Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting
The Alberta Energy Regulator approved this directive on March 12, 2018.
Contents
1 Introduction ............................................................................................................................................. 5
1.1 Purpose of This Directive .............................................................................................................. 5
1.2 What’s New in This Edition ........................................................................................................... 5
1.3 Flaring, Incineration, and Venting Management Hierarchy and Framework ................................ 5
1.4 Access to Production Flaring, Incineration, and Venting Data ..................................................... 7
1.5 AER Requirements ....................................................................................................................... 8
1.6 Notification Through the Designated Information Submission System ........................................ 8
2 Solution Gas Management (Crude Oil / Bitumen Battery Flaring, Incineration, and Venting) ............... 9
2.1 Solution Gas Flaring Reduction Targets ....................................................................................... 9
2.2 Solution Gas Venting Reduction ................................................................................................... 9
2.3 Solution Gas Flaring and Venting Decision Tree........................................................................ 10
2.4 Conservation at Crude Bitumen Batteries .................................................................................. 10
2.5 Conservation at Conventional Crude Oil Batteries ..................................................................... 11
2.6 General Conservation Requirements at all Condensate Producing Sites and Crude Oil and
Crude Bitumen Batteries............................................................................................................. 11
2.7 Clustering .................................................................................................................................... 12
2.8 Power Generation Using Otherwise-Flared/Vented Gas ............................................................ 13
2.9 Economic Evaluation of Gas Conservation ................................................................................ 14
2.9.1 Economic Evaluation Criteria ......................................................................................... 14
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018) 1
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2 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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Appendices
1 References and Contacts Cited............................................................................................................ 79
2 Definitions of Terms as used in Directive 060 ...................................................................................... 81
3 Abbreviations ........................................................................................................................................ 85
4 Background to Directive 060 ................................................................................................................ 86
5 Information for Permit Request to Flare or Incinerate in Exceedance of Flared or Incinerated
3 3
Volume Allowance Threshold (600, 400, or 200 10 m Exceedance)................................................ 88
6 Sour Gas Flaring/Incineration Data Summary Report ......................................................................... 90
7 Air Quality Management Plans for Temporary SO2 Emissions ............................................................ 91
8 Screening Dispersion Modelling Using AER Spreadsheet ................................................................... 93
9 Resident Flaring/Venting/Incinerating Notification Sample Form ......................................................... 96
10 Agreement on Zero Flaring and Venting Agreement............................................................................ 97
11 Request to Extinguish Sour Gas Flare Pilots ....................................................................................... 98
Figures
1 Solution gas flaring/venting management framework ............................................................................ 7
2 Solution gas flaring/venting decision tree ............................................................................................. 10
3 Temporary flaring and incineration decision tree ................................................................................. 23
4 Temporary flaring/incineration permit process ..................................................................................... 27
5 Facility flaring, incinerating, and venting decision tree ......................................................................... 39
6 Facility flaring, incinerating, and venting decision tree ......................................................................... 43
7 Pipeline flaring, incinerating, and venting decision tree ....................................................................... 48
8 Comprehensive management of the nonroutine flaring of sour gas .................................................... 67
9 Flare management strategy flowchart .................................................................................................. 70
10 Peace River area .................................................................................................................................. 75
Tables
1 Limitations and notification requirements for nonroutine flaring, incinerating, and venting during
solution gas conserving facility outage ................................................................................................. 19
2 Temporary flaring, venting, and incineration notification requirements ................................................ 34
3 Major flaring event definition................................................................................................................. 44
4 Cumulative facility or lease site benzene emission limits ..................................................................... 73
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1 Introduction
Most of these requirements have been developed in consultation with the Clean Air Strategic
Alliance (CASA) to eliminate or reduce the potential and observed impacts of these activities and
to ensure that public safety concerns and environmental impacts are addressed before beginning to
flare, incinerate, or vent. Directive 060 requirements are also aligned to ensure compliance with
Alberta Environment and Parks (AEP) Alberta Ambient Air Quality Objectives and Guidelines
(AAAQO).
Note: Appendices have been included to further the understanding of Directive 060 requirements.
See appendix 1 for a list of references and contacts, appendix 2 for definitions of terms, and
appendix 3 for abbreviations.
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Two multistakeholder teams from CASA have made recommendations for flaring, incineration, and
venting for the upstream petroleum industry, and the AER has based this directive on those
recommendations (see appendix 4 for background on Directive 060).
