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OIL AND GAS
Small British company sees big potential in shale oil and gas
by Daniel J. Graeber
London (UPI) Jun 3, 2013


Fatality at Alberta oil sands site is the fourth this year for Suncor
Calgary, Alberta (UPI) Jun 3, 2013 - A construction group said an employee died as a result of injuries suffered at an oil sands site in Canada operated by energy company Suncor.

North American Construction Group said an employee working at a Suncor Energy site was injured Monday while performing maintenance work and died after his transport to an area hospital. The construction group said it was working with authorities to determine the cause of the incident.

"We are devastated by this news and deeply saddened by the terrible and unexpected loss of our co-worker and friend," Martin Ferron, president and chief executive officer of North American Construction Group, said in a statement.

The construction company said Monday the name and age of the employee are not being released.

There was no public statement on the incident from Suncor. Representatives from the Alberta Occupational Health and Safety organization confirmed the fatality and are working on their investigation at the site.

The fatality is the fourth such incident this year at the Suncor site.

A small energy company, Union Jack Oil, said there may be as much as 5.4 billion barrels of oil and 2.7 trillion cubic feet of gas in British shale deposits.

Union Jack holds a 10 percent stake in a license area in the central United Kingdom dubbed PEDL201. The company said in a statement Monday an independent site assessment indicates the potential in shale oil and gas in the area is enormous.

The company said that, even if recovery rates are on the low end of what's possible, the volume of oil and gas taken from the region could have a "significant commercial value."

Union Jack cautioned there's no certainly that any portion of the oil and gas thought to exist in the license area will be cost-effective to produce.

The company says it plans to drill two conventional exploration wells into the reserve area by July.

The British government says shale resources could ensure energy security for a country where imports will account for more than half of the country's demands in the coming decades.

Shale exploration is in its infancy in the country. Cuadrilla Resources, a British shale pioneer, has been the target of frequent protests from activists concerned about the environmental impacts of shale development.

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