types of methane are well-known, scientifically accepted, and summarized in a well-known presentation by Dennis Coleman and papers by I.R. Kaplan and Dennis Coleman. These works, in turn, cites nearly 75 other references related to the topics of methane generation, “fingerprinting,” forensic investigations, and stable isotope geochemistry. Based upon our review of hundreds of Colorado gas samples over many years, the COGCC is able to differentiate between biogenic and thermogenic methane using both stable isotope analysis of the methane and compositional analysis of the gas. In the Denver-Julesburg and Piceance Basins, the COGCC has consistently found that biogenic gas contains only methane and a very small amount of ethane, while thermogenic gas contains not just methane and ethane but also heavier hydrocarbons such as propane, butane, pentane, and hexanes. As explained below, Gasland incorrectly attributes several cases of water well contamination in Colorado to oil and gas development when our investigations determined that the wells in question contained biogenic methane that is not attributable to such development.
The Weld County Wells
Gasland features three Weld County landowners, Mike Markham, Renee McClure, and Aimee Ellsworth, whose water wells were allegedly contaminated by oil and gas development. The COGCC investigated complaints from all three landowners in 2008 and 2009, and we issued written reports summarizing our findings on each. We concluded that Aimee Ellsworth’s well contained a mixture of biogenic and thermogenic methane that was in part attributable to oil and gas development, and Mrs. Ellsworth and an operator reached a settlement in that case.
DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES Bill Ritter, Jr., Governor
1120 Lincoln St. Suite 801 Denver, CO 80203
Phone: (303) 894-2100 FAX: (303) 894-2109
www.colorado.gov/cogcc
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However, using the same investigative techniques, we concluded that Mike Markham’s and Renee McClure’s wells contained biogenic gas that was not related to oil and gas activity. Unfortunately, Gasland does not mention our McClure finding and dismisses our Markham finding out of hand.
The Markham and McClure water wells are both located in the Denver-Julesburg Basin in Weld County. They and other water wells in this area draw water from the Laramie-Fox Hills Aquifer, which is composed of interbedded sandstones, shales, and coals. Indeed, the water well completion report for Mr. Markham’s well shows that it penetrated at least four different coal beds. The occurrence of methane in the coals of the Laramie Formation has been well documented in numerous publications by the Colorado Geological Survey, the United States Geological Survey, and the Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists dating back more than 30 years. For example, a 1976 publication by the Colorado Division of Water Resources states that the aquifer contains “troublesome amounts of . . . methane.” A 1983 publication by the United States Geological Survey similarly states that “[m]ethane-rich gas commonly occurs in ground water in the Denver Basin, southern Weld County, Colorado.” And a 2001 report by the Colorado Geological Survey discusses the methane potential of this formation and cites approximately 30 publications on this subject.
Laboratory analysis confirmed that the Markham and McClure wells contained biogenic methane typical of gas that is naturally found in the coals of the Laramie–Fox Hills Aquifer. This determination was based on a stable isotope analysis, which effectively “finger-printed” the gas as biogenic, as well as a gas composition analysis, which indicated that heavier hydrocarbons associated with thermogenic gas were absent. In addition, water samples from the wells were analyzed for benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and xylenes (BTEX), which are constituents of the hydrocarbons produced by oil and gas wells in the area. The absence of any BTEX compounds in these water samples provided additional evidence that oil and gas activity did not contaminate the Markham and McClure wells. The COGCC has also reviewed the records for all oil and gas wells located within one-half mile of the Markham and McClure wells, which is more than double the typical hydraulic fracture length in Colorado. This review indicated that: all oil and gas wells near the Markham well were drilled and hydraulically fractured in 1991, except for two wells that were fractured in 2005 and 2006, respectively; and all oil and gas wells near the McClure well were drilled and hydraulically fractured in 2002, except for one well that was hydraulically fractured in 2005. The records do not reflect any pressure failures or other problems associated with these wells that would indicate a loss of fracture fluid or gas from the well bore into the surrounding geologic formations. In support of its thesis that the Markham and McClure water wells were contaminated by oil and gas development, the Gasland website makes several arguments that merit a brief response. First, the website quotes Professor Anthony Ingraffea of Cornell University for the proposition that drilling and hydraulic fracturing could cause biogenic methane to migrate into aquifers under certain circumstances. However, Professor Ingraffea’s statement does not suggest that these circumstances apply to the Markham and McClure wells, nor does it address the extensive scientific literature establishing that biogenic methane is naturally present in the aquifer in question. Second, the website quotes Weston Wilson, an Environmental Protection Agency employee, speculating that oil and gas operators in Weld County are withdrawing large amounts of groundwater and that these withdrawals are releasing biogenic methane. However, oil and gas companies in Weld County obtain most of their water from municipalities, which obtain such water from surface water sources such as the Colorado-Big Thompson and Windy
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Gap projects. Finally, the website asserts that the water in the Markham and McClure wells deteriorated after drilling and hydraulic fracturing occurred nearby. However, COGCC records indicate little or no temporal relationship between the Markham and McClure complaints and nearby drilling and hydraulic fracturing activities, which occurred several years earlier and in most cases many years earlier.
The West Divide Creek Seeps
Gasland also addresses complaints about oil and gas activity in the West Divide Creek area of the Piceance Basin in Garfield County, though it again confuses issues related to biogenic gas with those related to thermogenic gas. The film focuses on two seeps that are in close geographic proximity but derive from different origins. One of the seeps occurs in a wetland on property owned by Lisa Bracken, who appears in the film; it contains biogenic methane. The other seep, which the COGCC terms the West Divide Creek gas seep, is about 1,500 feet to the south on property owned by a neighbor; it contains thermogenic methane caused by EnCana’s failure to properly cement a natural gas well. Gasland adopts the claim that the West Divide Creek gas seep was caused by hydraulic fracturing. After investigating the matter thoroughly in 2004, COGCC staff concluded the seep was caused by gas migrating up a gas well borehole that had not been properly cemented and in which the upper portion of the gas bearing Williams Fork Formation had not been isolated. On August 16, 2004, following a public hearing, the COGCC commissioners approved an enforcement order (Order 1V-276) that incorporated the staff’s causation conclusions and assessed a substantial fine against the operator. In investigating the West Divide gas seep, the COGCC determined that it contains thermogenic methane. The gas composition and stable isotope signature of the gas closely matched that of the gas being produced from the Williams Fork Formation. The gas from both the West Divide Creek seep and the Williams Fork Formation is composed primarily of methane, but it also contains ethane, propane, butane, pentane, and hexanes. In addition, BTEX compounds were detected in ground and surface water in the vicinity of the West Divide Creek seep, which indicates that the gas is related to oil and gas activities and not of biogenic origin. In contrast, the laboratory results for the gas samples collected from the seep on Ms. Bracken’s property have demonstrated that the gas is biogenic. The COGCC has collected nine gas samples on six different occasions during 2004, 2007, 2009, and 2010. With respect to each sample, the gas composition was found to be 100 percent methane, no heavier hydrocarbon compound was detected, and the stable isotope ratio indicated that the gas is biogenic. The COGCC has also collected six water samples on four different occasions during 2004, 2007, and 2009 and ten soil samples on multiple occasions during 2008 and 2009 from Ms. Bracken’s property. BTEX compounds and/or other hydrocarbons associated with oil and gas operations were not detected in any of these samples. Based on these results, the COGCC has concluded that the gas seep on Ms. Bracken’s property resulted from the fermentation of organic matter by methanogenic bacteria. This is not uncommon in wetland areas, such as those that exist along West Divide Creek.
Other Information
Oil and gas development is an industrial activity, and property owners sometimes complain that it has contaminated their water well. The COGCC investigates all such complaints and reports the results individually to the complainant and collectively to the Colorado Water Quality Control
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Division. In some cases, the COGCC has found that the well contains thermogenic methane linked to oil and gas development. In most cases, however, the COGCC has found that contamination is not present or that the methane comes from biogenic sources and is not attributable to oil and gas production. The following excerpt from a report summarizing the COGCC’s investigation following the contamination of the Ellsworth water well is illustrative:
In response to concerns regarding the presence of methane gas in water wells completed in the Laramie/Fox Hills Aquifer, COGCC, Noble Energy, and Anadarko/Kerr McGee sampled a total of 28 water wells between March 25, 2009 and April 7, 2009 across an approximately 170 square mile area. Sample results show that these wells contained either no methane gas or biogenic (biological generated) methane gas. None of these wells, other than the Ellsworth water well, contained thermogenic methane gas. The sample results along with letters discussing the results were sent by COGCC staff to the 28 well owners [who had requested testing].
Nevertheless, it remains important to establish prudent regulations to ensure that other resources, such as groundwater, are protected. Producing oil and gas formations in much of Colorado, including the Denver-Julesburg and Piceance Basins, lie at depths of up to 8,000 feet below the ground surface, while the aquifers that sustain domestic water wells are generally less than 1,000 feet below the ground surface. COGCC regulations establish casing and cementing standards to ensure that gas being produced from 8,000 feet down does not leak into the shallower aquifers. These regulations require wells to be cased with steel pipe and the casing to be surrounded by cement to create a hydraulic seal within the annular space between the wall of the well bore and the steel pipe. In addition, a number of recent amendments to the COGCC regulations address concerns raised about hydraulic fracturing:
• Rule 205 requires operators to inventory chemicals, including fracturing fluids, and to provide this information upon request to the COGCC and certain health care professionals;
• Rule 317 requires cement bond logs to confirm that aquifers are protected; • Rule 317B imposes mandatory setbacks and enhanced environmental
precautions on oil and gas development occurring near public drinking water sources;
• Rule 341 requires well pressures to be monitored during hydraulic fracturing; • Rule 608 mandates additional pressure testing and water well sampling for
coalbed methane wells; and • Rules 903 , 904 , and 906 impose enhanced requirements for pit permitting,
lining, monitoring, and secondary containment to ensure that pit fluids, including hydraulic fracturing flowback, do not leak.
Finally, it should be understood that the COGCC Director, Dave Neslin, offered to speak with Gasland’s producer, Josh Fox, on camera during the filming of the movie. Because the issues are technical and complex and arouse concerns in many people, Director Neslin asked that he be allowed to review any material from the interview that would be included in the final film. Unfortunately, Mr. Fox declined. Such a discussion might have prevented the inaccuracies noted above.
16
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17
All
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18
Oil Sands 101 ‐‐ About Alberta Oil Sands
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 119
Oil Sands 101 ‐‐ About Alberta Oil Sands
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 220
Oil Sands 101 ‐‐ About Alberta Oil Sands
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 321
Oil Sands 101 ‐‐ About Alberta Oil Sands
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 422
Oil Sands 101 ‐‐ About Alberta Oil Sands
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 523
Oil Sands 101 ‐‐ About Alberta Oil Sands
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 624
Alberta Oil Sands 101 ‐ Economic Impact on the United Strates
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 125
Alberta Oil Sands 101 ‐ Economic Impact on the United Strates
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 226
Alberta Oil Sands 101 ‐ Economic Impact on the United Strates
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 327
Alberta Oil Sands 101 ‐ Economic Impact on the United Strates
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 428
Alberta Oil Sands 101 ‐ Economic Impact on the United Strates
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 529
Alberta Oil Sands 101 ‐ Energy and Sercurity
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 130
Alberta Oil Sands 101 ‐ Energy and Sercurity
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 231
Alberta Oil Sands 101 ‐ Energy and Sercurity
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 332
Alberta Oil Sands 101 ‐ Energy and Sercurity
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 433
Alberta Oil Sands 101 ‐ Energy and Sercurity
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 534
Alberta Oil Sands 101 ‐ Energy and Sercurity
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 635
Alberta Oil Sands 101 ‐‐ Oil Sands and GHGs
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 136
Alberta Oil Sands 101 ‐‐ Oil Sands and GHGs
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 237
Alberta Oil Sands 101 ‐‐ Oil Sands and GHGs
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 338
Alberta Oil Sands 101 ‐‐ Oil Sands and GHGs
2013 Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance Energy Conference 439
Introduction to U.S. Suppliers List
2100, 350 – 7 Avenue S.W. Calgary, Alberta Canada T2P 3N9 Tel (403) 267-1100 Fax (403) 261-4622
1000, 275 Slater Street Ottawa, Ontario Canada K1P 5H9 Tel: 613-288-2126 Fax: 613- 236-4280
403, 235 Water Street St. John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador Canada A1C 1B6 Tel 709-724-4200 Fax 709-724-4225
www.capp.ca communication@capp.ca
Introduction
In order to gain insight into how Canadian oil sands development increases economic activity in a particular region, CAPP requested from oil sands companies a list of their oil sands suppliers and business partners. The following list is an aggregation of recent suppliers for several Canadian oil sands companies.
This list is not an exhaustive survey of suppliers in a particular region. Rather, it serves as a tool to highlight existing examples of the commerce and trade relationships between Canadian oil sands producers and companies in the region.
As CAPP receives more information from its member companies, the list will be regularly updated. If you are interested in receiving the next update, or if you are a supplier for oil sands or know of a supplier not on the list, please contact suppliers@capp.ca.
Number of Vendors in U.S. States
Alabama 7 Maine 1 Oklahoma 39Alaska 1 Maryland 8 Oregon 17Arizona 10 Massachusetts 41 Pennsylvania 72Arkansas 2 Michigan 22 Rhode Island 5California 83 Minnesota 40 South Carolina 11Colorado 33 Mississippi 4 South Dakota 2Connecticut 19 Missouri 19 Tennessee 9Delaware 5 Montana 5 Texas 185Florida 34 Nebraska 5 Utah 11Georgia 27 Nevada 2 Vermont 2Idaho 4 New Hampshire 3 Virginia 14Illinois 75 New Jersey 30 Washington 21Indiana 12 New Mexico 2 West Virginia 2Iowa 7 New York 44 Wisconsin 33Kansas 7 North Carolina 16 Wyoming 4Kentucky 4 North Dakota 4 Grand Total 1062Louisiana 13 Ohio 46
40
Introduction to U.S. Suppliers List
Suppliers Classification – Description
Chemicals - Companies dealing with manufacturing, handling, developing or selling chemicals/chemical products
Communications - Companies providing temporary or permanent communications devices and/or services such as Telus, Bell etc.
Construction - Companies involved in the manual labor of a project such as constructing pipelines, constructing buildings etc.
Consulting - Companies involved in consulting on business practices and business efficiencies Electrical Equipment/Services
- Companies providing and/or consulting on electrical equipment usage, electrical power servicing, electrical control equipment etc.