In particular, the AER has adopted CASA’s objective hierarchy and its framework for managing
routine solution gas flares (see figure 1) and has extended its application of the hierarchy to include
flaring, incineration, and venting of gas in general. 1
In accordance with the objective hierarchy, licensees, operators, and approval holders must evaluate
the following three options:
1
See CASA’s website www.casahome.org.
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The AER also makes flaring, incineration, and venting information available to licensees, operators,
and approval holders in order to facilitate solution gas conservation and clustering opportunities, as
described in section 2.13.
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For questions on using FIS, contact the FIS administrator by email at FIS.Administrator@aer.ca or
by telephone at 403-297-4845.
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2 Solution Gas Management (Crude Oil / Bitumen Battery Flaring, Incineration, and
Venting)
The AER’s goal is to have the upstream petroleum industry continue to reduce the volume of
solution gas routinely flared, incinerated, and vented. The AER expects that the upstream petroleum
industry will pursue continuous improvement in reducing solution gas flaring, incineration, and
venting in Alberta, and, in consultation with stakeholders, will monitor progress to determine the
need for additional requirements to facilitate increased solution gas conservation.
For solution gas management and disposition reporting, incinerated gas must be reported as flared.
Conservation is defined as the recovery of solution gas for use as fuel for production facilities, for
other useful purposes (e.g., power generation), for sale, or for beneficial injection into an oil or gas
pool (e.g., pressure maintenance, enhanced oil recovery). Conservation opportunities are evaluated
as economic or uneconomic based on the criteria listed in section 2.9.
1) The Alberta solution gas flaring limit is 670 million cubic metres (106 m3) per year (50 per cent
of the revised 1996 baseline of 1340 106 m3/year).
2) If solution gas flaring exceeds the 670 106 m3 limit in any year, the AER will impose reductions
that will stipulate maximum solution gas flaring limits for individual operating sites based on
analysis of the most current annual data so as to reduce flaring to less than 670 106 m3/year. For
example, solution gas flaring could be limited to a maximum of 500 thousand (103) m3/year at
any one site.
In 2005, 59 per cent less solution gas was vented than in 2000. The CASA Flaring and Venting
Project Team considered solution gas venting in the report, Gas Flaring and Venting in Alberta:
Report and Recommendations for the Upstream Petroleum Industry by the Flaring/Venting Project
Team, which it released in 2004. 2 The AER accepts these recommendations and has incorporated
them into Directive 060.
2
This and other reports from this team are available on CASA’s website, www.casahome.org.
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1) The licensee or operator of a multiwell bitumen site must build solution gas conservation lines
to one common point on the lease as part of initial construction.
2) For new bitumen wells, the test period (excluding completion and cleanup operations) limit is
either six months or until combined flared and vented volumes at the site exceed a rolling
average of 900 m3/day for any consecutive three-month period, whichever is less.
a) As soon as testing shows that combined flaring and venting volumes at the site exceed
900 m3/day, conservation must be evaluated as described in section 2.9. Volumes are
calculated based on a three-month rolling average.
b) If conservation is required, it must occur as quickly as possible and must not extend for
more than six months after flow rate determination. Shorter tie-in times must be pursued
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wherever possible. Wells must be shut in if the required conservation is not operational
within the timelines noted above.
3) If testing shows that combined flaring and venting volumes at the site do not exceed
900 m3/day, economic evaluation of solution gas conservation is not required and the well may
proceed to produce without conserving the solution gas. The AER, however, still recommends
economic evaluation of gas conservation, even when volumes are less than 900 m3/day.
In general, for new oil wells the solution gas flaring during the test period must not extend beyond
the time required to obtain data for the economic evaluation and for sizing conservation equipment.
Any flaring for testing, cleanup, and completions must not exceed 72 hours (see section 3.2 for
further details and extensions to time limits).
1) Upon completion of the testing period, if testing shows that combined flaring and venting
volumes at the site will exceed 900 m3/day, solution gas conservation must be evaluated as
described in section 2.9. The wells must be shut in at the end of the test period and remain shut
in pending the results of the solution gas conservation evaluation process.
a) If the results of the solution gas conservation evaluation indicate that conservation is
required, the wells must remain shut in until conservation is implemented.
b) If the results of the solution gas conservation evaluation indicate that conservation is not
required and the AER has not directed that conservation be implemented, the wells may
proceed to produce without conserving the solution gas.
