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OIL AND GAS
Erosion leaves pit under production platform in the North Sea
by Daniel J. Graeber
Stavanger, Norway (UPI) May 21, 2013


Planned work at Montreal refinery for gasoline and other products completed
Montreal (UPI) May 21, 2013 - Canadian company Suncor Energy said the planned maintenance at its refinery in Montreal was completed within the expected time frame.

Suncor said it completed the overhaul. It put roughly 900 people to work on the planned maintenance when it began April 21.

"Suncor's planned maintenance program is designed to support safe, reliable operations," the company said Tuesday. "Production impact has been factored into Suncor's annual guidance."

Suncor's facility in Montreal processes oil into gasoline, heavy fuel oil, and other petroleum products.

Suncor operates three refineries in Canada and one in the United States with a combined processing capacity of 462,000 bpd.

In early April, the company said it plans to spend about eight weeks overhauling its oil sands refinery in Edmonton, Alberta. That refinery is designed to process 142,000 barrels of oil sands per day into light oils.

Norwegian energy company Statoil said it will keep operations at the platform tied to its giant Snorre field in the North Sea closed to investigate subsea erosion.

Statoil confirmed Tuesday production from the Snorre B platform closed Saturday after the "discovery of an abnormal erosion of mass under the template [of the platform]."

Snorre is Norway's fourth-largest field. The Snorre B platform started production in 2001.

The company said the area under the platform is under constant surveillance. There have been no indications of any hydrocarbons leaking since the anomaly was discovered.

"The pit is stable and is being monitored continuously," Bente Aleksandersen, a senior vice president for regional operations, said in a statement. "The most important thing for us now is to clarify what caused the pit to form, and a number of explanations are being examined."

The company said it pulled more than 30 people from the platform as a security precaution. Statoil said the platform will remain shut down while investigations continue in coordination with Norway's petroleum safety authority.

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