Engineering Services
- Companies providing engineering services such as consulting, designing projects - Does not include procurement/construction or construction management of
projectsEnvironmental - Companies working on environmental reclamation services such as testing,
inspection, research, public awareness etc. EPC - Engineering services, procurement and construction of projects Equipment Services - Companies manufacturing, distributing, selling or renting equipment such as large
rigging equipment, pumps, automation equipment etc.Health & Safety - Companies providing products and/or services that promote and provide safety in
the workforce such as fire retardant uniforms etc. Legal Services - Firms providing legal services to companies in the oil sands Materials - Companies providing basic materials and unfinished goods to the oil sands such
as steel, plastics etc. MRO - Companies providing maintenance, repair and operation of equipment/facilities Parts & Supplies - Companies providing spare parts to the oil sands such as nuts, bolts, filters, small
piping etc. Retail - Companies falling outside the realm of oil sands industry such as food service,
sports goods stores etc. Technological - Companies dealing with developing technology and/or supplying technological
products such as software development, computer models etc. Transportation - Companies involved in logistics such as goods transporting and package shipping Water/Waste Treatment
- Companies involved in treating waste water and moving water in and out of project areas, including environmental companies that solely focus on water treatment
41
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 1
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationDSL MODULAR INC. Anchorage AK Support Services
BIRMINGHAM FASTENER & SUPPLY INC. Birmingham AL Parts & Supplies
METAL SAMPLES CORROSION MONITORING SYSTEM
Munford AL Instrumentation
METAL SAMPLES/CORTEST INSTRUMENT SYSTEMS Munford AL Instrumentation
OAKSTONE PUBLISHING LLC Birmingham AL Support Services
OHD Pelham AL Health & Safety
RAK SYSTEMS, INC. Theodore AL Materials
SPI / MOBILE PULLEY WORKS INC. Mobile AL Parts & Supplies
VULCAN INC. Foley AL Manufacturing
AMERCABLE DIVISION OF ASSOCIATED MATERIALS El Dorado AR Materials
WELSPUN Little Rock AR Materials
AERODATA, INC. Scottsdale AZ Engineering Services
ENVIRONMENTAL SUPPORT SOLUTIONS INC Tempe AZ Environmental
HONEYWELL AZ Equipment Services
INSIGHT DIRECT USA INC Tempe AZ Technological
KREBS' ENGINEERS Tucson AZ Engineering Services
MINTEC, INC. Tucson AZ Technological
MODULAR MINING SYSTEMS Tucson AZ Technological
PHOENIX DIGITAL CORPORATION Scottsdale AZ Technological
VALLEY FORGE & BOLT MANUFACTURING Phoenix AZ Parts & Supplies
WESTERN CHEMICAL INTERNATIONAL Scottsdale AZ Equipment Services
AIRMAGNET INC. Sunnyvale CA Technological
ALDEROX CANADA INCORPORATED San Clemente CA EPC
AMERICAN TRAINING RESOURCES INC Tustin CA Health & Safety
AMERITROL INC. Vista CA Parts & Supplies
APTWATER INC Long Beach CA Water/Waste Treatment
ARC MACHINES INC. Pacoima CA Equipment Services
ARES CORPORATION Burlingame CA Technological
ARIA TECHNOLOGIES, INC Livermore CA Parts & Supplies
AUTODESK INC San Rafael CA Technological
AVISTA TECHNOLOGIES San Marcos CA Chemicals
BERKELEY FORGE & TOOL INC. Berkeley CA Parts & Supplies
BHK INC. Ontario CA Manufacturing
C AND G CONSTRUCTION INC. Upland CA Procurement/Construction
CASTELLE Morgan Hill CA Technological
42
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 2
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationCCI FLUID KINETICS Rancho Santa
Margarita CA MRO
COEN COMPANY INC San Mateo CA MRO
CONNEX ELECTRONICS CORPORATION Fremont CA MRO
CONTROL COMPONENTS INC. Rancho Santa Margai
CA Parts & Supplies
CRANE WORKS, INC. San Leandro CA Equipment Services
CRESCENT CONSULTING INC Topanga CA Consulting
DELTA TECH SERVICE, INC. BENICIA CA Chemicals
DF DICKINS ASSOCIATES LTD Del Mar CA Consulting
EDGEN MURRAY CORPORATION San Diego CA Materials
ELDEX LABORATORIES INC. Napa CA Instrumentation
FATA HUNTER INC. Riverside CA EPC
FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE CO. Santa Ana CA Support Services
FLOWSERVE CORPORATION Vernon CA Equipment Services
FLOWSERVE US INC Vernon CA Equipment Services
GARRETTCOM INC. Fremont CA Parts & Supplies
GINT SOFTWARE INC Santa Rosa CA Technological
HAWK RIDGE SYSTEMS LLC Mountain View CA Engineering Services
HEGER PUMPS INC Long Beach CA Equipment Services
HEWLETT-PACKARD Palo Alto CA Technological
HYPERION SOLUTIONS CORP. Santa Clara CA Technological
IMAGINE THAT, INC. San Jose CA Technological
INDUSTRIAL NETWORK CONTROLS, LLC Riverside CA Equipment Services
INFORMATICA CORPORATION Redwood City CA Technological
INOVX SOLUTIONS Irvine CA Technological
INVENSYS SYSTEMS, INC. Irvine CA Technological
ISOGRAPH INC Irvine CA Technological
JR JOHANSON INC. San Luis Obispo
CA Engineering Services
KAPPA OPTO-ELECTRONICS INC Monrovia CA Technological
KOBELCO EDTI Corona CA Equipment Services
KOMAX SYSTEMS, INC. Huntington Beach
CA Equipment Services
LAMONS METAL GASKET CO INC Martinez CA Parts & Supplies
LEADERSHIP STUDIES INC. Escondido CA Training
M CHEMICAL COMPANY INC Los Angeles CA Chemicals
MGM TRANSFORMER COMPANY Commerce CA Manufacturing
43
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 3
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationMWH AMERICAS, INC. Arcadia CA EPC
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF STANDARDS AND TECHNOLOGY
Los Angeles CA Technological
ORACLE Redwood Shores
CA Technological
OSISOFT INC San Leandro CA Technological
PERFORCE SOFTWARE INC. Alameda CA Technological
PFR ENERGY SYSTEMS, INC. Los Angeles CA Technological
PHENOMENEX, INC. Torrance CA Technological
POLYTEC INC. Irvine CA Instrumentation
PQI CORPORATION Fremont CA Instrumentation
PRO PIPE Mission Viejo CA Water/Waste Treatment
PROSOURCE TECHNOLOGIES Mission Viejo CA Consulting Services
RF PRECISION CABLES, INC Anaheim CA Electrical Equipment/Services
RISA TECHNOLOGIES Foothill Ranch CA Technological
ROHRBACK COSASCO SYSTEMS, INC. Santa Fe Springs
CA Parts & Supplies
SAFER SYSTEMS, LLC Camarillo CA Health & Safety
SETARAM INC Pleasanton CA Instrumentation
SMT PLUS, INC. Penn Valley CA Consulting
STS LAB, INC Van Nuys CA Construction
SUB-ONE TECHNOLOGY INC Pleasanton CA Materials
SUBSURFACE LEAK DETECTION INC San Jose CA Water/Waste Treatment
SUMTOTAL SYSTEMS INC Mountain View CA Technological
SUMTOTAL SYSTEMS INC San Francisco CA Technological
SYSTAT SOFTWARE INCORPORATED San Jose CA Technological
TDK-LAMBDA AMERICAS INC. San Diego CA Electrical Equipment/Services
TECHNIP USA CORPORATION Claremont CA EPC
THE BRIX GROUP, INC. DBA PANA PACIFIC Fresno CA Communications
TIBCO SOFTWARE INC. Palo Alto CA Technological
TURTLE AND HUGHES INC. CA Materials
TYCO VALVES & CONTROLS LP Pasadena CA Parts & Supplies
W.F. MCDONALD COMPANY Los Angeles CA Manufacturing
WEBEX COMMUNICATIONS INC. Santa Clara CA Communications
WELLBORE SOLUTIONS INC Bakersfield CA Equipment Services
WHITTIER FILTRATION (TECH SUBSIDY OF VEOLIA) Brea CA Water/Waste Treatment
WORKSHARE TECHNOLOGY INC. San Francisco CA Technological
44
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 4
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationYOUNG ENGINEERING & MANUFACTURING INC. San Dimas CA Manufacturing
AMERICAN MILLENNIUM CORPORATION INC. Golden CO Equipment Services
APPLIED FLOW TECHNOLOGY Colorado Springs
CO Technological
BARREE & ASSOCIATES LLC Lakewood CO Engineering Services
BLAST DYNAMICS INC Steamboat Springs
CO Procurement/Construction
COLORADO ENGINEERING EXPERIMENT Nunn CO Instrumentation
CUSTOM TECHNICAL CERRAMICS, INC. Arvada CO Equipment Services
DINGO SOFTWARE PTY LTD Centennial CO Technological
GOLDEN SOFTWARE INC. Golden CO Technological
HUMAN CENTERED SOLUTIONS, LLP Lone Tree CO Consulting
HY-TRAN, INC. Golden CO Equipment
IHS INC Englewood CO Consulting
ISYS SEARCH SOFTWARE, INC. Englewood CO Software
KRUPP Denver CO Construction
MAPTEK/KRJA SYSTEMS, INC. Lakewood CO Technological
MASTER MAGNETICS INC. Castle Rock CO Parts & Supplies
MICHAEL B. SMITH ARCHITECTURE, INC. Denver CO Engineering Services
PATERSON & COOKE, LTD. Golden CO Consulting
PRECISION PIPELINE LLC Denver CO EPC
QUEST INTEGRITY USA LLC Boulder CO Engineering Services
REED GROUP LTD Broomfield CO Consulting
REVERE INC. Greenwood Village
CO Consulting
RMB PRODUCTS Fountain CO Manufacturing
ROGER VOELLER & ASSOCIATES, LLC Littleton CO Consulting
ROONEY ENGINEERING INC. Centennial CO Engineering Services
SPATIAL ENERGY, LLC Boulder CO Support Services
TANCO ENGINEERING INC. Loveland CO EPC
THE ECONOMIST Boulder CO Other
TIMOTHY A. SAUNDERS, INC Golden CO Consulting Services
TRANSFORM SOFTWARE AND SERVICES, INC. Littleton CO Technological
TRANSZAP, INC. Denver CO Technological
URS ENERGY & CONSTRUCTION INC Denver CO EPC
VAISALA INC Louisville CO Environmental
WES LLC. Clark CO Environmental
45
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 5
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationALIMAK HEK INC. Shelton CT EPC
ALL TEST PRO LLC Old Saybrook CT Instrumentation
CARBTROL CORPORATION Bridgeport CT Water/Waste Treatment
CIDRA OILSANDS LTD. Wallingford CT Parts & Supplies
CONCEPT ENGINEERING Old Saybrook CT Engineering Services
FISCHER TECHNOLOGY INC Windsor CT Materials
FLUID-O-TECH INTERNATIONAL INC Plantsville CT
GARDNER DENVER NASH LLC Trumball CT Equipment Services
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY Fairfield CT Technological
GRAHAM CORPORATION Hartford CT Equipment
INTERTEK USA INC. (CALEB BRETT USA ) Hartford CT Health & Safety
J.R. MERRITT CONTROLS, INC. Stratford CT Manufacturing
LEGGETTE, BRASHEARS & GRAHAM, INC. Shelton CT Environental
NERAC, INC Tolland CT Consulting
PRAXAIR CANADA INC. Danbury CT Chemicals
SONICS & MATERIALS INC Newtown CT Materials
THE SPENCER TURBINE COMPANY Windsor CT Equipment Services
THINKLOGICAL SOLUTIONS, INC. Milford CT Technological
WORTH CONSTRUCTION INC. Bethel CT Construction
ABBYTEK ENTERPRISES LLC Greenwood DE Parts & Supplies
AGILENT TECHNOLOGIES - ORDER PROCESSING Wilmington DE Parts & Supplies
ELANCO INC. Bear DE Parts & Supplies
GRAVER TECHNOLOGIES LLC Newark DE Parts & Supplies
JOINT ANALYTICAL SYSTEMS (AMERICAS) INC Newark DE Chemicals
ABB Miami FL Electrical Equipment/Services
AIR DIMENSIONS INC Deerfield Beach FL Equipment Services
AQUATIC ECO-SYSTEMS INC Apopka FL Environental
AXIOM INTERNATIONAL Clearwater FL Technological
B B MARKETING ENTERPRISES Pompano Beach
FL Parts & Supplies
BEE ELECTRONICS INC. Fort Pierce FL Retail
CITRIX SYSTEMS INC Fort Lauderdale FL Technological
CODEWARE INC. Orlando FL Technological
DETECT INC Panama City FL Environental
DILO COMPANY INC Odessa FL Equipment Services
DYNALCO CONTROLS CORPORATION Fort Lauderdale FL Instrumentation
46
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 6
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationEMBRAER EXECTUIVE JET SERVICES LLC Fort Lauderdale FL MRO
EMERGENCY ONE, INC. Ocala FL Health & Safety
ENVIROSAFE TECHNOLGIES, INC. Jacksonville FL Equipment
FIREPROGRAMS SOFTWARE Ocala FL Technological
FIRST CALL ASSOCIATES Boca Raton FL Consulting
FLOW CONSULTING Jennings FL Consulting
H PARKER AND COMPANY, INC. Sarasota FL Consulting
IDENTICA HOLDINGS CORPORATION Tampa FL
IMMUNITY INC Miami FL Technological
LESLIE CONTROLS, INC. Tampa FL Parts & Supplies
LINKTEK CORPORATION Clearwater FL Technological
MIX TELEMATICS Boca Raton FL Technological
PARKSON Ft. Lauderdale FL Water/Waste Treatment
PARKWOOD CONSULTING INC Bradenton FL Consulting
PDMA CORPORATION Tampa FL Instrumentation
SPELLEX CORPORATION Tampa FL Technological
SUN ENERGY PRODUCTS CORP. Ft. Lauderdale FL Chemicals
SUNLAND US FL Contruction
THOR GUARD, INC. Sunrise FL Health & Safety
TOPTECH SYSTEMS INC. Longwood FL Technological
US PATENT CERTIFICATE PLAQUE CENTER Fort Myers FL Retail
VALESCO BATTERY SYSTEMS INC Miami FL Parts & Supplies
VISTA ENERGY GROUP, INC. St Augustin FL Consulting
ANALYTICAL MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS, INC. Alpharetta GA Consulting
ANDRITZ AUTOMATION INC Decatur GA Engineering Services
ANTEK INSTRUMENTS, INC. Atlanta GA Engineering Servies
AUBREY DANIELS INTERNATIONAL Atlanta GA Consulting
BEASLEY FOREST PRODUCTS INC. Hazlehurst GA Materials
BRUEL & KJAER NORTH AMERICA INC Norcross GA Instrumentation
CLARAGE INC. Suwanee GA Equipment
COMPRESSOR CONTROLS CORPORATION Atlanta GA Equipment
DATA SOUTH SYSTEMS, INC. Hinesville GA Technological
DET NORSKE VERITAS (USA) INC Atlanta GA Consulting
FLOQUIP ENGINEERING COMPANY Riceboro GA Water/Waste Treatment
FLSMIDTH DORR-OLIVER EIMCO LTD Atlanta GA MRO
FMC TECHNOLOGIES INC. Acworth GA Technological
47
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 7
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationG E ENERGY PARTS INC. Atlanta GA Parts & Supplies
GIW INDUSTRIES Grovetown GA Equipment Services
HELLA, INC Peachtree City GA Parts & Supplies
HV DIAGNOSTICS INC Woodstock GA Electrical Equipment/Services
IRON MOUNTAIN INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY Norcross GA Support Services
IVANHOE GROUP Peachtree City GA MRO
PAC - PETROLEUM ANALYZER COMPANY Atlanta GA Instrumentation
PROFESSIONAL AIRCRAFT ACCESSORIES Atlanta GA MRO
SNF INC. Riceboro GA Chemicals
STRUERS INC. Atlanta GA Equipment
SULZER PUMPS (US) INC. Atlanta GA Equipment
THINK RESOURCES, INC. Norcross GA Engineering Services
TRADEMASTER, INC Peachtree City GA Materials
YOKOGAWA CORPORATION OF AMERICA Newnan GA Instrumentation
COMPRESSOR CONTROLS Des Moines IA
COMPRESSOR CONTROLS CORPORATION Des Moines IA Equipment Services
GEOLEARNING, INC West Des Moines
IA Technological
SIEMENS WATER TECHNOLOGIES CORP Ames IA Water/Waste Treatment
SPARTAN/FISHER Marshalltown IA Parts & Supplies
SYSTEMS EQUIPMENT CORPORATION Waukon IA Equipment Services
XERXES CORPORATION Tipton IA Manufacturing
ADVANCED EXPLOSIVES DEMOLITION Couer D'alene ID Support Services
GROUND FORCE MANUFACTURING, LLC. Post Falls ID Equipment Services
HEDWELD USA INC. Post Falls ID Equipment Services
USGS - US GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Boise ID Environental
AAR CORP. Chicago IL MRO
ALTECH ENVIRONMENT USA CORPORATION Geneva IL Equipment Services
BASLER ELECTRIC COMPANY Highland IL Manufacturing
BEA SYSTEM'S INC. Chicago IL Technological
BLAC INC. Elmhurst IL Equipment Services
BRIDGESTONE Normal IL Manufacturing
BRIESER CONSTRUCTION CO. Channahon IL Construction
CHICAGO BLOWER CORPORATION Glendale Heights
IL Manufacturing
CHICAGO INDUSTRIAL PUMP COMPANY South Elgin IL Equipment Services
48
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 8
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationCORPORATE EXECUTIVE BOARD Chicago IL Consulting
DESPATCH INDUSTRIES LTD PARTNERSHIP Palatine IL Equipment
DONALDSON COMPANY INC Chicago IL Manufacturing
EN ENGINEERING LLC Woodridge IL Engineering Services
E-ONE,INC. Chicago IL Health & Safety
FINNING (CATERPILLAR) Peoria IL Equipment Services
FLOWSERVE US INC. Lombard IL Equipment Services
G&W ELECTRIC COMPANY Blue Island IL Electrical Equipment/Services
GARDNER DENVER, INC. Quincy IL Equipment Services
HONEYWELL ANALYTICS INC Lincolnshire IL Equipment Services
HONEYWELL INTERNATIONAL INC. Chicago IL Equipment Services
HPD LLC Plainfield IL Water/Waste Treatment
INDECK POWER EQUIPMENT COMPANY Wheeling IL Equipment Services
INDUSTRIAL GRAPHITE SALES, LLC Elk Grove Village
IL Parts & Supplies
INVENSYS SYSTEMS, INC. Carol Stream IL Technological
ITRACS CORPORATION Oak Brook IL Technological
JOHN CRANE INC. Morton Grove IL Equipment Services
JOHNSON MATTHEY INC Oakbrook Terrace
IL Chemicals
JONES & BLYTHE Springfield IL Construction
KOMATSU AMERICA CORP Rolling Meadows
IL Equipment Services
KT STEEL Chicago IL Materials
LECHLER INC. St. Charles IL Parts & Supplies
MAC EQUIPMENT, INC. Chicago IL Retail
MAGNETROL INTERNATIONAL LIMITED Downers Grove IL Instrumentation
MATERIAL TESTING TECHNOLOGY COMPANY Wheeling IL Parts & Supplies
MCMASTER-CARR SUPPLY CO Elmhurst IL Parts & Supplies
MIDWESTERN CONTRACTORS Chicago IL Construction
NETIQ CORPORATION Lisle IL Technological
NORMAN FILTER COMPANY LLC Bridgeview IL Parts & Supplies
NORTHROP GRUMMAN INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, INC
Chicago IL Technological
OPEN TEXT INC Chicago IL Technological
OPW ENGINEERED SYSTEMS Hodgkins IL Equipment Services
OVIVO USA, LLC Chicago IL Maintenance & Repair
PA CRUSHER CORP Palatine IL Procurement/Construction
49
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 9
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationPARTICULATE SOLID RESEARCH INC Chicago IL Engineering Services
PENNWELL Chicago IL Software
PHILIPPI-HAGENBUCH, INC Peoria IL Equipment Services
PROTECTION CONTROLS, INC. Skokie IL Health & Safety
QUACKENBUSH COMPANY Crystal Lake IL Equipment Services
RESOURCES CONSERVATION CO INTERNATIONAL Chicago IL Consulting Services
ROLTA TUSC INC Lombard IL Consulting
ROTH PUMP COMPANY Milan IL Equipment Services
ROTH PUMP COMPANY Rock Island IL Equipment Services
SCHENCK PROCESS MINING NORTH AMERICA Palatine IL Equipment
SIDLEY AUSTIN LLP Chicago IL Legal Servies
SIEMENS WATER TECHNOLOGIES Rockford IL Water/Waste Treatment
SNAMPROGETTI-SNC LAVALIN JV Chicago IL Equipment
SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY Carbondale IL Support Services
SPRAYING SYSTEM CO Wheaton IL Parts & Supplies
SULZER PUMPS (US) INC. Naperville IL Equipment Services
SUNERGOS LLC Barrington Hills IL Consulting
THE SALEM GROUP Schaumberg IL Consulting
TITAN TIRE CORPORATION Chicago IL Manufacturing
TOSHIBA INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION Buffalo Grove IL Manufacturing
U.S. SILICA COMPANY Ottawa IL Materials
UNITED CONVEYOR CORPORATION Waukegan IL Materials
UNITED GROUP, INC Lake Forest IL Parts & Supplies
UOP LLC Des Plaines IL Materials
VILLAGE OF MANHATTAN Manhattan IL Support Services
W.S. DARLEY & CO. Itasca IL Equipment Services
WABASH POWER EQUIPMENT COMPANY Wheeling IL Equipment Services
WASHINGTON GROUP INTERNATIONAL Chicago IL Technological
WEIR SLURRY GROUP, INC. Wheaton IL Equipment Services
WILBROS IL Construction
WITECH CO INC. Crete IL Construction
WOLFRAM RESEARCH, INC. Champaign IL Technological
BIGINCH FABRICATORS & CONSTRUCTION, INC. Montezuma IN Construction
BRAKE SUPPLY COMPANY, INC. Evansville IN Parts & Supplies
CONFORMA CLAD INC. New Albany IN Materials
CONSOLIDATED FABRICATION AND Gary IN MRO
50
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 10
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationCONSTRUCTORS, INC.