2) If testing shows that combined flaring and venting volumes at the site do not exceed
900 m3/day and the AER has not directed that conservation be implemented, the wells may
proceed to produce without conserving the solution gas. The AER, however, still recommends
economic evaluation of gas conservation, even when volumes are less than 900 m3/day.
2.6 General Conservation Requirements at all Condensate Producing Sites and Crude
Oil and Crude Bitumen Batteries
These requirements apply to all condensate producing sites and crude oil and crude bitumen
batteries unless otherwise specified.
1) The licensee or operator must conserve solution gas at all sites 3 where
a) the combined flaring and venting volume is greater than 900 m3/day per site 4 and the
decision tree process and economic evaluation (see section 2.8) result in a net present value
(NPV) greater than –Cdn$55 000;
3
A site is defined as a single-surface lease (pads counted as one lease) where gas is flared or vented.
4
Volumes are calculated based on a three-month rolling average.
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b) the gas:oil ratio (GOR) is greater than 3000 m3/m3. All wells producing with a GOR greater
than 3000 m3/m3 at any time during the life of the well must be shut in until the gas is
conserved;
c) flared or incinerated volumes are greater than 900 m3/day per site and the flare or
incinerator is within 500 m of a residence, regardless of economics; or
d) the AER directs the licensee, operator, or approval holder to conserve solution gas,
regardless of economics.
2) For any sites flaring or venting combined volumes greater than 900 m3 per day and not
conserving, conservation economics must be completed every 12 months using the criteria in
section 2.9.
3) The AER may still, on a case-by-case basis, require economic evaluations for sites that are
flaring or venting combined volumes less than 900 m3/day and not conserving if it is believed
that conservation may be feasible.
4) Conserving facilities must be designed for 95 per cent conservation with a minimum operating
level of 90 per cent.
5) The licensee or operator may apply to discontinue conservation if annual operating expenses
exceed annual revenue. See section 2.6(6).
6) The licensee or operator must get approval from the AER Authorizations Branch to discontinue
conservation once it has been implemented at any facility, and must
c) notify the appropriate AER field centre and residents within 500 m of its intention to
discontinue conservation and initiate flaring or venting at a site, and
d) if conservation facilities are not operational, comply with table 1 until such time as
approval from the AER Authorizations Branch to discontinue conservation is granted.
2.7 Clustering
Clustering is defined as the practice of gathering the solution gas from several flares or vents at a
common point for conservation. Solution gas is economic to conserve in some areas if licensees and
operators coordinate their efforts in an efficient, cooperative process to take advantage of combined
gas volumes and economies of scale. Furthermore, solution gas conservation economics (see
section 2.9) will be enhanced if conservation is incorporated into the initial planning of larger
multiwell projects.
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1) Licensees or operators of active production facilities operating within three kilometres (km) of
each other or other appropriate oil and gas facilities (including pipelines) must evaluate
clustering when evaluating solution gas conservation economics.
The AER may suspend production in the area under consideration until the economic assessment is
complete.
• all licensees and operators exchange production data and jointly consider clustering of solution
gas production or regional gas conservation systems, and
• the licensee or operator with the largest flare and vent volumes take the lead in coordinating the
evaluation of conservation economics for the area.
2) The licensee or operator of a multiwell oil or bitumen development must assess conservation on
a project or development area basis regardless of distance. Evaluations must address all
potential gas vent and flare sources associated with the multiwell development.
a) The licensee or operator must incorporate provision for conservation at all stages of project
development to optimize the opportunity for economic conservation of solution gas.
b) Applications under Directive 056: Energy Development Applications and Schedules for
multiwell oil or bitumen developments must include a summary of the gas conservation
evaluation and a description of the licensee or operator’s related project plans.
The AER may suspend production at any facility until the economic assessment is complete.
1) Approval of electrical power plants by the Alberta Utilities Commission is required under the
Hydro and Electric Energy Act.
Alberta Utilities Commission Rule 007: Applications for Power Plants, Substations,
Transmission Lines, and Industrial System Designations provides application requirements for
power plant applications and includes a simplified application form for electric power
generating projects of 1.0 megawatt (MW) or smaller.
2) Power plants with a generation capacity greater than 1.0 MW at peak load require approval
issued by AEP under the Environmental Protection and Enhancement Act (EPEA).
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1) Methods of conservation must include pipeline to sales, fuel, power generation, pressure
maintenance, or any other method that may become available.