ENDRESS & HAUSER INSTRUMENTS Greenwood IN Instrumentation
GLAS COL Terre Haute IN Manufacturing
KOONTZ WAGNER ELECTRIC CO, INC. South Bend IN Electrical Equiment/Services
PURDUE UNIVERSITY West Lafayette IN Support Services
RALPH J. WEST CO. Boonville IN Equipment Services
ROBERTS PIPELINE INC. Middletown IN Construction
STELLITE COATINGS Goshen IN Materials
URSCHEL LABORATORIES, INC. Valparaiso IN Equipment Services
BRADKEN-ATCHISON/ST JOSEPH INC Atchison KN Materials
BRUEST CATALYTIC HEATERS Independence KS Equipment Services
CESSNA AIRCRAFT COMPANY, THE Wichita KS Transportation
KOCH-GLITSCH, LP Wichita KS Equipment Services
SMOOT CO. DIVISION OF MAGNUM SYSTEMS, INC. Kansas City KS Engineering Services
TROW ENGINEERING CONSULTANTS, INC. KS Engineering Services
UNIVERSAL ENSCO KS Engineering Services
ARCH ENVIRONMENTAL EQUIPMENT Paducah KY Electrical Equipment/Services
REPUBLIC INDUSTRIES INTERNATIONAL INC Louisville KY Parts & Supplies
RONAN ENGINEERING COMPANY Florence KY Instrumentation
TRENWA INC. Fort Thomas KY Electrical Equipment/Services
ADVANCE PRODUCTS & SYSTEMS, INC Lafayette LA Water/Waste Treatment
CAMERON CANADA CORPORATION LA Materials
CAMERON VALVES & MEASUREMENT CORP. LA Materials
ECOSCIENCE RESOURCE GROUP LLC Baton Rouge LA Environental
EDGEN MURRAY CORPORATION Baton Rouge LA Materials
FERRARA FIRE APPARATUS INC Holden LA Health & Safety
GLADDEN SALES INC Baton Rouge LA Health & Safety
GREENWOOD GROUP LLC River Ridge LA
J.W. TOUPS, INC. Thibodaux LA Consulting
MARINE & INDUSTRIAL SUPPLY OF LA LLC Prairieville LA Parts & Supplies
NOLAN POWER GROUP LLC Mandeville LA Equipment Services
PROCESS CHEMICALS INC. Metairie LA Chemicals
SONARWIRE GLOBAL, LLC Abita Springs LA Construction
ABB MA Electrical Equipment/Services
51
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 11
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationACOUSTIC TECHNOLOGY, INC. East Boston MA Health & Safety
ADVANCED MANAGEMENT SERVICES, INC. Canton MA Consulting
ALDEN RESEARCH LABORATORY, INC. Holden MA Engineering Services
ALTOVA, INC Beverly MA Technological
AMERICAN LEWA, INC Holliston MA Parts & Supplies
AMERICAN SUPERCONDUCTOR CORPORATION Devens MA Engineering Services
ASPEN AEROGELS INC Northborough MA Materials
ASPEN TECHNOLOGY INC Burlington MA Technological
BETE FOG NOZZLE INC. Greenfield MA Parts & Supplies
CIRCADIAN TECHNOLOGIES INC Stoneham MA Consulting
DATADIRECT TECHNOLOGIES Bedford MA Technological
DETRICK LAWRENCE CORP. Edgartown MA Health & Safety
DOBLE ENGINEERING COMPANY Watertown MA Engineering Services
DRESSER INC. - MASONELIAN Avon MA Parts & Supplies
DRS POWER TECHNOLOGY, INC. Fitchburg MA Equipment Services
EBSCO PUBLISHING Ipswich MA Consulting
EDGETECH Marlborough MA Technological
EMC CORPORATION Hopkinton MA Technological
GALVANIC APPLIED SCIENCES USA, INC Lowell MA Instrumentation
GELLER MICROANALYTICAL LABORATORY, INC Topsfield MA Instrumentation
GILL METAL FAB INC Brockton MA Materials
GLASS EXPANSION INC. Pocasset MA Parts & Supplies
HAWK MEASUREMENT AMERICA LLC Middleton MA Instrumentation
HYDRO-TEST PRODUCTS INC Stow MA Equipment Services
ICONICS INC. Forborough MA Technological
INSTRON Norwood MA Equipment
INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT
Boston MA Consulting
IPSWITCH, INC Lexington MA Technological
KROHNE INC Peabody MA Manufacturing
LAWRENCE PUMPS Lawrence MA Equipment Services
LOGMEIN, INC Woburn MA Technological
MALVERN INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED Westborough MA Instrumentation
OLYMPUS NDT Waltham MA Retail
OXFORD INSTRUMENTS AMERICA INC Concord MA Instrumentation
PARKER HANNIFIN CORPORATION Haverhill MA Engineering Services
52
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 12
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationPULSE INC Walpole MA Construction
SOANE ENERGY LLC Cambridge MA Chemicals
SYBASE LTD. Burlington MA Technological
THE MATHWORKS, INC Natick MA Technological
XTRALIS INC Norwell MA Health & Safety
ASSET PERFORMANCE NETWORKS, LLC Bethesda MD Consulting
FLOWSERVE PUMP DIVISION-WORTHINGTON SPA MD Materials
GKD-USA INC. Cambridge MD Materials
GSE POWER SYSTEMS, INC. Sykeville MD Technological
HIGHLAND CONSULTING GROUP, INC St. Michaels MD Consulting
MAXIMUS INC Columbia MD Health & Safety
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF STANDARDS AND TECHNOLOGY
Gaithersburg MD Technological
TESSCO INCORPORATED Hunt Valley MD Technological
CLYDE BERGEMANN BACHMANN, INC. Auburn ME Equipment Services
ALPHA RESOURCES, INC. Stevensville MI Instrumentation
AMERICAN BLOWER SUPPLY INC. Warren MI Materials
BLACK & VEATCH Ann Arbor MI EPC
CLYDE UNION, INC. Battle Creek MI Equipment Services
DEWIND WELLS & DEWATERING, INC Zeeland MI MRO
EAGLE INDUSTRIAL TRUCK MFG LLC Taylor MI Equipment Services
FIRECHECK CO2 SERVICE Dundee MI Health & Safety
HINES INDUSTRIES INC Ann Arbor MI Equipment Services
INTELLITACTICS INC. Detroit MI Software
JANX Parma MI Engineering Services
JAPAN STEEL WORKS AMERICA, INC. Detroit MI Materials
LAVISION INCORPORATED Ypsilanti MI Engineering Services
LUBE-POWER INC Shelby Township
MI Parts & Supplies
MAP MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS INC. Midland MI Construction
MARSULEX INC. Detroit MI Engineering Services
MATERIALS TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION Ann Arbor MI Parts & Supplies
MEARS GROUP INC. Rosebush MI EPC
PRAB, INC. Kalamazoo MI Materials
REID SUPPLY COMPANY Mushegon MI Parts & Supplies
S.W. CONTROLS INC. Plymouth MI Parts & Supplies
SIEMENS WATER TECHNOLOGIES CORP. Holland MI WATER/WASTE
53
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 13
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationTREATMENT
SPIRALOCK CORPORATION Madison Hts. MI Parts & Supplies
AURORA PICTURES, INC. Minneapolis MN Health & Safety
BARR ENGINEERING CO. Minneapolis MN Engineering Services
BENDTEC INC Duluth MN Materials
C.H. ROBINSON WORLDWIDE, INC. Eden Prarie MN Transportation
CAVCOM, INC. Walker MN Health & Safety
CHARPS WELDING AND FABRICATING INC. Clearbrook MN Construction
DELTAK Plymouth MN Materials
DESPATCH INDUSTRIES LTD PARTNERSHIP Minneapolis MN Equipment Services
DIGI-KEY CORPORATION Thief River Falls MN Technological
DONALDSON COMPANY, INC. Bloomington MN Manufacturing
DURAG INC Mendota Heights
MN Instrumentation
ELECTRIC MACHINERY COMPANY INC. Minneapolis MN Manufacturing
ELECTRO SENSORS INC Minnetonka MN Parts & Supplies
FOND DU LAC TRIBAL AND COMMUNITY Cloquet MN Support Services
GOLDENEYE SOLUTIONS, INC Little Falls MN Water/Waste Treatment
GOWAN CONSTRUCTION INC. Oslo MN Construction
HAMON DELTAK INC Plymouth MN Equipment Services
IRACORE INTERNATIONAL INC Hibbing MN Materials
L & M RADIATOR INC. Hibbing MN Parts & Supplies
LAKE SUPERIOR CONSULTING LLC Duluth MN Engineering Services
LHB ENGINEERS AND ARCHITECTS Minneapolis MN Engineering Services
LW SURVEY ENGINEERING AND DESIGN CO. Duluth MN Support Services
MATTRACKS INC. Karlstad MN Parts & Supplies
MERJENT INC. Minneapolis MN Engineering Services
MIELKE ELECTRIC WORKS Duluth MN Parts & Supplies
MINCO PRODUCTS INC Fridley MN Equipment Services
MINNESOTA LIMITED INC. Big Lake MN Equipment Services
NORTHLANDS CONSTRUCTORS OF DULUTH Duluth MN Construction
PERSONNEL DECISIONS INTERNATIONAL CORP Minneapolis MN Consulting
PROSOURCE TECHNOLOGIES Minneapolis MN Consulting
RELIABILITY MANAGEMENT GROUP Minneapolis MN Consulting
RMS CONTROLS INC. MN Materials
ROSEMOUNT INC. Chanhassen MN Instrumentation
54
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 14
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationTHERMO FISHER SCIENTIFIC Minneapolis MN Instrumentation
THERMO RAMSEY INC Minneapolis MN Electrical Equipment/Services
THERMOFISHER SCIENTIFIC INC Minneapolis MN Instrumentation
TIOGA, INC. New Hope MN Equipment Services
TWIN CITY CLARAGE, INC Minneapolis MN Parts & Supplies
TYCO VALVES & CONTROLS LP MN Parts & Supplies
UNITED PIPING INC. Duluth MN Construction
AMP TECHNOLOGY LLC Fenton MO Technological
BHA GROUP INC Kansas City MO Parts & Supplies
C G POWER SYSTEM USA, INC. Washington MO Equipment Services
CHAS S. LEWIS & CO INC Crestwood MO Equipment Services
DECISION SCIENCES CORPORATION St. Louis MO Consulting
DOBLE ENGINEERING COMPANY INC Kansas City MO Engineering Services
FEDERAL STEEL SUPPLY INC Chesterfield MO Materials
GARDNER DENVER NASH LLC St. Peters MO Equipment Services
GARDNER DENVER, INC. St. Louis MO Equipment Services
GEEDING CONSTRUCTION INC. Troy MO Construction
GLEN MARTIN ENGINEERING, INC. Boonville MO EPC
GROTH CORPORATION St Louis MO Parts & Supplies
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING AND EQUIPMENT CO. St. Louis MO Equipment Services
LABRAGE PIPE AND STEEL COMPANY St. Louis MO Materials
NOOTER/ERIKSEN Fenton MO Equipment Services
O' BRIEN CORPORATION St. Louis MO Electrical Equipment/Services
PRICE GREGORY MO Construction
STEVEN CHASTEEN Kansas City MO Consulting
WEAR-CONCEPTS INC Liberty MO Parts & Supplies
CALVERT COMPANY INC., THE Richland MS Electrical Equipment/Services
DIXIE MAT AND HARDWOOD CO, INC. Sandy Hook MS Parts & Supplies
FMC TECHNOLOGIES, INC. Saltillo MS Technological
SULFUR OPERATION SUPPORT INC Ocean Springs MS Engineering Services
BAY LIMITED Bilings MT Construction
CENTER FOR INTERNET SECURITY INC Kalispell MT Technological
LIFTING TECHNOLOGIES, INC. Missoula MT Equipment Services
PTI CAMP CONTRACT US PHASE IV MT Construction
55
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 15
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationTOWHAUL CORP. DBR SMITH EQUIPMENT USA. Bozeman MT Equipment Services
AC CONTROLS Charlotte NC Parts & Supplies
ALSTOM POWER, INC. Charlotte NC Engineering Services
APEX INSTRUMENTS, INC. Fuquay-Varina NC Instrumentation
CASPER CONSTRUCTION INC. Burnsville NC Construction
CEM CORPORATION Matthews NC Instrumentation
CONTROLS SOUTHEAST INC Charlotte NC Equipment Services
ECC, LLC. Vass NC Manufacturing
ISA Research Triangle Park
NC Consulting
KRAL-USA INC Matthews NC Equipment Services
MAC INC. Glenburn NC Engineering Services
MPHUSKY CORPORATION Charlotte NC Electrical Equipment/Services
NACB LLC Raleigh NC Parts & Supplies
NSI SOLUTIONS, INC. Raleigh NC Chemicals
SOURCE TECHNOLOGY ASSOCIATES Chapel Hill NC
SPOT COOLERS Charlotte NC Equipment Services
SPX FLOW TECHNOLOGY Charlotte NC Equipment Services
EARTHMOVERS, INC. Minot ND Contruction
HENKELS & MCCOY ND Construction
MICHELS ND EPC
TIC WYOMING Tioga ND Construction
CLEAVER BROOKS Lincoln NE Equipment Services
PETER KIEWIT & SONS Omaha NE Construction
PRICE GREGORY NE Construction
VALMONT INDUSTRIES INC Omaha NE EPC
WILBROS NE Construction
KINEX CAPPERS, LLC Amherst NH Equipment Services
SERIF, INC Amherst NH Technological
VHG LABS, INC. Manchester NH Instrumentation
ALOK BHARGAVA Pine Brook NJ Consulting
BIACH INDUSTRIES INC. Cranford NJ Parts & Supplies
CAMO SMART SOFTWARE INC Woodbridge NJ Technological
CARMAGEN ENGINEERING, INC. Rockaway NJ Engineering Services
CHEM FLOWTRONIC, INC. Little Falls NJ Chemicals
CHEVRON LUMMUS GLOBAL LLC Bloomfield NJ Engineering Services
56
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 16
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationCUSTOM WORKFLOW SOLUTIONS LLC Florham Park NJ Technolgical
EKATO CORPORATION Oakland NJ Engineering Services
ELEMENTAR AMERICAS, INC. Mt. Laurel NJ Engineering Services
EXCELL FEEDERS INC. Somerset NJ Water/Waste Treatment
FACTORY DIRECT PIPELINE PRODUCTS INC Blairstown NJ Parts & Supplies
FOSTER WHEELER USA CORPORATION Hampton NJ EPC
GLEN MILLS INC. Clifton NJ Equipment Services
GOOCH THERMAL SYSTEMS Lebanon NJ Parts & Supplies
HAMON RESEARCH-COTTRELL, INC. Somerville NJ MRO
HIROX-USA INC Hackensack NJ Instrumentation
HONEYWELL INTERNATIONAL INC. Morristown NJ Equipment Services
JOHN C. ERNST CO. INC Sparta NJ Parts & Supplies
KEPNER TREGOE, INC Princeton NJ Consulting
KIMBLE-CHASE LIFE SCIENCE AND RESEARCH PRODUCTS,LLC
Vineland NJ Equipment Services
MISTRAS GROUP INC Princeton Junction
NJ Technological
NORTON ENGINEERING CONSULTANTS INC Ridgewood NJ Engineering Services
OLI SYSTEMS, INC. Morris Plains NJ Technological
PFI PROJECT CONSULTANTS Cherry Hill NJ Consulting
SANKARAN SUNDARESAN Princeton Junction
NJ Consulting
SEMINARS AND CONFERENCES GROUP INTERNATIONAL, LLC
Englishtown NJ Consulting
SETARAM INC. Pennsarken NJ Materials
SYSTEMS DISTRIBUTORS, INC Neptune NJ Equipment Services
TECHNE INCORPORATED Burlington NJ Equipment Services
THE CENTER FOR PROFESSIONAL ADVANCEMENT, INC.
East Brunswick NJ Consulting
CPFD SOFTWARE LLC Albuquerque NM Technolgical
MBF INSPECTION SERVICES INC. Roswell NM Consulting
MSLI, GP Reno NV Technological
TYCO VALVES AND CONTROLS Reno NV Parts & Supplies
ABB LUMMUS CREST INC. New York NY Parts & Supplies
ADSCO MANUFACTURING LLC Brentwood NY Parts & Supplies
ALL AREA FIRE AND RESCUE APPARATUS West Babylon NY
AMERICAN PRECISION INDUSTRIES INC. - BASCO DIVISION
Buffalo NY Equipment Services
AMULET HOTKEY INC New York NY Equipment Services
57
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 17
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationAPI HEAT TRANSFER INC. Buffalo NY Equipment Services
ATLAS COPCO COMPTEC LLC Voorheesville NY Equipment Services
BASCO DIVISION Buffalo NY Equipment Services
BLASCH PRECISION CERAMICS, INC. Albany NY Parts & Supplies
BURGESS MANNING INC. Orchard Park NY Equipment Services
CAMERON INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION Buffalo NY Equipment Services
CHENTRONICS CORPORATION Norwich NY Equipment Services
CORPUSCULAR INC. Cold Spring NY Chemicals
CT CORPORATION New York NY Technological
DYNALAB CORP New York NY Legal Services
ENECON CORPORATION Medford NY Materials
ENTERPRISE AIR, INC. New York NY Technological
GARDNER NASH NY Parts & Supplies
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY Schenectady NY Electrical Equipment/Services
GRAHAM CORPORATION Batavia NY Equipment Services
IMPRESSIONS INTERNATIONAL INC Rochester NY Other
ITT ENIDINE INC. Orchard Park NY Equipment Services
ITT INDUSTRIES - GOULDS PUMPS Seneca Falls NY Equipment Services
KNOVEL CORPORATION New York NY Technological
KOIKE ARONSON, INC. Arcade NY Equipment Services
LENOVO (UNITED STATES) INC. NY Technological
LIGHTNIN, C/O HASTIK-BAYMONT, INC. NY Water/Waste Treatment
MARTIN KURZ & CO., INC Mineola NY Materials
NARISHIGE INTERNATIONAL USA, INC. East Meadow NY Instrumentation
PACS INDUSTRIES, INC. Bethpage NY Electrical Equipment/Services
PALISADE CORPORATION Ithaca NY Technological
QUALITROL COMPANY LLC Fairport NY Instrumentation
R.P. ADAMS COMPANY INC Buffalo NY Equipment Services
RATNIK INDUSTRIES LTD. Victor NY Equipment Services
RIVERHAWK CORPORATION New Hartford NY Equipment Services
SCHENCK TREBEL CORPORATION Deer Park NY Parts & Supplies
SHANNON ENTERPRISES OF W.N.Y. INC North Tonawanda
NY Manufacturing
SSA & COMPANY New York NY Consulting
TAPROGGE AMERICA CORPORATION Edgewood NY Parts & Supplies
58
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 18
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationTMP WORLDWIDE New York NY Consulting
U.E. SYSTEMS INCORPORATED Elmsford NY Instrumentation
WELDING RESEARCH COUNCIL, INC. NY NY Engineering Services
WESTPORT HARDNESS & GAGING CORPORATION West Islip NY Parts & Supplies
YOUNG & FRANKLIN INC. Liverpool NY Engineering Services
AMG VANADIUM, INC. Cambridge OH Materials
ANALYTICAL PRODUCTS GROUP Westlake OH Equipment Services
ASHLAND INC Dublin OH Chemicals
AVTRON INDUSTRIAL AUTOMATION INC Cleveland OH Electrical Equipment/Services
BEVILLE ENGINEERING INC Dayton OH Engineering Services
CHEMINEER, INC. Dayton OH Equipment Services
CLARK RELIANCE CORP NATIONAL Strongsville OH Parts & Supplies
CORRPRO COMPANIES INC. Medina OH Materials
EARTHSOFT INC Strongsville OH Technological
EDISON WELDING INSTITUTE Columbus OH Engineering Services
EFFOX INC. West Chester OH Parts & Supplies
EGC ENTERPRISE INC Chardon OH Materials
ENGINEERING MECHANICS CORP. Columbus OH Technological
EQUITY ENGINEERING GROUP, INC. , THE Shaker Heights OH Engineering Services
EUCLID Euclid OH Equipment Services
EXPO EXPERTS, LLC Cincinnati OH Consulting
GE ENGINE SERVICES LLC Cincinnati OH Equipment Services
HALLMARK OH Retail
HARTZELL PROPELLER INC. Piqua OH Manufacturing
HAYS CLEVELAND Cleveland OH Equipment Services
ICI NETWORKS, LLC Akron OH Technological
KIRK KEY INTERLOCK COMPANY Massillon OH Parts & Supplies
LAMBDA RESEARCH Cincinnati OH Technological
MADER DAMPERS LaGrange OH Engineering Services
MC MASTER-CARR SUPPLY COMPANY Aurora OH Parts & Supplies
MCMASTER CARR SUPPLY COMPANY Cleveland OH Parts & Supplies
MCNEIL INDUSTRIES, INC. Painsville OH Manufacturing
MODULAR SECURITY SYSTEMS, INC Ironton OH Technological
MONARCH ELECTRIC SERVICE CO (INC) Cleveland OH MRO
NATIONAL BOARD OF BOILER PRESSURE VESSEL Columbus OH Support Services
59
U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 19
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationNOVAVISION INC. Bowling Green OH Health & Safety
OR-TEC INC. Maple Heights OH Parts & Supplies
PEPPERL FUCHS INC Twinsburg OH Electrical Equipment/Services
PRESSURE VESSEL RESEARCH COUNCIL INC Shaker Heights OH Engineering Services
SHAFER VALVE COMPANY DB Mansfield OH Parts & Supplies
SIEMANS INDUSTRIAL AUTOMATION OH Materials
SIGMATEK SYSTEMS INTERNATIONAL LLC Cincinnati OH Construction
SNAP-ON INCORPORATED Wooster OH Parts & Supplies
STRUERS, INC. Cleveland OH Materials
TEMA ISENMANN, INC. Cincinnati OH Support Services
THE MACK IRON WORKS CO. Sandusky OH Materials
THERMO LABSYSTEMS INC. Cincinnati OH Parts & Supplies
UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI Cincinnati OH Engineering Services
UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY RESEARCH FOUNDATION
Cleveland OH Support Services
V.O. BAKER COMPANY Mentor OH Materials
WORTHINGTON PRODUCTS INC Canton OH Engineering Services
BADGER METER, INC. Milwaukee OK Instrumentation
BRADEN MANUFACTURING LLC Tulsa OK Parts & Supplies
CALLIDUS TECHNOLOGIES INC. Tulsa OK Equipment Services
CHART COOLER SERVICE CO INC Tulsa OK Engineering Services
CONTROL DEVICES, INC. Broken Arrow OK Manufacturing
DEVCO USA LLC Tulsa OK Materials
ENDURO PIPELINE SERVICES, INC. Tulsa OK MRO
ENERGY EXCHANGER COMPANY Tulsa OK Equipment Services
ENGLOBAL INSPECTION SERVICES Tulsa OK Engineering Services
EXPRESS INTEGRATED TECHNOLOGIES Tulsa OK Equipment Services
FABSCO FIN-AIR, LLC Sapulpa OK Equipment Services
FABSCO SHELL AND TUBE LLC Sapulpa OK Engineering Services
FIN-X, INC Owasso OK Manufacturing
GEA RAINEY CORPORATION Catoosa OK Equipment Services
GOLDEN FIELD SERVICES INC. Tulsa OK EPC
INCREASE PERFORMANCE INC. Tulsa OK EPC
JOHN M. CAMPBELL AND COMPANY Norman OK Consulting
JOHN ZINK COMPANY Tulsa OK Environmental
LINDE PROCESS PLANTS, INC. Tulsa OK EPC
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Vendor Name City Region ClassificationMATRIX SERVICE INDUSTRIAL Tulsa OK Construction
MCDANIEL TECHNICAL SERVICE INC. Broken Arrow OK Engineering Services
MICHELS US OK EPC
MILLS CONSTRUCTION AND WELDING INC. Cushing OK Construction
NMW INC Nowata OK Parts & Supplies
PETRO-CHEM DEVELOPMENT CO. INC Tulsa OK Engineering Services
PFINDE INC. Bixby OK Consulting
R.W. HOLLAND, INC. Tulsa OK Equipment Services
RUHRPUMPEN, INC Tulsa OK Equipment Services
SHELL AND TUBE, LLC Tulsa OK Equipment Services
SOUTHWEST FILTER CO. Tulsa OK Equipment Services
SPX CORPORATION Tulsa OK Equipment Services
SULZER CHEMTECH USA Tulsa OK Parts & Supplies
SUMMIT MACHINE TOOL MANUFACTURING CORP Oklahoma City OK Parts & Supplies
T.D.WILLIAMSON INC Tulsa OK Equipment Services
TULSA HEATERS, INC. Tulsa OK Equipment Services
TULSA INSPECTION RESOURCES INC. Tulsa OK MRO
WHIZDOM INTERNATIONAL FREIGHT SERVICE Tulsa OK Transportation
WS SERVICES LLC Wilson OK Materials
PIPELINE EQUIPMENT, INC. Tulsa OK Materials
CLIMAX PORTABLE MACHINE TOOLS INC. Newberg OR Equipment Services
DOLPHIN SOFTWARE, INC Lake Oswego OR Technological
DR. V. ROBERT HAYLES Manzanita OR Consulting
EDX WIRELESS, LLC Eugene OR Technological
ETHICSPOINT, INC. Lake Oswego OR Consulting
EVRAZ INC. NA CANADA Portland OR Materials
FERGUSON ENTERPRISES INC. Portland OR Health & Safety
G C C INC Salem OR Equipment Services
HACH ULTRA ANALYTICS Grants Pass OR Water/Waste Treatment
MARINER'S SUPPLY CO. INC Portland OR Transportation
MATERIAL FLOW & CONVEYOR SYSTEMS INC Donald OR Parts & Supplies
MORROW EQUIPMENT COMPANY LLC Salem OR Equipment Services
NORTHWEST PIPE COMPANY Portland OR Materials
SIEMENS ENERGY, INC. OR Materials
SULZER PUMPS (US) INC. Portland OR Equipment Services
THE GERBER STORE Portland OR Retail
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Vendor Name City Region ClassificationTRIPWIRE, INC. Portland OR Technological
ABB INC. Pittsburgh PA Electrical Equipment/Services
AIR PRODUCTS AND CHEMICALS, INC. Allentown PA Materials
ALFA LAVAL Lykens PA Parts & Supplies
ALLEN-SHERMAN-HOFF Exton PA Equipment Services
ANALYTICAL CONTROLS INC. Bensalem PA Instrumentation
ANSYS INC. Canonsburg PA Engineering Services
APPLIED TEST SYSTEMS, INC. Butler PA Instrumentation
ARCOS INDUSTRIES, L.L.C. Mt. Carmel PA Parts & Supplies
ARKEMA INC King Of Prussia PA Chemicals
ASSETWORKS INC. Wayne PA Technological
ASTM CUSTOMER SERVICE West Conshohocken
PA Support Services
BAFCO INC. Warminster PA Engineering Services
BAY TECHNICAL ASSOCIATES INC. Downingtown PA Engineering Services
BENTLEY SYSTEMS INCORPORATED Philadelphia PA Technological
CAMERON MEASUREMENT SYSTEMS DIVISION PA Materials
CANNON INSTRUMENT COMPANY INC. State College PA Instrumentation
CAREER MAPPERS INC Langhorne PA Consulting
CIC BALL COMPANY Hatfield PA Support Services
CLEMENT COMMUNICATIONS INC. Upper Chichester
PA Health & Safety
DELTAVALVE USA Pittsburgh PA Equipment Services
DYNACUT INC. Springtown PA Equipment Services
ELLIOTT TURBOMACHINERY CO., INC., EBARA GROUP
Jeannette PA Equipment Services
ELSEVIER BV Philadelphia PA Health & Safety
EXTREL CMS Indiana PA Parts & Supplies
EXTREL CMS, LLC Pittsburgh PA Parts & Supplies
EXXON RESEARCH & ENGINEERING CO. Philadelphia PA Engineering Services
FEDEX Pittsburgh PA Transportation
FENNER DUNLOP AMERICAS INC Pittsburgh PA Parts & Supplies
FLEXWARE, INC Jeannette PA Consulting
FLUID ENGINEERING Erie PA Engineering Services
FS-ELLIOTT CO., LLC Export PA Equipment Services
GARDNER DENVER NASH LLC Bentleyville PA Equipment Services
GOULDS PUMPS INC Pittsburgh PA Equipment Services
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Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 22
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationHAMON RESEARCH-COTTRELL, INC. Philadelphia PA MRO
HIGH PRESSURE EQUIPMENT COMPANY Erie PA Parts & Supplies
INDUSTRIAL RESEARCH OFFICE State College PA Engineering Services
INDUSTRIAL SCIENTIFIC CORPORATION Oakdale PA Health & Safety
JOHN M. CIMBALA University Park PA Engineering Services
JOHNSON MARCH SYSTEMS, INC Ivyland PA Chemicals
KENNAMETAL LTD. Latrope PA Equipment Services
KEY BELLEVILLES INC. Leechburg PA Manufacturing
KINGSBURY, INC Philadelphia PA Parts & Supplies
KNF NEUBERGER INC. Philadelphia PA Equipment Services
LAROX INC Philadelphia PA Equipment Services
MANAGEMENT RECRUITERS INTERNATIONAL, INC Philadelphia PA Consulting
MICROTRAC INC. Montgomeryville PA Engineering Services
MITSUBISHI ELECTRIC POWER PRODUCTS, INC Warrendale PA Electrical Equipment/Services
MOHAMAD HASSIBI CONSULTING SERVICES LLC Perryopolis PA Consulting
MONITOR LABS, INC. Gibsonia PA Environmental
NAO INC. Philadelphia PA Engineering Services
OUTLOOKSOFT CORPORATION Newtown Square
PA Technological
PA CRUSHER CORP Broomall PA Support Services
PRESSURE PRODUCTS INDUSTRIES INC. Warminister PA Equipment Services
PRIMAVERA SYSTEMS, INC. Bala Cynwyd PA Technological
PRIMAVERA SYSTEMS, INC. Philadelphia PA Technological
PRIME TECHNOLOGIES INC West Chester PA Technological
ROBINSON FANS INC Zelienople PA Equipment Services
S.P. KINNEY ENGINEERS INC. Carnegie PA Equipment
SAFETY RAIL SOURCE, LLC Norristown PA Health & Safety
SAUEREISEN, INC. Pittsburgh PA Materials
SCHUTTE & KOERTING LLC Trevose PA Equipment Services
SHERPA SOFTWARE PARTNERS, LP Bridgeville PA Software
SIEMENS WATER TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION Chalfont PA Water/Waste Treatment
SLOGAN ENGINEERING CO. Pittsburgh PA Construction
STANLEY-VIDMAR INC. Pittsburgh PA Support Services
TATE-JONES, INC. Pittsburgh PA Parts & Supplies
TEI STRUTHERS WELLS Warren PA Parts & Supplies
THE PUROLITE COMPANY Bala Cynwyd PA Chemicals
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Vendor Name City Region ClassificationTHERMO LABSYSTEMS INC. Philadelphia PA Parts & Supplies
TOSOH AMERICA INC King Of Prussia PA Parts & Supplies
WILLIAM P. BAHNFLETH State College PA Engineering Services
YUBA HEAT TRANSFER, LLC Bethlehem PA Equipment Services
GEO-INSTRUMENTS, LLC Narragansett RI Instrumentation
GUTOR NORTH AMERICA West Kingston RI Electrical Equipment/Services
LK GOODWIN COMPANY Providence RI Materials
REMOTE CONTROL INC North Kingstown
RI Parts & Supplies
SPECAC INC. Cranston RI Parts & Supplies
CARBIS INCORPORATED Florence SC Health & Safety
EASTON CORPORATION Lexington SC Construction
GE ELECTRIC Greenville SC Technological
HAGLER SYSTEMS INC. North Augusta SC Engineering Services