2) Licensees or operators must update the conservation economics for any sites that are flaring or
venting combined volumes of more than 900 m3/day and that are not conserving every 12
months. This information, with the responsible individual named and the document dated, is to
be kept on file by the licensee or operator and must be provided to the AER upon request.
Evaluation information may be stored at a central location rather than on site.
3) A licensee or operator must provide the evaluation to the AER within five working days of
receipt of a request.
4) A licensee must complete the economical evaluation process in accordance with Directive 060
requirements.
1) Evaluations must be completed on a before-tax basis, and must exclude contingency and
overhead costs.
3) Price forecasts used in the evaluation of solution gas conservation projects (gas gathered,
processed, and sold to market) must use the most recent version of commodity price forecast
from GLJ Petroleum Consultants Limited. Gas prices must be obtained from the “Natural Gas
and Sulphur Price Forecast Table” in the “ARP” column ($Cdn/MMBtu). Condensate prices
must be obtained from the “Crude Oil and Natural Gas Liquids Table” in the “Alberta Natural
Gas Liquids Section – Edmonton Pentanes Plus” column ($Cdn/bbl).
4) Price forecasts for power generation projects must reflect the most recent 12-month rolling
average of the pool monthly summary price as published by the Alberta Electric System
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Operator (AESO). 5 The power price must be escalated at the long-term inflation rate (see
item 9). Alternatively, the cost of the power displaced at the site may be used.
5) The licensee or operator must have information to support the remaining reserves calculation
and the production forecast (including planned drilling programs and pressure maintenance
schemes). The production forecast must be reviewed by a qualified technical professional who
is a member of the association as defined in the Engineering and Geoscience Professions Act. 6
6) The licensee or operator must have a detailed breakdown of capital costs showing equipment,
material, installation, and engineering costs. Capital costs must be approved-for-expenditure
quality numbers based on selection of appropriate technology. Any capital costs incurred before
the initiation of the solution gas project (i.e., sunk costs) must not be included in the analysis;
only future capital costs related to solution gas conservation may be included.
a) For new flares, if capital cost savings result from implementing gas conservation, such as
any equipment that would otherwise be required, the flares must be considered in the
conservation economic evaluation and subtracted from the overall cost of the conservation
infrastructure in evaluating the economics of solution gas tie-in.
b) Salvage value of gas conservation infrastructure must be included as project revenue in the
year the value would be realized (e.g., transfer of a gas compressor from one conservation
project at the end of that project’s life to another conservation project). The salvage value
must be a reasonable market value estimate of the equipment and not a depreciated value
from a taxation perspective.
7) The incremental annual operating costs for the gas conservation project, including gas
gathering and processing fees, are to be assumed as up to 10 per cent of the initial capital cost
of installing the conservation facilities. If the gas contains 10 moles per kilomole (mol/kmol)
hydrogen sulphide (H2S) or more, the incremental annual operating costs for the solution gas
project may be assumed to be up to 20 per cent of the capital cost to initially install the
conservation facilities.
a) The economic evaluation must account for any cost savings, such as reduced trucking,
equipment rental, and the licensee’s or operator’s costs that may result from the
conservation project.
8) The incremental annual operating costs for power generation projects are to be assumed as up
to 10 per cent of the initial capital cost of installing the generation facilities. Standby fees may
be calculated in addition to this 10 per cent allowance.
5
The most recent 12-month rolling average of the pool monthly summary price can be found on the AESO website at
http://ets.aeso.ca.
6
Engineering and Geoscience Professions Act, RSA 2000 c. E-11, as amended.
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9) The most recent inflation rate must be based on the current economic trends report published
quarterly on the Government of Alberta, Treasury Board and Finance, Economy and Statistics
website.
10) The discount rate must be equal to the prime lending rate of ATB Financial on loans payable in
Canadian dollars plus 3 per cent, based on the month preceding the month the evaluation was
conducted in. This rate is reviewed periodically by the AER and will be revised if the cost of
capital for the oil and gas industry changes significantly.
11) A solution gas conservation project is considered economic, and the gas must be conserved, if
the economics of gas conservation generates an NPV before-tax of more than –Cdn$55 000.
a) The NPV is defined as the sum of discounted, annual, before-tax cash flows for the
economic life of the solution gas conservation project, where each annual before-tax cash
flow is net of that year’s conserving project capital investment, if any.
b) The economic life of a conservation project is defined as the period from the start of the
project to the time when annual expenses exceed annual revenue. Note that section 2.6(6)
provides a process whereby the licensee or operator may apply to discontinue conservation
if annual expenses exceed annual revenue.