KNH AVIATION SERVICES, INC. Myrtle Beach SC
MICHELIN Greer SC Parts & Supplies
MICHELS SC EPC
MPHUSKY CORPORATION Greenville SC Equipment Services
RM DYNEX Sullivans Island SC Engineering Services
SAFERACK LLC Sumter SC Support Services
SCHUF USA INC Mt. Pleasant SC Parts & Supplies
PRICE GREGORY SD Construction
PTI CAMP CONTRACT US PHASE IV SD Construction
AGILAIRE LLC Knoxville TN Environmental
BARON USA INC Cookeville TN Engineering Services
EMBRAER AIRCRAFT MAINTENANCE Nashville TN MRO
LINATEX CORPORATION OF AMERICA Gallatin TN Materials
LISEGA INC. Kodak TN Parts & Supplies
MOBIUS INSTITUTE NORTH AMERICA, LLC Brentwood TN Consulting
SINCLAIR ASSOCIATES, INC. Knoxville TN Equipment Services
SYSTEM IMPROVEMENTS INC. Knoxville TN Technological
WINDROCK INC Knoxville TN Engineering Services
AAA TECHNOLOGY & SPECIALTIES CO INC Houston TX Parts & Supplies
AB LADDER COMPANY Houston TX Parts & Supplies
ABASCO LLC Humble TX Environmental
ABSG CONSULTING INC. Houston TX Consulting
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Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 24
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationACCELERATED PM, LLC Lake Kiowa TX Consulting
AFTON PUMPS, INC. Houston TX Equipment Services
AGAR CORPORATION Houston TX Manufacturing
ALCO PRODUCTS Dallas TX Parts & Supplies
ALIMAK HEK INC. Webster TX Construction
ALPEC ENGINEERING Katy TX Engineering Services
AMEC PARAGON INC. Houston TX Engineering Services
ANDERGAUGE USA, INC. Houston TX Equipment Services
ANDON SPECIALTIES Corpus Christi TX Materials
ANDRITZ SEPARATION INC Arlington TX Consulting
ANIXTER, INC. TX Parts & Supplies
AQUIRE INC Irving TX Technological
ARINC INCORPORATED Dallas TX Consulting
ARMS RELIABILITY ENGINEERS LLC Austin TX Technological
ASPEN TECHNOLOGY, INC. Houston TX Technological
ATCO-HUNTER BLAST SHELTERS LTD. Houston TX Engineering Services
AUTOMATION PRODUCTS INC. Houston TX Instrumentation
AWC, INC. TX Consulting
BAKER ENGINEERING AND RISK CONSULTANTS INC. San Antonio TX Consulting
BAKER HUGHS Houston TX Consulting
BECHTEL CA & US Houston TX EPC
BEKAERT PROGRESSIVE COMPOSITES Dallas TX Parts & Supplies
BERG STEEL PIPE CORP. Houston TX Manufacturing
BMC SOFTWARE SERVICES INC. Houston TX Technological
BUREAU VERITAS NORTH AMERICA, INC. Houston TX Consulting
C & W CONSULTING Missouri City TX Environmental
CALEB BRETT U.S.A. INC Deer Park TX Engineering Services
CB&I LUMMUS GLOBAL OVERSEAS Houston TX EPC
CENTRAL TEXAS IRON WORKS, INC. Waco TX Materials
CFC CANADOIL, INC. Houston TX Materials
CLIMAX PORTABLE MACHINE TOOLS INC. Dallas TX Equipment Services
COLT-KBR JOINT VENTURE Houston TX Construction
COMMONWEALTH ENGINEERING Houston TX EPC
CORR INSTRUMENTS LLC San Antonio TX Parts & Supplies
CRANE VALVES NORTH AMERICA The Woodlands TX Parts & Supplies
CRASH RESCUE EQUIPMENT SERVICE, INC. Dallas TX Equipment Services
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Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 25
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationCRITERION CATALYSTS & TECHNOLOGIES Houston TX Chemicals
CURTIS-WRIGHT CORPORATION TX Engineering Services
DAILY THERMETRICS CORPORATION Houston TX Instrumentation
DECISION SYSTEMS INC Longview TX Consulting
DIAMOND GEAR COMPANY LTD Houston TX Parts & Supplies
DOOLEY TACKABERRY, INC. Deer Park TX Health & Safety
DRACO SPRING MANUFACTURING Houston TX Parts & Supplies
DRESSER INC - ROOTS Houston TX Parts & Supplies
DRIVES & CONTROLS SERVICES INC. Tyler TX Electrical Equipment/Services
DUANE HOUKOM, INC. Laporte TX Support Services
EATON ELECTRICAL TX Engineering Services
ECODYNE HEAT EXCHANGERS, INC Houston TX Parts & Supplies
EDGEN MURRAY CORPORATION Houston TX Materials
ENCON SAFETY PRODUCTS Houston TX Health & Safety
ENDRESS & HAUSER INSTRUMENTS TX Instrumentation
ENGINEERING DYNAMICS INC. San Antonio TX EPC
FLEXITALLIC Deer Park TX Parts & Supplies
FLOWSERVE CORPORATION Deer Park TX Equipment Services
FLUIDIC TECHNIQUES/FTI INDUSTRIES Mansfield TX Materials
FLUOR Irving TX EPC
FMC TECGNOLOGIES INC. Houston TX Equipment Services
GALPERTI INC. Houston TX Manufacturing
GE OIL & GAS OPERATIONS, LLC Houston TX Engineering Services
GIRARD INDUSTRIES I, LTD. Houston TX MRO
GLENN TECH INTERNATIONAL GROUP, LP Houston TX Support Services
GLOBAL LAND SERVICES INC. Houston TX Construction
GOAR, ALLISON & ASSOCIATES, INC. Tyler TX Engineering Services
GOULDS PUMPS INC TX Equipment Services
GRANITE SEED COMPANY TX Materials
GT INSTRUMENTS LTD. Kemah TX Instrumentation
GULF INTERSTATE ENGINEERING CO. Houston TX EPC
HALDOR TOPSOE INC Houston TX Chemicals
HAMWORTHY PEABODY COMBUSTION INC Houston TX Equipment Services
HEAT TRANSFER RESEARCH, INC. College Station TX Technological
HUDSON PRODUCTS CORPORATION Beasley TX Parts & Supplies
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Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 26
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationHUDSON PRODUCTS CORPORATION Houston TX Parts & Supplies
I.J.K. CONSORTIUM Houston TX Equipment Services
INCREASE PERFORMANCE, INC. CONROE TX EPC
INGENTIS US Colleyville TX Technological
INTERPLAN SYSTEMS INC. Houston TX Technological
JETBLUE AIRWAYS CORPORATION Dallas TX Support Services
JMJ ASSOCIATES CANADA ULC Austin TX Engineering Services
JOHN ZINK COMPANY Dallas TX Environmental
KATHERINE DUNCKER ROMANAK Austin TX Consulting
KENYON INTERNATIONAL EMERGENCY Houston TX Health & Safety
KOCH HEAT TRANSFER COMPANY Houston TX Equipment Services
LA BARGE PIPE & STEEL COMPANY TX Materials
LARSEN & TOUBRO LIMITED Houston TX Parts & Supplies
LAVENDER INTERNATIONAL NON-DESTRUCTIVE Humble TX Consulting
LIGHTNIN, C/O HASTIK-BAYMONT, INC. Houston TX Water/Waste Treatment
LOCKWOOD INTERNATIONAL INC Houston TX Parts & Supplies
LUBRICATION SYSTEMS COMPANY Houston TX Equipment Services
M & M ENGINEERING ASSOCIATES INC Austin TX Engineering Services
M AND J VALVE CO. Houston TX Parts & Supplies
M AND M ENGINEERING ASSOCIATES INC Leander TX MRO
MAN TURBOMACHINERY INC. Houston TX Equipment Services
MANAGEMENT CONTROLS INC Houston TX Consulting
MCJUNKIN REDMAN CORP. TX Equipment Services
MCLAREN SOFTWARE INC. Houston TX Technological
MEERA BUCK AND ASSOCIATES Houston TX
MICHELS US TX EPC
MOGAS INDUSTRIES Houston TX Parts & Supplies
MONARCH SEPARATORS INC Houston TX Water/Waste Treatment
MORGAN BUILDINGS & SPAS OF CANADA, ULC Garland TX Equipment Services
MUSE, STANCIL & CO. Addison TX Consulting
NACE INTERNATIONAL Houston TX Environmental
NATIONAL INSTRUMENTS Austin TX Technological
NATURAL RESOURCE GROUP LLC Houston TX Environmental
NDE QUALITY SYSTEMS, INC. Houston TX Consulting
NETIQ CORPORATION Houston TX Technological
NEXUS GLOBAL BUSINES SOLUTIONS INC Houston TX Consulting
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U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
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Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 27
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationNITRAM ENERGY INC. ALCO PRODUCTS DIVISION Wichita Falls TX Engineering Services
OHMSTEDE INC. Beaumont TX MRO
OMICRON ELECTRONICS CORP. USA Houston TX Consulting
PAGE SOUTHERLAND PAGE, L.L.P Houston TX Engineering Services
PARKER HANNIFIN CORPORATION Fort Worth TX Equipment Services
PAULIN RESEARCH GROUP Houston TX Parts & Supplies
PE BEN USA INC Houston TX Consulting
PETRECO INTERNATIONAL INC. Houston TX Parts & Supplies
PETROCARBON CORPORATION Pearland TX Engineering Services
PETROLEUM ANALYZER COMPANY Houston TX Instrumentation
PIGS UNLIMITED INTERNATIONAL, INC Tomball TX Chemicals
PIPEWAY INTERNATIONAL INC Tomball TX Parts & Supplies
PIPING TECHNOLOGY & PRODUCTS, INC. Houston TX EPC
PIPLELINE SUPPLY & SERVICE CO. Houston TX MRO
PLANT AUTOMATION SERVICES INC. Houston TX Consulting
POWELL ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS, INC. Houston TX Parts & Supplies
PRIME PIPE INTERNATIONAL, INC. The Woodlands TX MRO
PROCESS CONTROL OUTLET Baytown TX Electrical Equipment/Services
PROCESS TECHNICAL SERVICES INC Beaumont TX Consulting
PROGNOST SYSTEMS INC Houston TX Technological
PUFFER-SWEIVEN, LP Stafford TX Equipment Services
REFINED TECHNOLOGIES INC Spring TX Chemicals
RETCO TOOL CO., INC. Dallas TX Materials
RIGAKU AMERICAS CORPORATION The Woodlands TX Instrumentation
RILCON MFG. CO. INC. Houston TX Parts & Supplies
ROXAR INC. Houston TX Consulting
RUHRPUMPEN INC Dallas TX Equipment Services
SALEM LAND SERVICES INC. Bellaire TX Consulting
SENTRY AIR SYSTEMS INC. Houston TX Equipment Services
SHAFER KLINE AND WARREN INC. Spring TX Engineering Services
SHELL GLOBAL SOLUTIONS (US) INC. Houston TX Consulting
SIEMENS ENERGY AND AUTOMATION INC. Houston TX Parts & Supplies
SOLID SYSTEMS CAD SERVICE INC Houston TX Technological
SOLIDSTATE CONTROLS, INC. Stafford TX Electrical Equipment/Services
SOLOMON ASSOCIATES INC Dallas TX Consulting
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U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 28
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationSONI MEGA TECH INC Houston TX Technological
SOUTHWEST RESEARCH INSTITUTE San Antonio TX Consulting
SPACE AGE LAMINATING AND BINDERY CO. INC Houston TX Support Services
SPEED VALVE AND SPECIALTY INFRARED Orange TX
SPX FLOW TECHNOLOGY Houston TX Engineering Services
STEDMAN WEST INTERESTS, INC. Houston TX Support Services
STEVEN SWANSON CONSULTING, LLC Houston TX Consulting
STRATOS LLC The Woodlands TX Consulting
SYSTEMS APPLICATION ENGINEERING INC. Houston TX Technological
T C E/ TURBO COMPONENTS & ENGINEERING INC. Houston TX Parts & Supplies
T.D. WILLIAMSON INC Dallas TX Equipment Services
TAPCO INTERNATIONAL INC. Dallas TX Parts & Supplies
TD WILLIAMSON INC. Houston TX Equipment Services
TECHNIP USA INC Houston TX EPC
TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY College Station TX Consulting
TGC ENGINEERS, LTD. Houston TX Engineering Services
THE JAPAN STEEL WORKS, LTD Houston TX Equipment Services
THERMO PROCESS INSTRUMENTS L.P Sugar Land TX Instrumentation
TOSHIBA INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION TX Parts & Supplies
TRACER CONSTRUCTION CO. Houston TX Construction
TRACERCO Pasadena TX Engineering Services
TRANSERA INTERNATIONAL LOGISTICS, INC. Houston TX Transportation
TRANTER PHE, INC. Wichita Falls TX Equipment Services
TRICONEX CORPORATION (INVENSYS - TRISEN) Houston TX Technological
TROW ENGINEERING CONSULTANTS, INC. Houston TX Engineering Services
TUNDRA BOILER & INSTRUMENTATION LTD. Houston TX Instrumentation
TURTLE AND HUGHES INC. Houston TX Electrical Equipment/Services
TWL KNOWLEDGE GROUP INC Carrollton TX Consulting
TYCO VALVES & CONTROLS LP Houston TX Parts & Supplies
UNIVERSAL ENSCO Houston TX Engineering Services
UNIVERSAL FIELD SERVICES, INC. Addison TX Construction
VALVE SYSTEMS AND CONTROLS, LP Houston TX Parts & Supplies
VECTOR GROUP, INC Houston TX Parts & Supplies
VIRGO ENGINEERS INC TX Parts & Supplies
WASHINGTON CHAIN & SUPPLY INC Dallas TX Parts & Supplies
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U.S. Suppliers to Canadian Oil Sands
Published 1/10/2013
Not for Redistribution Without Permission 1063 Vendor Names in Total For more information: suppliers@capp.ca Page 29
Vendor Name City Region ClassificationWELDSONIX INC. Houston TX MRO
WILLIAM MARSH RICE UNIVERSITY Houston TX Engineering Services
WILSON SUPPLY COMPANY TX Parts & Supplies
WISCO Houston TX Engineering Services
ALARM CONTROL SYSTEMS, INC. Salt Lake City UT Health & Safety
FLSMIDTH SALT LAKE CITY INC Midvale UT Equipment Services
GRANITE SEED COMPANY Lehi UT Materials
HIREVUE, INC. Draper UT Technological
HYDRO ENGINEERING INC Salt Lake City UT Engineering Services
IMMERSIVE TECHNOLOGIES INC Sandy UT Technological
OVIVO USA LLC Salt Lake City UT Water/Waste Treatment
POCOCK INDUSTRIAL INC. Salt Lake City UT Consulting
SELERITY TECHNOLOGIES USA INC Salt Lake City UT Chemicals
SHAW NAPTECH,INC Clearfield UT EPC
WESTECH ENGINEERING, INC Salt Lake City UT Water/Waste Treatment
ANTON PAAR USA Ashland VA Instrumentation
COMMONWEALTH ENTERPRISES INC. Glenn Allen VA Equipment
CYBERTRUST, INC. Herndon VA Technological
EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT SERVICES Culpeper VA Health & Safety
FERGUSON ENTERPRISES INC. Newport News VA Equipment Services
FLOWSERVE PUMP DIVISION Chesapeake VA Equipment Services
GE FANUC AUTOMATION AMERICAS, INC. Charlottesville VA Technological
INDEPENDENT PROJECT ANALYSIS, INC. Ashburn VA Consulting
INTEGIC CORPORATION Chantilly VA Technological
INTEGRATED GLOBALSERVICES INC Midlothian VA MRO
MARKS PRODUCTS, INC Williamsville VA Equipment Services
NORTHROP GRUMMAN INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, INC.
McLean VA Technological
PREMIER PROJECT ASSOCIATES, LLC Haymarket VA Engineering Services
SPECTRA QUEST, INC. Richmond VA Equipment Services
DYNAPOWER CORP South Burlington
VT Equipment Services
HAYWARD TYLER INC Colchester VT Engineering Services
BEACON OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND Seattle WA Health & Safety
CHARLES COWAN & ASSOCIATES, LTD. Yacolt WA Consulting
CHEMPOINT.COM INC Bellevue WA Chemicals
CONQUEST CONSULTING GROUP Camas WA Consulting
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Vendor Name City Region ClassificationCONVEYOR DYNAMICS INC Bellingham WA Materials
EIGENVECTOR RESEARCH INC. Wenatchee WA Chemicals
ERI ECONOMIC RESEARCH INSTITUTE Redmond WA Consulting
GOLDSIM TECHNOLOGY GROUP LLC Issaquah WA Technological
ISS-WONDERWARE Bothell WA Environmental
KIEWIT PACIFIC CO. Vancouver WA EPC
LOGOS COMPUTER SOLUTIONS, INC. Seattle WA Technological
PARAGON DECISION TECHNOLOGY INC. Bellevue WA Technological
PROCESS HEATING COMPANY, INC. Seattle WA Parts & Supplies
PROJECT REVIEW & ANALYSIS, LLC Bellingham WA Consulting
ROSEMOUNT INC. WA Instrumentation
SCHWEITZER ENGINEERING LABORATORIES INC. Pullman WA Electrical Equipment/Services
SMITH-ROOT, INC Vancouver WA Environmental
SOUND SEAL & PACKING CO Edmonds WA Parts & Supplies
SULZER BINGHAM WA Parts & Supplies
WA CHAIN & SUPPLY, INC. Seattle WA Parts & Supplies
WINESTIMATOR, INC Kent WA Technological
ALADTEC, INC. Hudson WI Technological
BUCYRUS INTERNATIONAL Oak Creek WI Equipment Services
COOPER POWER SYSTEMS Waukesha WI Electrical Equipment/Services
DOUGLAS COUNTY Superior WI Support Services
DRIVE SOURCE INTERNATIONAL, INC. Sturtevant WI Parts & Supplies
ENERPIPE SYSTEMS INC New London WI Equipment Services
FOUR STAR CONSTRUCTION INC. Fond du Lac WI Construction
GE OIL & GAS OPERATIONS, LLC Oshkosh WI Engineering Services
GLOBAL PIPELINE PARTNERS LLC. Marshfield WI Construction
J KOSKI TRUCKING INC. Superior WI Transportation
KASCO MARINE INC. Prescott WI Equipment Services
KRENZ AND COMPANY, INC Germantown WI Equipment Services
LAKEHEAD CONSTRUCTIONS INC. Superior WI Construction
METSO MINERALS INDUSTRIES INC Waukesha WI Engineering Services
MICHELS CORP. Brownsville WI EPC
MODINE MFG CO Racine WI Manufacturing
NATURAL RESOURCES ENGINEERING CO. Superior WI EPC
NORTHERN ENVIRONMENTAL COMPLIANCE Hayward WI Environmental
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Vendor Name City Region ClassificationNOWLAND AND MOUT LLP Janesville WI Legal Services
P&H MINEPRO SERVICES Milwaukee WI Equipment Services
PETERSEN PRODUCTS CO LLC Fredonia WI Parts & Supplies
PICK HEATERS INC West Bend WI Equipment Services
PREMIER ENGINEERING & MANUFACTURING Marinette WI Engineering Services
RECONYX LLP Holmen WI Parts & Supplies
ROCKWELL AUTOMATION INC Milwaukee WI Technological
SCHMIDT ENGINEERING AND EQUIPMENT, INC. New Berlin WI Engineering Services
SENTRY EQUIPMENT CORP Oconomowoc WI Parts & Supplies
TRANE La Crosse WI Equipment Services
WAUKESHA BEARINGS CORPORATION Pewaukee WI Parts & Supplies
WEIR MINERALS Madison WI Parts & Supplies
WSA ENGINEERED SYSTEMS INC. Milwaukee WI Water/Waste Treatment
XTREEM ENVIRONMENTAL SOLUTIONS INC. Superior WI Environmental
ZENITH TRANSFORMER COMPONENTS LLC Waukesha WI Electrical Equipment/Services
CONTINUOUS LEARNING GROUP INC Morgantown WV Consulting
PRESSURE PRODUCTS CO., INC. Charleston WV Parts & Supplies
L AND H INDUSTRIAL INC Gillette WY Parts & Supplies
WESTERN TECHNOLOGY SERVICES Casper WY Equipment Services
WOTCO INC Mills WY Equipment Services
XONITEK CONSULTING GROUP Casper WY Consulting
72
Canada’s oil sands sector surpassed growth expectations in 2012 due to stable oil prices and strong
investment. Optimism continued into 2013; although, somewhat tempered by ongoing concerns that could impact the sector’s growth and sustainability such as the need to diversify markets, obtain the social license to operate, cost management and labour and skill shortages. The sector must continue to implement innovative solutions to address these concerns and ensure energy sustainability in Canada.
TOP 10 OIL SANDS OCCUPATIONS BASED ON 2012 EMPLOYMENT LEVELS
1 Power engineers (steam-ticketed operators) 3,860
2 Heavy equipment operators 3,055
3 Heavy-duty equipment mechanics 985
4 Facility operation and maintenance managers 960
5 Engineering managers 855
6 Petroleum engineers 810
7 Mechanical engineers 575
8 Primary production managers 570
9 Industrial electricians 565
10 Millwrights and machinists 565
The Decade Ahead: Oil Sands Labour Demand Outlook to 2022
The benefits of oil sands investment go well beyond direct employment. There are also thousands of workers providing contract services to oil sands operators such as those employed in construction, oil and gas services and supply chain sectors. Additional jobs are also created or ‘induced’ in the broader economy from the purchases of direct employees and contracted (or indirect) workers. The investment in oil sands development and operations over the next decade is estimated to sustain more than half a million jobs across Canada (direct, indirect and induced). Although the majority of jobs are expected to be in Alberta, more than 20 per cent, or 112,000 will be in other Canadian provinces – such as Ontario, British Columbia, Quebec, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Atlantic Canada.
Funded by the Government of Canada
Part of
OIL SANDS EMPLOYMENT AND HIRING OUTLOOK
The oil sands operations sector must add another 16,000 direct new jobs between 2013 and 2022 to meet growing oil sands production. By 2022, employment is projected to reach 38,300 jobs, with in situ employing half of the workforce.
Aside from job growth, the sector will also face retirements over the coming decade as close to 30 per cent of the current workforce will be eligible to retire during the outlook period. Age-related attrition could create an additional 6,500 job vacancies and when combined with 16,000 new jobs, this results in a hiring requirement of 22,500 jobs over the next decade.
Additionally, if three per cent of the oil sands workforce changes companies and/or leaves the sector during each year of the outlook period, hiring activity increases by another 9,350 positions, bringing total hiring requirements to about 31,850 over the next decade.
73
April 2013
Shortages in some oil sands occupations pose a greater risk than others: Power engineers will have the highest demand over the next decade and make up about 25 per cent of projected hiring requirements for both in situ and upgrading operations.
Shortages of supply chain, logistics, procurement and contract management workers, could create bottlenecks and impact expansion schedules.
Sustainability-related occupations, such as stakeholder relations, environmental, health and safety roles, will experience above-average employment growth.
Retirements amongst managers/ supervisors will lead to a loss of mentoring capacity and have a negative impact on workforce development and productivity.
Human resources professionals will be in high demand as organizational effectiveness and recruiting, retaining and developing human capital continue to be key business concerns.
Retirement of industry-specific workers, such as petroleum engineers and geoscience professionals, are more difficult to address because of the limited labour supply pool.
WORKFORCE RECOMMENDATIONS
Collaborative efforts and innovative solutions, many of them driven by industry, are focused on increasing the pool of qualified workers for the oil sands operations sector. Mitigating the risks associated with labour and skill shortages must be top of mind. Additional strategies or opportunities include:
Managing labour costs - According to a recent study by the Hay Group, oil and gas industry wages are increasing at a rate of 3.9 per cent, which is faster than the Canadian average of 2.9 per cent. Less reliance on recruiting from within the industry may curtail rising labour costs.
Increasing energy literacy - The lack of understanding of the industry, its career opportunities and its value to the Canadian economy continues to be a significant barrier to attracting talent.
Attracting workers beyond Western Canada - Most of the programs designed to increase the pool of qualified workers are implemented in Western Canada, where competition for workers is already fierce. Further, rotational work assignments continue to operate from Western Canadian transportation hubs and are not attractive to potential workers from eastern locations.
Recruiting internationally for some skill sets - Recent changes to federal immigration policy and programs provide an opportunity to target internationally trained workers to fill in-demand jobs. Not all oil sands jobs lend themselves to international recruitment because of the unique nature of work and/or qualifications. However, occupations such as mining engineers, petroleum process engineers and trades have transferable experience and qualifications.
The Petroleum Human Resources Council of Canada is a national, not-for-profit, collaborative forum that addresses human resources issues within the petroleum industry. We accomplish this through providing expert knowledge on petroleum labour market trends and developing strategies, solutions, products and services to address current and future human resource challenges in the oil and gas industry.
The highlights presented here are taken from the Oil Sands Labour Demand Outlook to 2022, part of the Petroleum HR Council’s suite of
labour market information (LMI) products and services. Visit www.petrohrsc.ca for more information.
Funded by the Government of Canada
Part of 74
EAGLE FORD SHALETASK FORCE REPORT
CONVENED AND CHAIRED BY
RAILROAD COMMISSIONER DAVID PORTER
MARCH 2013 75
EAGLE FORD SHALE
76
2INFRASTRUCTURE -ROADS, PIPELINES,HOUSING
The increase in Eagle Ford Shale drilling and production is the source of remarkable economic
has heightened infrastructure challenges for the
77
22CHAPTER 2 INFRASTRUCTURE - ROADS, PIPELINES, HOUSING
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Truck Traffic and Road Quality
Increased drilling and production in the Eagle Ford Shale, compounded by the limited number of existing
study conducted by the Texas Department of Transportation (“TxDOT”), in Webb and La Salle Counties from
1
2 The
Pipeline Placement and Safety
Pipelines are normally the preferred method for transporting
Currently, Texas is home to more than
mand for pipelines in the Eagle Ford Shale, and the Railroad
1 Texas Department of Transportation, Laredo District. (2012, October 23). Eagle Ford Shale: impacts to the transportation system. Presented by Melissa Montemayor at the Eagle Ford Shale stakeholders summit, Laredo, Texas. Available at http://www.tamiu.edu/adminis/vpia/events/documents/102312TxDOTEFSSSumiitPresentationMMontemayor.pdf
2 Center for Community and Business Research, Institute for Economic Development. (2012, May). Economic impact of the Eagle Ford Shale. San Antonio, TX: Th e University of Texas at San Antonio, p. 52. Retrieved from http://ccbr.iedtexas.org/index.php/Download-document/52-Eagle-Ford-Shale-Final-Report-May-2012.html 3 American Association of Pipelines. (2012). Why pipelines? Retrieved from http://www.aopl.org/aboutPipelines/?fa=pipelinesInTh eUS 4 Center for Community and Business Research, Institute for Economic Development. (2012, May). Economic impact of the Eagle Ford Shale. San Antonio, TX: Th e University of Texas at San Antonio, p. 33. Retrieved from http://ccbr.iedtexas.org/index.php/Download-document/52-Eagle-Ford-Shale-Final-Report-May-2012.html
TEXAS PIPELINES
Pipeline CommodityNatural GasCrude OilProductOther
78
23CHAPTER 2 INFRASTRUCTURE - ROADS, PIPELINES, HOUSING
EAGLE FORD SHALE TASK FORCE
Housing
Housing Stock by County in 2000
Housing Stock by County in 2010
5 Ibid, p. 58. 6 Kamal, A. College of Architecture, Center for Urban and Regional Planning Research. (2012, July). Strategic housing analy-sis - sustainable choices for the growing demand for housing in the Eagle Ford Shale area of South Texas. San Antonio, TX: Th e University of Texas at San Antonio, p. 4. Retrieved from http://web.caller.com/2012/pdf/EFS-Housing-Study_-July-2012.pdf.
79
24CHAPTER 2 INFRASTRUCTURE - ROADS, PIPELINES, HOUSING
EAGLE FORD SHALE TASK FORCE
TASK FORCE MEETING
7
Paul Woodard,
Brian Schoenemann,
James Mann,
Brian Frederick,
Greg Brazaitis,
Christian Noll,
Bob Zachariah,
Truck Traffic and Road Quality
Source: Texas Department of Transportation, “Roads for Texas Energy” (December 2012)
7 State Representative Tracy King and State Representative Geanie Morrison attended the meeting.
8 Barton, J. (2011, September 28). Energy sector impacts to Texas’ transportation system. Presented by Brian Schoenemann at the Eagle Ford Shale Task Force meeting on infrastructure, Cuero, Texas.
LOADED TRUCKS PER GAS WELLActivity Number of Loaded TrucksBring well into production 1,184Maintain production (each year) Up to 353Refracturing (every 5 years) 997
80
25CHAPTER 2 INFRASTRUCTURE - ROADS, PIPELINES, HOUSING
EAGLE FORD SHALE TASK FORCE
9 The
10 To further illustrate the breadth of this issue, the TxDOT study
9 Ibid. 10 Texas Department of Transportation, Task Force on Texas’ Energy Sector Roadway Needs. (2012, December). Report to the Texas Transportation Commission, p. 2. Retrieved from http://ft p.dot.state.tx.us/pub/txdot-info/energy/fi nal_report.pdf
discussed:
lo
81
26CHAPTER 2 INFRASTRUCTURE - ROADS, PIPELINES, HOUSING
EAGLE FORD SHALE TASK FORCE
11
12
Some
17
11 Search results at www.rrc.state.tx.us for Karnes County and DeWitt County P-4 drilling applications. 12 Fowler, D., Affl erbach, C., Oliver, J., Kuecker, D., & Pilchiek, J. DeWitt County Commissioners Court, Naismith Engineering, Inc. (NEI). (2012). Road damage cost allocation study - DeWitt County. Retrieved from website: http://web.caller.com/2012/pdf/DeWitt-County-Road-Damage-Cost-Allocation-Study.pdf 13 Ibid. 14 Ibid. 15 Ibid. 16 Ibid. 17 See Tex.Tax Code § 26.04(c) (describing formula for determination of a county’s eff ective tax rate); also see Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts (2012), Truth-in-Taxation Guide 9–12. Retrieved from http://www.window.state.tx.us/taxinfo/proptax/tnt11/pdf/96-312.pdf
82
27CHAPTER 2 INFRASTRUCTURE - ROADS, PIPELINES, HOUSING
EAGLE FORD SHALE TASK FORCE
Road and bridge maintenance budgets doubled
19
20
21
22
18 Fowler, D. (2012). Testimony before the House County Aff airs Committee. Retrieved from http://www.legis.state.tx.us/tlodocs/82R/handouts/C2102012102410001/e5650987-5d8e-4aad-8c33-e7f7f8d225fd.PDF
19 DeWitt County. (2012). Fiscal year (“FY”) 2013 proposed budget - DeWitt County, Texas. Retrieved from http://www.co.DeWitt.tx.us/ips/export/sites/DeWitt/downloads/Fiscal_Year_2013_Proposed_Budget.pdf
20 Total state tax collections in the 2014-2015 biennium are estimated to be $96.9 billion. Of this, the sales and motor vehicle sales taxes comprise $63 billion, and oil and gas production taxes comprise $7.1 billion. Retrieved from http://www.window.state.tx.us/fi nances/Biennial_Revenue_Estimate/bre2014/BRE_2014-15.pdf
21 Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 202001 et seq. (West 2012) (Oil Production Tax).
22 State Comptroller data obtained by open records request (on fi le with Judge Daryl Fowler, DeWitt County Courthouse). Ac-cessed via personal interview with Fowler. (2012, November).
23 Th e legislature created the Economic Stabilization Fund in 1988 by adding Section 49-g to Article III of the Texas Constitu-tion; For other statutory provisions governing the Fund, see Tex. Educ. Code ch. 42; Tex. Tax Code §§ 201.404, 202.353.
24 Fowler, D. (2012). Testimony before the House County Aff airs Committee. Retrieved fromhttp://www.legis.state.tx.us/tlodocs/82R/handouts/C2102012102410001/e5650987-5d8e-4aad-8c33-e7f7f8d225fd.PDF
83
28CHAPTER 2 INFRASTRUCTURE - ROADS, PIPELINES, HOUSING
EAGLE FORD SHALE TASK FORCE
Using the statutory formulas, DeWitt County
27
29
The election, if
25 Notes from November 2012 interview with Judge Daryl Fowler, DeWitt County. (on fi le with the Railroad Commission). 26 Ibid. 27 Ibid. 28 Ibid. 29 Ibid. 30 Ibid. 31 Tex. Tax Code § 26.07 (West 2013) (describing procedures for a rollback election).
32 Notes from November 2012 interview with Judge Daryl Fowler, DeWitt County. (on fi le with the Railroad Commission).
84
29CHAPTER 2 INFRASTRUCTURE - ROADS, PIPELINES, HOUSING
EAGLE FORD SHALE TASK FORCE
Houston Chronicle
The
33 Ibid. 34 Konnath, H. (2012, July 9). Traffi c deaths soar in Eagle Ford Shale areas. Houston Chronicle. Retrieved from http://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/Traffi c-deaths-soar-in-Eagle-Ford-Shale-areas-3691999.php
35 Texas Department of Transporation. (2012). Roads for Texas energy. Retrieved from http://www.roadsfortexasenergy.com/
85
30CHAPTER 2 INFRASTRUCTURE - ROADS, PIPELINES, HOUSING
EAGLE FORD SHALE TASK FORCE
The Railroad Commission
Texas Department of Public Safety
The Wind Coalition
Railroad Commission Regulations.)