12) If a solution gas conservation project has an NPV less than –Cdn$55 000 and is therefore
considered uneconomic on its initial evaluation, the project economics must be
re-evaluated annually (within 12 months of the latest evaluation) using updated prices, costs,
and forecasts.
a) detailed capital and operating cost schedules as set out in sections 2.9.1(6) and 2.9.1(7)
b) oil and gas reserves calculations and supporting information (including a discussion of
planned drilling programs and pressure maintenance schemes)
c) a production forecast for both the oil and gas streams and the economic limit (date and
production rates) of the project based on the oil production rate (including planned drilling
programs and pressure maintenance schemes)
d) a copy of the gas analysis from the project or a representative analog complete with gas
heating value and gas liquid yields
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1) The licensee or operator must notify residents, schools, and the appropriate AER field centre of
nonroutine flaring, incineration, and venting at production and processing facilities, as
described in section 2.11, table 1.
2) The licensee or operator must meet minimum spacing requirements (see section 7.8).
1) the definition of solution gas, and information on its conservation and use
2) an explanation of solution gas flaring, incineration, and venting management options and the
decision tree process
5) descriptions of specific actions the licensee or operator will take to eliminate or reduce flaring,
incineration, or venting or improve the efficiency of the flare, incinerator, or vent source based
on the evaluation
6) a list of industry, AER, and government contacts that are related to public consultation and
relevant to the project
2.11 Nonroutine Flaring, Incineration, and Venting at Solution Gas Conserving Facilities
The licensee or operator must minimize nonroutine flaring, incineration, and venting during upsets
and outages of solution gas conserving facilities.
The AER also recommends that the licensee or operator contact the appropriate AER field centre
for recommendations for minimizing solution gas flaring during outages at conserving facilities.
2) Table 1 does not apply to nonassociated gas (the percentage cutbacks listed in table 1 apply to
solution gas only). All nonassociated gas must be shut in during facility outages.
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3) Emergency or plant upset shut in of production and reduction of solution gas inlet requirements
in table 1 do not apply to thermal in-situ production.
5) If there is a restriction to the plant inlet, the AER recommends that solution gas processing have
priority over the processing of nonassociated gas in order to limit the unnecessary flaring of
solution gas.
6) The AER recommends that wells with the highest GOR be the first to be shut in during facility
outages and cutbacks.
7) Provided the overall required percentage reduction in solution gas production is achieved, it is
not necessary to implement equal reductions at all locations upstream of the conserving facility
outage.
a) When multiple licensees or operators are involved, they may determine how to best
implement the overall required production reductions. If an agreement cannot be reached,
each licensee and/or operator must reduce production as specified in table 1.
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Table 1. Limitations and notification requirements for nonroutine flaring, incinerating, and venting during
1
solution gas conserving facility outage
Shutdown
category Duration Operational requirements
Partial equipment < 5 days Unless directed by the AER to flare, incinerate, or conserve all casing gas and tank -top
outages gas, shut-in of production is not required for equipment outages lasting less than 5 days
that involve small volumes of gas (e.g., storage tank vapour recovery unit repair). This
allowance is limited to a maximum of 2 103 m3 per day subject to limitation on venting as
defined in section 8. If the event is ≥5 days, the operator must meet requirements stated
below (planned shutdown category, >4 hours duration)
Planned < 4 hours The licensee or operator must make all reasonable efforts2 to reduce battery or solution
gas plant inlet gas volumes by 50 per cent of average daily solution gas production over
the preceding 30-day period.
> 4 hours The licensee or operator must reduce battery or solution gas plant inlet gas volumes by
75 per cent of average daily solution gas production over the preceding
30-day period and meet the following requirements:
• Solution gas must not be flared from wells that have an H2S content greater than
10 per cent.
• Production may be sustained at rates that will provide sufficient throughput to keep
equipment operating safely and within minimum design turndown range. If this
volume is greater than 25 per cent of the average daily solution gas production, a
variance must be obtained from the appropriate AER field centre (see section
2.11.3).
• Residents within 500 m must be notified3 at least 24 hours before the planned
flaring event.
• The AER also recommends that the licensee or operator notify individuals who
have identified themselves to the licensee or operator as being sensitive to or
interested in emissions from the facility.
• The appropriate AER field centre must be notified4 24 to 72 hours in advance if the
event meets reporting requirements identified in IL 98-01,4 section 4.4.