Pipelines
36 Ibid.
37 Brazaitis, G. (2011, September 28). Stated at the Eagle Ford Shale Task Force meeting on infrastructure, Cuero, Texas.
preferred method for
transporting oil, natural
gas, petroleum liquids, and
of their transportation
more than 350,000 miles
86
31CHAPTER 2 INFRASTRUCTURE - ROADS, PIPELINES, HOUSING
EAGLE FORD SHALE TASK FORCE
and further hampered by the uncertainty surrounding the recent Texas Supreme Court decision in Texas Rice Land Partners, Ltd. v. Denbury Green Pipeline-Texas, LLC.
quirement articulated by the Texas Supreme Court in Denbury. Common carrier pipelines may include those
Denbury
The Court pointed out that it has long held that “the
38 Texas Rice Land Partners, Ltd. v. Denbury Green Pipeline-Texas, L.L.C., 363 S.W.3d 192 (Tex. 2012) (holding that a pipeline company had to show a “public use” in order to exercise the power of eminent domain and that obtaining the designation of “common carrier” from the Commission was not conclusive, at least under present procedures ).
39 Tex. Nat. Resources Code § 111.019(a).
40 Tex. Nat. Resources Code § 111.001–111.003. 41 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 3.70. (2013) (Railroad Comm’n of Tex., Pipeline Permits Required). 42 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 3.78. (2013) (Railroad Comm’n of Tex., Fees and Financial Security Requirements).
43 Denbury, 363 S.W.3d at 198. 44 Ibid.
87
32CHAPTER 2 INFRASTRUCTURE - ROADS, PIPELINES, HOUSING
EAGLE FORD SHALE TASK FORCE
the Legislature to create a remedy for this issue that is fair and reasonable
mum, and topsoil material should be stockpiled to the side because retaining
Housing
45 (September 28, 2011). Eagle Ford Shale Task Force meeting on infrastructure in Cuero, Texas
public use is often an
essential determination
determination must be
The Railroad Commission
88
33CHAPTER 2 INFRASTRUCTURE - ROADS, PIPELINES, HOUSING
EAGLE FORD SHALE TASK FORCE
production and midstream infrastructure)
46 Texas Department of Housing and Community Aff airs. (2012.) HOME division. Retrieved from http://www.tdhca.state.tx.us/home-division/index.htm.
47 Th e comprehensive study will cost $100,000 in professional and student labor, supply and data costs, and travel for research and presentations. UTSA anticipates that the project will commence in March 2013.
The housing shortage in
the Eagle Ford Shale
region has led to a higher
demand for both
housing, such as hotels,
89
Eagle Ford fatal crashes up 40 percentBy Jennifer Hiller, Staff WriterUpdated 1:40 pm, Saturday, March 16, 2013
KARNES CITY — Fatal traffic wrecks increased 40 percent in the Eagle Ford Shale region last year, with
preliminary data showing what everyone already knew anecdotally: the oil and gas boom has made South
Texas roads more dangerous.
There were 248 traffic fatalities in the region last year, compared with 177 the year before, according
numbers released Friday by the Texas Department of Transportation.
The number of crashes in which people suffered both serious and fatal injuries also rose, but by just 1.9
percent, from 2,673 such crashes in 2011 to 2,723 last year.
Just 9 percent of the crashes involved commercial vehicles.
A sharp uptick in the number of cars and trucks of all sizes, quickly deteriorating road conditions and
issues such as narrow, rural roads without shoulders have played roles in the increases, officials said at a
road safety event Friday in Karnes County, one of the busiest areas for drilling in the Eagle Ford.
“We're on small roads with more traffic,” said Carol Rawson, traffic operations division director with
TxDOT.
Roads that once carried 200 vehicles per day now have 2,400 vehicles traveling them, and many of those
weigh 80,000 pounds or more, Rawson said.
Casey Goetz, a major with the Department of Public Safety's highway patrol, said that in Karnes, La Salle
and Dimmit counties, the number of crashes involving commercial trucks is up 1,000 percent.
“Many drivers let their guard down in rural areas,” he said.
TxDOT, the Department of Public Safety and associations for the trucking and oil and gas industries
launched a roadway safety campaign for the oil patch called “Be Safe. Drive Smart” to try to improve
safety and awareness for both commercial and passenger vehicle drivers.
The safety campaign encourages all drivers to follow basic safety rules: wear seat belts, drive a safe speed,
pass carefully, avoid using cellphones while driving and always stop for red lights and stop signs.
The campaign will be visible on billboards, in newspaper and radio advertising, and on signs at gas
pumps.
TxDOT looked at a 23-county swath of the oil and gas field, from Laredo in the south, where drilling has
boomed in the last few years, to Madisonville in Madison County on the eastern edge, where petroleum
development is just beginning.
About two-thirds of those involved in the wrecks were men.
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And the most dangerous times of day were between 4 and 6 p.m.
Luke Legate of the Texas Oil and Gas Joint Association, which represents nine oil and gas associations in
the state, said the industry has increased driver safety programs and worked to implement everything
from stability controls in trucks to making sure that drivers have adequate rest time.
“More and more we are concentrating on the issue of safety,” Legate said.
John Esparza, president and CEO of the Texas Motor Vehicle Association, said that in 84 percent of the
fatalities involving a passenger vehicle and a commercial truck, it was the passenger vehicle's fault. But he
said all drivers need to take precautions.
“We've just got to keep pace and we're behind the eight ball, frankly,” he said.
When there is a wreck in the Eagle Ford region, it can take emergency responders a longer time to get
there than in a large city.
La Salle County Judge Joel Rodriguez Jr. said there are just three or four EMS responders in his county.
“We are sparsely populated areas and we may not be able to get to you,” Rodriguez said.
Road conditions and road safety have been a huge issue for residents.
Karee Clark lives off of State Highway 123 about 13 miles south of Seguin, and has seen large trucks
passing on hills and passenger cars being run off the road by large trucks.
“This has happened over and over and over again,” she said.
While Clark said she has been happy to see more patrol cars in the area, she's concerned about the quality
of the roadway and trucks running through stop lights.
“I saw one pass a school bus. I couldn't believe it,” she said.
jhiller@express-news.net
Eagle Ford fatal crashes up 40 percent - San Antonio Express-News http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/energy/article/Eagle-Ford-fatal-cras...
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Published April 13, 2013, 12:00 AM
Highway 85 concerns move southTraffic concerns are well known in and around the Oil Patch, but worries about how the Bakken energy boom is affecting roadways have moved across state lines to South Dakota.
By: Bryan Horwath, The Dickinson Press
Traffic concerns in the Oil Patch are well known to the people living and working in western North Dakota.
Worries about how the Bakken energy boom is now affecting or could, in the future, affect roadways have now spread across state lines.
The South Dakota Highway Patrol recently implemented a new squad of several officers based in Belle Fourche, S.D., in response to an increase in trafficcoming and going from the Bakken.
“Several years ago, we began to see an increase in traffic, primarily on (U.S.) Highway 85, both northbound and southbound,” said SDHP Capt. Kevin Karley.“As the traffic has increased, so have our service calls and driving complaints called in. This is a unique deal — we’re starting new.”
The four-person troop consisting of a sergeant and three troopers — which officially went into effect April 1 — has been named the Northern Plains Squadwith the added trooper positions being funded with grant money.
Karley said that in the past several years, northwest South Dakota has seen an increase in traffic of 70 percent overall. In certain areas of the region over thepast 10 years, there has been an increase of up to 230 percent in the number of commercial vehicles alone with most of the added activity coming onHighway 85.
In the Oil Patch, however, the increased traffic in South Dakota might be seen as child’s play.
Increased semi truck oil and water tanker traffic, along with all the other different types of vehicles needed during an energy boom, have cause increasingsafety, congestion and road decay issues in recent years in western North Dakota.
In a recent Forum News Service story, Watford City Mayor Brent Sanford called the number of traffic fatalities so far this year in McKenzie County, where hiscity is located, “appalling.”
Not yet four months into 2013, North Dakota has already had 32 traffic-related deaths.
Traffic gets busier the farther north one travels on Highway 85 in North Dakota, a situation only exacerbated during adverse weather conditions in the coldermonths and during summer road construction projects.
“That entire western portion of North Dakota is active,” said North Dakota Highway Patrol Superintendent Col. James Prochniak. “But our priority right now isthe Oil Patch. We’re stomping out the biggest fire by looking at the issues in areas like Williams County and McKenzie County and those challenges that wehear about every day.”
Calling the issues facing the highway patrol “critical,” Prochniak said his agency is trying to be proactive with traffic safety issues and increased activityacross the board, but added that “it’s difficult when you’re running from call to call and, quite frankly, officers are suffering from burnout.”
The highway patrol has requested funding for 15 additional officers during the current North Dakota legislative session, nine of which would be placed in theOil Patch, said Prochniak.
He added that three officers currently in training are scheduled to be added to the force in McKenzie County by June. Prochniak said the added manpowerwill be a welcome addition.
“With 148 officers total, we’re the smallest highway patrol in the nation,” Prochniak said. “Since I’ve been in this position beginning in 2009, we’ve reversedour trend and now have more officers in the western half of the state than on the eastern side. Is that justified? Absolutely.”
Prochniak said making western North Dakota roads safer and more easily negotiable takes a joint effort from the state’s Legislature and agencies to the oiland motor-carrier industries.
“We’ve really tried to ramp up all those relationships,” Prochniak said. “I firmly believe that, as silly as this sounds, if we weren’t taking the measures we’recurrently taking out there, things would be even worse.”
Whispers have been circulating for years among southwest North Dakota community leaders and residents that oil activity could steadily move south. If thateventually happens, Highway 85 will only become busier.
From Belfield to the South Dakota border and beyond, the highway is still a shell of what roadways are like in the heart of the Oil Patch.
A drive from Belfield to Amidon on Highway 85 still can resemble a scenic stroll down a country highway at times, though construction is set to begin on a12-mile stretch of the road from Belfield south next week.
In a release issued Friday, North Dakota Department of Transportation spokesperson Jamie Olson stated delays should be minimal, though speeds will bereduced to 35 mph in work zones.
“We don’t see things changing in the near future,” Karley said. “We hope adding these troopers can also take some of the pressure off of those local lawenforcement officials who have seen an increase in workload.”
Tags: north dakota, south dakota, energy, oil, bakken, roads, traffic, belfield
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Limon Office Lubbock Office P.O. Box 9 5401 N MLK Blvd., Unit 395 Limon, CO 80828 Lubbock, TX 79403 P: 303.586.1787 P: 806.775.2338 F: 719.775.9073 Fax: 806.775.3981
www.portstoplains.com
April 18, 2013 U.S. Department of State Attn: Genevieve Walker, NEPA Coordinator 2201 C Street NW, Room 2726 Washington, D.C. 20520
Dear Ms. Walker:
We are writing to strongly support TransCanada's proposed Keystone XL pipeline and urge you to swiftly
finalize the draft SEIS. Keystone XL will be critical to improving American energy security and boosting
our economy, and I strongly encourage its expeditious approval.
Our communities are members of the Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance, a grassroots coalition of cities, counties, businesses, economic development organizations and chambers of commerce from a ten‐state, 2,300 mile long transportation and economic development corridor that stretch from Texas to Alberta, Canada.
Keystone XL has undergone one of the most thorough environmental assessments ever conducted. In
this latest environmental review, the State Department again concludes that Keystone XL will not
significantly affect the environment. With over 57 additional mitigation measures to be undertaken by
TransCanada, Keystone XL is much safer, more efficient, and more reliable than other modes of crude oil
transport examined by the State Department.
Opponents have argued that Keystone XL will increase greenhouse gas emissions through increased oil
sands production. However the draft SEIS notes that not building the pipeline would not significantly
limit oil sands development or U.S. consumption of heavy oil. If the pipeline is not completed, that oil
would simply be transported by rail or other greenhouse gas generating means rather than through a
pipeline.
Keystone XL will provide tremendous economic benefits for our country, our region in particular. As the
draft SEIS outlines, the project will support over 42,100 jobs during the construction phase and will
generate over $5 billion in economic activity, including $2.05 billion in worker salaries. For local
governments along the pipeline corridor, $65 million in tax revenue will help fund necessary
Support for Findings of the Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement for the Keystone XL Pipeline
April 18, 2013 Page 2
Limon Office Lubbock Office P.O. Box 9 5401 N MLK Blvd., Unit 395 Limon, CO 80828 Lubbock, TX 79403 P: 303.586.1787 P: 806.775.2338 F: 719.775.9073 Fax: 806.775.3981
www.portstoplains.com
infrastructure projects, education, and medical services. Furthermore the development of Alberta’s oil
sands will have a significant economic impact on the U.S. For every two jobs created in the oil sands,
one is created in the United States, as our number one trading partner relies heavily on American‐made
equipment and expertise. It will also provide improved access to domestic oil supplies from the Bakken
Formation in North Dakota and Montana.
Keystone XL will also allow America to end its dependence on oil from the Middle East and Venezuela by
improving access to North American supplies. Relying upon regimes that are in many cases unstable and
unfriendly to the United States is simply bad energy and national security policy. We have seen the
shocks to our economy from oil price spikes caused by turmoil in these regions. It is much preferable to
develop stable, secure domestic and Canadian sources.
As leaders from the region that the Keystone XL pipeline will traverse, we applaud the thoroughness of
the approval process. The State Department draft EIS and the Nebraska Department of Environmental
Quality Supplemental EIS both find no significant environmental concerns that should prevent the
construction of this valuable project. We also know that TransCanada will construct the Keystone XL
with industry best practices that will meet or exceed all existing pipeline regulatory standards.
The Keystone XL pipeline is clearly in the nation’s interest and will be a valuable tool in strengthening
our national security and energy security. Therefore, we respectfully request that upon completion of
this review period, the Department of States move expeditiously to approve the pipeline and grant
TransCanada the Presidential Permit it needs to proceed.
Sincerely,
Brad Bekkedahl
Ports‐to‐Plains Board / City Commissioner
Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance / City of Willison
Williston, ND 58801
John Bertsch
Chair, Board of Directors
Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance
Plainview, TX 79403
Steve Burgess
Ports‐to‐Plains Board
Lincoln County
Limon, CO 80828
Sid Cauthorn
Ports‐to‐Plains Board Member / President/CEO
The Bank & Trust
Del Rio, TX 78841
Chris Cornell
Advisory Board / Business Development
Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance / Reece Albert, Inc.