Emergency6 or < 4 hours No reduction in the plant inlet is required.
plant upset
> 4 hours The licensee or operator must reduce battery or solution gas plant inlet gas volumes by
75 per cent of average daily solution gas production over the preceding
30-day period and must meet the following requirements:
• Solution gas must not be flared from wells that have an H2S content greater than
10 per cent.
• Production may be sustained at rates that will provide sufficient throughput to keep
equipment operating safely and within minimum design turndown range. If this
volume is greater than 25 per cent of the average daily production, a variance must
be obtained from the appropriate AER field centre (see section 2.11.3).
• Residents within 500 m must be notified4 without delay about the flaring event.
• The AER also recommends that the licensee or operator notify individuals who
have identified themselves to the licensee or operator as being sensitive to or
interested in emissions from the facility.
• The appropriate AER field centre3 must be notified without delay if the event meets
reporting requirements identified in IL 98-01,5 section 4.4.
Repeat nonroutine The licensee or operator must investigate causes of repeat nonroutine flaring or venting
flaring7 and take steps to eliminate or reduce the frequency of such incidents.
1
For the definition of conserving facility, see appendix 2.
2
Notwithstanding solution gas reduction requirements listed in table 1, if a sour or acid gas flare or incinerator stack is not
designed to meet the one-hour AAAQO for sulphur dioxide (SO2) under high flow-rate conditions, action must be taken
immediately to reduce gas to a rate compliant with the AAAQO (see section 7.12.5).
3
The appropriate AER field centre must be notified through the designated information submission system. In situations where
limits have been exceeded, the appropriate AER field centre must be contacted by telephone before the designated information
submission system is notified.
4
Refer to section 3.8 (4) for resident notification requirements.
5
IL 98-01: A Memorandum of Understanding Between Alberta Environmental Protection and the Alberta Energy and Utilities Board
Regarding Coordination of Release Notification Requirements and Subsequent Regulatory Response.
6
Emergency shutdowns or plant upsets are unplanned events at the battery site or at facilities downstream of the battery that
causes the nonroutine flaring at the battery.
7
Repeat nonroutine flares are defined as recurring events of similar cause at a conserving facility during a 30-day period.
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018) 19
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a) delivering solution gas to a nearby gas plant or facility that is not on turnaround;
b) scheduling maintenance at related oil facilities to coincide with the gas plant turnaround;
c) injecting solution gas into the gas cap of an oil pool or into a gas reservoir and
producing it back when the gas plant is back on stream (see Directive 065: Resources
Applications for Conventional Oil and Gas Reservoirs); and
d) communicating with well, battery, and gas plant licensees or operators to ensure that
nonroutine solution gas flaring, incineration, and venting are minimized.
1) A licensee or operator must plan for outages. If an alternative to table 1 is justified, the AER
recommends that the licensee or operator submit a written request to the AER field centre at
least 30 days before a planned shutdown explaining the alternative requested and giving
supporting reasons for the request. The AER recommends that wherever possible, contact
with the AER field centre not be deferred until an actual outage occurs.
8
http://www.energy.alberta.ca/NaturalGas/1139.asp
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• The Alberta Department of Energy has developed criteria for ensuring that when gas can be
economically conserved, it does not receive a royalty waiver.
a) A licensee or operator must report all new oil well production, including the test period,
and obtain a battery code for any new oil wells before production, including flaring, can
be reported (see Directive 017: Measurement Requirements for Oil and Gas Operations).
In cases where conservation is determined by the licensee or operator to be uneconomic (as per
section 2.8) but where a third party is able to conserve the gas, the AER recommends that the
licensee or operator either conserve the gas or make the gas available at the lease boundary at no
charge within three months of a request for the gas. It would be understood that this gas may be
provided without processing or compression, and the third-party organization must not affect the
upstream operations.
Any third party requesting data from a licensee or operator must be technically qualified and
have a reasonable expectation of proceeding with the gas conservation project. Third parties
must also comply with all relevant AER requirements.
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Unplanned nonroutine flaring and incinerating (e.g., process upsets, emergencies) do not require
a temporary permit. Planned nonroutine flaring and incineration events (e.g., maintenance
blowdowns, pipeline depressurizing, turnarounds) do require a temporary flaring or incineration
permit, as stated in section 3.3.
The AER does not consider venting an acceptable alternative to flaring or incineration. If gas
volumes are sufficient to sustain stable combustion, the gas must be burned or conserved (see
section 8.1(5) for specifics on well test venting). If venting is the only feasible alternative, it
must meet the requirements in section 8.
2) Licensees must evaluate opportunities to use existing gas gathering systems before
beginning temporary maintenance, well cleanup, or testing operations (i.e., “in-line testing”).
In-line testing must be done when economic and feasible to do so. Information on the
evaluation of the most feasible option (e.g., closest potential tie-in location) must be
provided with permit requests (section 3.5.1). The AER recommends that in-line testing be
used in situations where
a) suitable infrastructure exists in proximity to the well and can be connected at moderate
cost and where use of the infrastructure does not compromise integrity, or
3) If in-line testing is not possible, licensees must design completions and well testing
programs to minimize emissions while ensuring technically sound well completion and
acquisition of sufficient reservoir and productivity information for future development
decisions. Directive 040: Pressure and Deliverability Testing Oil and Gas Wells must be
consulted on the minimum pressure and deliverability requirements for well testing and on
the recommended practices in order to ensure that the appropriate information is obtained for
conservation and pool management purposes in addition to the requirements of this directive.
22 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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Licensees must use appropriate equipment and design temporary (maintenance, well completion,
or test) programs to comply with performance requirements in section 7 and the AAAQO.
Figure 3. Temporary flaring and incineration decision tree (adapted from CASA)
3.2 Oil and Gas Well Test Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting Duration Limits
1) These time limits are per zone, are nonconsecutive, and do not include shut-in time. These
periods include flaring, incinerating, and venting during cleanup, completion, workover, and
testing. Licensees and operators must not exceed the following flaring, incinerating, and
venting time limits:
b) bitumen wells/sites: until flow rates exceed an average of 900 m3/day for any
consecutive three-month period, not to exceed six months. See section 2.4.
d) dry coalbed methane development wells (producing less than 1 m3 of water per
operating day): 120 hours
e) dry coalbed methane nondevelopment wells (producing less than 1 m3 of water per
operating day): 336 hours
8
A site is defined as a single-surface lease (pads counted as one lease) where gas is flared or vented.
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018) 23
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f) wet coalbed methane wells (producing more than 1 m3 of water per operating day): see
section 3.2(7) below
2) Extensions to the time limits listed in (1)(a), (c), (d), and (e) above are allowed only if
a) cleanup of the wellbore is not complete. Cleanup is considered complete when sand,
proppant, or acid is no longer produced or when the gas composition meets the
minimum pipeline specifications for the nearest pipeline that could accept the gas;
b) stabilized flow has not been reached. Refer to Directive 040: Pressure and
Deliverability Testing Oil and Gas Wells, section 4.3, and Directive 034: Gas Well
Testing, Theory and Practice, section 7.1; or
3) For extensions to the time limits stated in (1)(b) and (f), licensees must request approval
from the AER as described in (5) below.
4) The licensee must document these reasons for extension and keep the information on file for
review and/or audit by the AER field centre when requested. The licensee is not required to
ask permission to extend the flaring/incineration beyond the specified time limit listed in
(1)(a), (c), (d), or (e) if the reason matches those listed in (2)(a), (b), or (c), but must notify
the appropriate AER field centre in advance through the designated information submission
system as soon as the licensee recognizes that the time limit will be exceeded. The licensee
must include reasons for the extension and the duration of the flaring, incinerating, and
venting.
a) If an audited licensee fails to justify the need to exceed the time limitation to the AER
field centre’s satisfaction, the licensee may be subject to a regulatory response.
5) If more time for well test flaring, incineration, or venting is needed for reasons other than
those listed above, the AER must be contacted for approval to continue as soon as possible,
and no later than the end of the specified period.
6) If a temporary flaring/incineration permit has been issued, the volume allowed in the permit
will take precedence over the time limit described in (1) above.
7) When well test information indicates that cleanup is complete and the well flow is stabilized
and all other AER requirements (e.g., AER Directive 040) are met, flaring/incineration/
venting must be discontinued, even if the time limit or the flaring/incineration permit volume
has not been reached. This requirement does not apply to bitumen or wet coalbed methane
wells. Timing requirements for bitumen are in section 2.4(2). Timing requirements for wet
coalbed methane wells are in (8) below.