San Angelo, TX 76903
Jacque Daly
Executive Assistant
Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance
Lubbock, TX 79407
Lane Danielzuk
Chair, Board of Directors
Heartland Expressway Association
Gering, NE 69341
Richard David
Ports‐to‐Plains Board / President/CEO
Amarillo EDC
Amarillo, TX 79101
John Friess
Ports‐to‐Plains Board Member
Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance
Sonora, TX 76950
Tim Garwood
Board Member
Heartland Expressway Association
Alliance, NE 69301
Beverly Haggard
Ports‐to‐Plains Board / City Council
City of Lamar
Lamar , CO 81052
Travis Hiner
Board Member
Heartland Expressway Association
Scottsbluff, NE 69361
Duffy Hinkle
Vice President of Membership & Marketing
Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance
Lubbock, TX 79403
Marlin Johnson
Communications Director
Heartland Expressway Association
Scottsbluff, NE 69361
Joe Kiely
Vice President of Operations
Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance
Limon, CO 80828
Cal Klewin
Executive Director
Theodore Roosevelt Expressway
Bowman, ND 58623
Todd McKee
Ports‐to‐Plains Board Treasurer / President & Chief Lending Officer
Peoples Bank
Lubbock, TX 79424
Penny Peryatel
Ports‐to‐Plains Board Member / President
Northern New Mexico Gas
Raton, NM 87740
Michael Reeves
President
Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance
Lubbock, TX 79403
Gaynelle Riffe
Ports‐to‐Plains Board Member / Co‐Owner
Stratford Grain Company
Stratford, TX 79084
Cathy Shull
Ports‐to‐Plains Board
Ports‐to‐Plains Alliance
Fort Morgan, CO 80701
David Drovdal
State Representative
North Dakota District #39
Arnegard, ND 58835
Mike Fladeland
Domestic Energy Advocate
Bismark, ND 58501
Nancy Johnson
Representative District #37
Dickinson, ND 58601
Laura Allen
County Judge
Val Verde County
Del Rio, TX 78840
Mark J. Barr
County Judge
Howard County
Big Spring, TX 70720
Justin Bennett
Former County Commissioner
Union County
Clayton, NM 88415
Lynn Brackel
County Commissioner
Bowman County
Bowman, ND 58623
Mike Brown
County Judge
Tom Green County
San Angelo, TX 76903
Terri Beth Carter
County Judge
Sherman County
Stratford, TX 79084
Bill Coleman
County Judge
Hale County
Plainview, TX 79072
W.B. Crooker
Former County Commissioner
Howard County
Big Spring, TX 79720
Carla Garner
County Judge
Sutton County
Sonora, TX 76950
Walter Hall
County Commissioner
Union County
Clayton, NM 88415
Tom Head
County Judge
Lubbock County
Lubbock, TX 79401
Beth Innis
Auditor
Williams County
Williston, ND 58802
Greg King
County Commissioner
Lincoln County
Limon, CO 80828
Sandy McCarthy
County Commissioner
Box Butte County
Alliance, NE 69301
Bill Nyby
County Commissioner
Sheridan County
Plentywood, MT 59254
Bob Paintin
County Comissioner
Cheyenne County
Kit Carson, CO 80825
Milton Pax
County Commissioner
Moore County
Dumas, TX 79029
Rowdy Rhoades
County Judge
Moore County
Dumas, TX 79029
Van Robertson
County Commissioner
Union County
Clayton, NM 88415
Kurt C. Schlegel
County Commissioner
Elbert County
Kiowa , CO 80117
Linda Svihovec
Auditor
McKenzie County
Watford City, ND 58854
Gary McDonald
Commissioner
Roosevelt County Commission
Wolf Point, MT 59201
Duane Nygaard
Commissioner
Roosevelt County Commission
Wolf Point, MT 59201
Jim Shanks
Commissioner
Roosevelt County Commission
Wolf Point, MT 59201
Gene Veeder
Commissioner
McKenzie County Commission
Watford City, ND 58854
Dora Alcala
Former Mayor
City of Del Rio
Del Rio, TX 78840
Paul Alexander
City Council
City of San Angelo
San Angelo, TX 76904
Jim Andersen
Board of Trustees
Town of Limon
Limon, CO 80828
Emsley Baker
Mayor
City of New Deal
New Deal, TX 79350
John Baker
Mayor
City of Tahoka
Tahoka, TX 79373
Marilyn Baxter
Mayor
Town of Eads
Eads, CO 81036
Del Beattie
Board of Trustees
Town of Limon
Limon, CO 80828
Coby Beckner
City Commissioner
Town of Clayton
Clayton, NM 88415
Ronald D. Carey
Mayor
City of Boise City
Boise City, OK 73933
Eugene Carter
Mayor
City of Hale Center
Hale Center, TX 79041
Jack Chosvig
Mayor
Town of Clayton
Clayton, NM 88415
Julie Coonts
Mayor
Town of Limon
Limon, CO 80828
Tommy Duncan
Mayor
City of Big Spring
Big Spring, TX 70720
Wendell Dunlap
Mayor
City of Plainview
Plainview, TX 79072
Douglas W. Ellison
Mayor
City of Medora
Medora, ND 58645
Charlotte Farmer
City Council
City of San Angelo
San Angelo, TX 76903
Paul Harpole
Mayor
City of Amarillo
Amarillo, TX 79101
Linda Hawthorne
Board of Trustees
Town of Limon
Limon, CO 80828
Jack Hendricks
Board of Trustees
Town of Limon
Limon, CO 80828
Kendall Hirschfeld
City Council
City of San Angelo
San Angelo, TX 76903
Lyn James
President
Bowman City Commission
Bowman, ND 58623
Ross W. James
Mayor
City of Tulia
Tulia, TX 79088
Mike Kelly
Board of Trustees
Town of Limon
Limon, CO 80828
Tom Martin
Former Mayor
City of Lubbock
Lubbock, TX 79424
Scott Martinez
Mayor
City of O'Donnell
O'Donnell, TX 79351
Ed Mayo
Mayor
City of Gering
Gering, NE 69341
Randy Meininger
Mayor
City of Scottsbluff
Scottsbluff, NE 69361
Dwain Morrison
City Council
City of San Angelo
San Angelo, TX 76904
Alvin New
Mayor
City of San Angelo
San Angelo, TX 76904
Dave Nix
Mayor
City of Lamesa
Lamesa, TX 79331
Glen Robertson
Mayor
City of Lubbock
Lubbock, TX 79457
Brent Sanford
Mayor
Watford City
Watford City, ND 58854
Pat Sims
Mayor
City of Dumas
Dumas, TX 79029
Roger J. Stagner
Mayor
City of Lamar
Lamar , CO 81052
Darrell Stephens
Mayor
City of Abernathy
Abernathy, TX 79311
Patricia Vice
Mayor
City of Genoa
Genoa, CO 80818
Trevor Williams
Board of Trustees
Town of Limon
Limon, CO 80828
Bob Churchwell
Administrator
City of Burlington
Burlington, CO 80807
Michael Cypert
City Manager
City of Abernathy
Abernathy, TX 79311
Michael Dane
Assistant City Manager
City of San Angelo
San Angelo, TX 76902
Joshua Jones
City Manager
City of Hale Center
Hale Center, TX 79041
Pete Kampfer
City Manager
City of Raton
Raton, NM 87740
Aaron M. Smith
City Manager/Economic Development Director
City of Tulia
Tulia, TX 79088
Dave Stone
Town Manager
Town of Limon
Limon, CO 80828
Fred Vera
City Manager
City of Lamesa
Lamesa, TX 79331
Jerry Webster
City Administrator
City of Tahoka
Tahoka, TX 79373
Ashley Alderson
Executive Director
Bowman County Development Corporation
Bowman, ND 58623
Christine Allen
Director of Foreign Trade Zone
Lubbock Economic Development Alliance
Lubbock, TX 79401
Alan Anderson
Commissioner
ND Dept. of Commerce
Bismarck, ND 58501
Gaylon Baker
Executive Director
Stark Development Corporation
Dickinson, ND 58601
Bart Bradford
Housing Development
Plentywood, MT 59254
Tonya Brown
President
Sonora EDC
Sonora, TX 76950
Kevin Carter
Executive Director
Plainview Hale County Industrial Foundation
Plainview, TX 79072
Tom Clark
Executive Director
Metro Denver EDC
Denver, CO 80202
Deb Cottier
Director
Nebraska Northwest Development Corp
Chadron, NE 69337
Kari Cutting
Vice President
North Dakota Petroleum Council
Bismarck, ND 58502
William Davis
President
Eagle Pass Chamber of Commerce
Eagle Pass, TX 78853
Bob Donnell
Executive Director
Roswell‐Chaves County EDC
Roswell, NM 88202
Mike Duran
Executive Director
Lamesa EDC
Lamesa, TX 79331
Blaise Emerson
Executive Director
Black Hills Local Council of Local Governments
Rapid City, SD 57701
Blaise Emerson
Executive Director
Black Hills Community Economic Development
Rapid City, SD 57701
Preston Gibson
Chairman
Economic Development Council of Colorado
Denver, CO 80236
Bonnie Helm
Director
McHenry County JDA
Towner, ND 58788
Chelsie Herian
Executive Director
Box Butte Development Corporation
Alliance, NE 69301
Chuck Karpf
Executive Director
Panhandle Area Development District
Gering, NE 69341
Shawn Kirkpatrick
Executive Director
Levelland EDC
Levelland, TX 79336
Frank H. Larson
President
Del Rio Area Development
Del Rio, TX 78842
Bill Lavers
Executive Director
Development Corporation of Snyder
Snyder, TX 79549
Arleene Loyd
Director of Business Retention and Expansion
Odessa Economic Development
Odessa, TX 79761
Kristen Moudy
Business Development Specialist
Canadian‐Hemphill County EDC
Canadian, TX 79014
Lisa Nolder
Executive Director
Prowers County Development Inc.
Lamar , CO 81052
North Dakota Association of Oil and Gas Producing Counties
Bismarck, ND 58501
John Osborne
President
Lubbock Economic Development Alliance
Lubbock, TX 79401
John Phillips
President
Economic Development of North Dakota
Beulah, ND 58523
Dan Redd
CEO
Borger Economic Development Corp.
Borger, TX 79008
Thomas C. Rolfstad
Director
Williston Economic Development
Williston, ND 58802
Mike Running
Executive Director
Dumas EDC
Dumas, TX 79029
Stephanie Salazar
President & CEO
Broomfield Economic Development Corp.
Broomfield, CO 80021
Bob Sivertsen
President
Highway 2 Association
Havre, MT 59501
Benjamin Snow
President
Rapid City Economic Development Partnership
Rapid City, SD 57701
Jack Taylor
Contract Director
SPIRIT 54
Liberal, KS 67901
Jack Taylor
Executive Director
S.P.I.R.I.T.
Liberal, KS 67905
Terri Thiel
Executive Director
Dickinson Convention & Visitors Bureau
Dickinson, ND 58601
Harvey T. Thompson
SPIRIT 54
Liberal, KS 67901
Marilyn Thompson
Board Member
SPIRIT 54
Liberal, KS 67901
Lorie Vincent
Executive Director
The High Ground of Texas
Stratford, TX 79084
Terry Wegman
Executive Director
Big Spring EDC
Big Spring, TX 79720
Pamela Welch
Executive Director
Midland Development Corporation
Midland, TX 79701
Shawn Wenko
Assistant Director
Williston Economic Development
Williston, ND 58801
John Zimmerman
Board Member
SPIRIT 54
Hutchinson, KS 67504
Sandra Adams
President
Lamesa Chamber of Commerce
Lamesa, TX 79331
Al Arreola
Executive Director
Del Rio Chamber of Commerce
Del Rio, TX 78840
Sam Cartwright
President/CEO
Moore County Chamber of Commerce
Dumas, TX 79029
Gilberto Cisneros
President/CEO
Chamber of the Americas
Denver, CO 80215
Del Rio Hispanic Chamber of Commerce
Del Rio, TX 78840
Kelvin Hullet
President
Bismarck‐Mandan Chamber
Bismarck, ND 58501
Terry L. Johnson
President
Belfield Area Chamber of Commerce
Belfield, ND 58622
Eddie McBride
President
Lubbock Chamber of Commerce
Lubbock, TX 79401
Gary Molberg
President/CEO
Amarillo Chamber of Commerce
Amarillo, TX 79101
Linda Morris
Executive Director
Plainview Chamber of Commerce
Plainview, TX 79072
Phil Neighbors
President/CEO
San Angelo Chamber of Commerce
San Angelo, TX 76903
Kristine Olsen
President
Dalhart Area Chamber of Commerce
Dalhart, TX 79022
Debbye Valverde
Executive Director
Big Spring Area Chamber of Commerce
Dumas, TX 79720
Greater North Dakota Chamber
Bismarck, ND 58502
Jack Albert
CEO
Reece Albert, Inc.
San Angelo, TX 76903
Roger Albert
President and CFO
Reece Albert, Inc.
San Angelo, TX 76903
David Benth
President
Riverside Rentals
Willison, ND 58801
Shirley Bentrup
SJB Consulting
Dickinson, ND 58602
Anne Boothe
Economic Development Professional
Triangle Communications
Malta, MT 59538
Shirley Brentrup
Rural Development Consultant
SJB Consulting
Dickinson, ND 58601
Joe Bunnell
Owner ‐ Northern Hills Recycling Center
Member of Belle Foursche Chamber of Commerce
Belle Fourche, SD 57717
Linda Byerly
Vice President
Byerly Computer Services
Willison, ND 58801
Rex Byerly
President
Byerly Computer Services
Willison, ND 58801
Roger Cable
Director of Business Development
Oftedal Construction, Inc
Casper, WY 82604
Ken Callahan
Energy Services Manager
Montana Dakota Utilities
Williston, ND 58801
Fritz Carlan
Manager ‐ Grandview Meats
Member of Belle Foursche Chamber of Commerce
Belle Fourche, SD 57717
Fritz Carlan
Owner ‐ Badlands Security, LLC
Member of Belle Foursche Chamber of Commerce
Belle Fourche, SD 57717
Randy Gaebe
GDI
Bowman , ND 58623
Tracey Gallagher
Owner ‐ Scissors
Member of Belle Foursche Chamber of Commerce
Belle Fourche, SD 57717
Jon Geyerman
President
NJ&A, Inc.
Willison, ND 58801
Elizabeth Grindstaff
Manager of Marketing & Sales
Texas‐Pacifico Railroad
San Angelo, TX 76904
Russ Hanson
Executive Vice President
AGC of North Dakota
Bismarck, ND 58502
David Hettler
CPA
Ehler & Hettler
Lubbock, TX 79423
Dixon Hitch
President
Hitch Aviation, Inc.
Malta, MT 59538
Thom Hood
Member of Belle Foursche Chamber of Commerce
Belle Fourche, SD 57717
Bruce Houle
President
Culberson State Agency, Inc.
Culberson, MT 59218
Melana Howe
CEO
Howe Enterprises
Hettinger, ND 58639
Max Howorth
Former Executive
Shell Oil Company
Sonora, TX 76950
Glen M. Jameson
Reservoir and Evaluations Engineer
Consultant
Denver, CO 80227
Craig Knapp
Owner ‐ Dairy Queen
Member of Belle Foursche Chamber of Commerce
Belle Fourche, SD 57717
Jo Kralicek
Sales Executive
Bakken Publications
Bismarck, ND 58501
Mike McBain
President
Laredo Cotton Transfer, Inc.
Laredo, TX 78040
Diane Paulson
Owner
Paulson Premium Seed
Bowman , ND 58623
Les Paulson
Owner
Paulson Premium Seed
Bowman , ND 58623
Michael Queen
VP Corporate Safety and Health
Universalpegasus International
Houston, TX 77081
Sonia Shannon
Assistance Secretary of the Corporation
Central 57 Importers & Exporters
Eagle Pass, TX 78852
Ross Simser
President
Phillips County Insurance
Malta, MT 59538
Steve Stenehjem
CEO
First International Bank & Trust
Watford City, ND 58854
Blaine Steven
Owner
Windshield Doctor
Willison, ND 58801
Jake Stuart
Agent
Phillips County Insurance
Malta, MT 59538
Vicky Theil
Mark Hill & Associates
Member of Belle Foursche Chamber of Commerce
Belle Fourche, SD 57717
Bob Wiffler
Private Business
Bowman, ND 58602
Nancy Wiffler
Private Business
Bowman, ND 57523
Eric Wilke
President
Todd's Technology Store, Inc.
Malta, MT 59538
Randy Younger
President
First National Bank of Hugo/Limon
Limon, CO 80828
Paul Armes
President
Wayland Baptist University
Plainview, TX 79072
Donna Davis
Associate Professor of Marketing
Rawls College of Business ‐ Texas Tech University
Lubbock, TX 79409
Greg Fulton
President
Colorado Motor Carriers Association
Denver, CO 80216
H. David Jones
Transportation Planning Director
Lubbock Metropolitan Planning Organization
Lubbock, TX 79401
Brian Kimberly
Director of Business Development
Reese Technology Center
Lubbock, TX 79413
John King
Vice President for University Relations
Lubbock Christian University
Lubbock, TX 79407
Bill Miller
Executive Director
Reese Technology Center
Lubbock, TX 79413
Tim Pierce
Executive Director
South Plains Association of Governments
Lubbock, TX 79452
Deanette Piesik
CEO‐TrainND
Williston State College
Williston, ND 58801
Todd Banks
Executive Director
Sherwood Park & District Chamber of Commerce
Sherwood Park, AB T8B1M6
Darren Boras
President
Lethbridge Chamber of Commerce
Lethbridge, AB T1J2E1
Lynn Carolei
President
St. Albert & District Chamber of Commerce
St. Albert, AB T8N6L5
Lindsay Dodd
Chair
Edmonton Chamber of Commerce
Edmonton, AB T5J1P7
John Gilchrist
President
Stony Plain & District Chamber of Commerce
Stony Plain, AB T7Z1V5
Robin Grayston
President
Spruce Grove & District Chamber of Commerce
Spruce Grove, AB T7X3B4
Cindy Guy
President
Leduc Chamber of Commerce
Leduc, AB T9E7K9
Brenda Johnson
Spruce Grove & District Chamber of Commerce
Spruce Grove, AB T7X3B4
Yousra Jomha
President
High River & District Chamber of Commerce
High River, AB T1V1M9
Ray Knudsen
Senior Engineer/Treasurer/Director
LeanOptions Consulting
Regina, SK S4S6J9
Ken Kobly
President & CEO
Alberta Chambers of Commerce
Edmonton, AB T5J2Z2
Gayle Langford
President
Red Deer Chamber of Commerce
Red Deer, AB T4N5Y6
Ed Mah
Past President
Drumheller & District Chamber of Commerce
Drumheller, AB T0J0Y0
Medicine Hat Chamber of Commerce
Medicine Hat, AB T1A2S7
Len Mitzel
Former Member of Legislative Assembly for Alberta
Eastern Alberta Trade Corridor
Etzikom, AB T0K0W0
Tanya Oliver
Executive Director
Bonnyville & District Chamber of Commerce
Bonnyville, AB T9N2G7
Gord Olson
President
High Prairie and Area Chamber of Commerce
High Prairie, AB T0G1E0
Dan Pearcy
CEO
Grande Prairie & District Chamber of Commerce
Grande Prairie, AB T8V7X9
Lutz Perschon
CAO
Cypress County
Dunmore, AB T1B0K3
Nick Sanders
President
Fort McMurray Chamber of Commerce
Fort McMurray, AB T9H2J9
Dwayne Stoesz
President
Sylvan Lake Chamber of Commerce
Sylvan Lake, AB T4S1S6
Jackie Stratton
President
Rimbey & District Chamber of Commerce
Rimbey, AB T0C2J0
Pat Tenney
Executive Director
Lloydminster Chamber of Commerce
Lloydminster, AB T9V0Y8
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