8) For wet coalbed methane wells producing more than 1 m3 of water per operating day,
flaring/incinerating or venting must cease (gas must be conserved) within six months of gas
24 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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production for an individual well exceeding a cumulative total of 100 103 m3 for any
consecutive three-month period (about 1100 m3/day). Shorter tie-in periods must be pursued
wherever possible.
a) Licensees must notify the AER Authorizations Branch as soon as the cumulative total
gas production exceeds 100 103 m3 for any consecutive three-month period at a wet
coalbed methane well that is flaring, incinerating, or venting.
b) For wet coalbed methane wells that do not trigger the requirement above (i.e.,
100 103 m3 in 3 months), flaring, incineration, and venting are limited to the lesser of
ii) a total cumulative volume of 400 103 m3 for tier 2 (development) wells or 600 103 m3
for tier 1 (other) wells per zone tested (see section 3.3.1[2]). Wells already tied in
are treated as tier 3 and allowed a maximum cumulative flare, incineration, and vent
volume of 200 103 m3.
The AER may suspend well flaring or incineration for noncompliance with conditions of the
permit. The licensee must comply with the conditions of the temporary flaring permit.
1) Licensees must obtain a permit to flare or incinerate sour gas containing more than
50 mol/kmol H2S (5 per cent) or sour gas from any well classified as a critical sour well.
a) If operations result in H2S concentrations that are higher than concentrations at the well
(e.g., flaring gas from tanks), the composition of the gas to be burned must be
determined in order to establish whether a permit is required. This composition must
also be used in any required dispersion modelling.
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b) If supplemental fuel gas is used, the resulting composition must be used for dispersion
modelling. However, the gas composition from the source is still used as the basis for
determining whether a permit is required.
2) Licensees must obtain a permit for temporary flaring or incineration of natural gas if gas
well test volumes exceed the volume allowance threshold. This is based on the volume of
gas flowed back from the well (and does not include fuel gas added, and volumes from
vented nitrogen or carbon dioxide used in fracturing fluid).
a) The volume allowance threshold is defined in three tiers based on the volume of raw gas
flowed back from the well (not including fuel gas added and carbon dioxide [CO2] or
nitrogen used for hydraulic fracturing). These volumes apply to gas well tests only:
i) Tier 1 ≤600 103 m3: applies to wells that have not been tied in and have a Lahee
classification of new field wildcat (NFW), new pool wildcat (NPW), deeper pool
test (DPT), or outpost (OUT).
ii) Tier 2 ≤400 103 m3: applies to wells that have not been tied in and have been
assigned a Lahee classification (including development) not listed in the tier 1
allowance (excluding re-entry [REN] and experimental [EX] wells. See (b) and (c)
below).
iii) Tier 3 ≤200 103 m3: applies to any well that has been tied in to facilities
appropriately designed to handle production from the formation being tested (e.g.,
sweet versus sour service).
All requested volumes must be justified and may be questioned by the AER.
b) The volume allowance threshold for a re-entry well is the same tier allowance (1, 2, or
3) that applied to the well before it was reclassified as re-entry.
c) For wells with a Lahee classification of experimental, the volume allowance threshold is
the same tier allowance (1, 2, or 3) that applied to the well before it was reclassified as
experimental or that normally would have applied to the well had it not been classified
as experimental.
d) An incremental volume of 200 103 m3 may be added to the volume allowance threshold
defined above for each additional zone being tested during continuous operations on a
well (with continuous operations meaning that servicing equipment and personnel are
not demobilized between tests on each zone), subject to the following limitations:
i) The volume flared from any zone during multiple-zone tests must not exceed the
volume allowance threshold for a single zone unless a larger volume is specifically
approved by the AER Authorizations Branch.
26 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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ii) The incremental allowance does not apply to single tests over multiple commingled
zones. Each zone to be tested must be identified and fully accounted for in the
related flare permit request.
a) Licensees must evaluate compliance with the one-hour AAAQO for SO2 if the gas
contains more than 10 mol/kmol H2S (1 per cent). Related dispersion modelling results
must be provided to the AER Authorizations Branch upon request.
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2) Flaring or incinerating small volumes of sour gas containing more than 50 mol/kmol H2S
(5 per cent) are exempt from AER permit requirements provided that the following
conditions are met:
a) Maximum sulphur emission rates do not exceed 1.0 tonne per day over the duration of
the event.
b) Total flared or incinerated volume do not exceed 50 103 m3 over the duration of the
event.
c) Equipment is designed to ensure compliance with the one-hour AAAQO for SO2 or
operating procedures are in place to ensure compliance with the AAAQO. Related
dispersion modelling evaluations and design information are documented and available
to the AER Authorizations Branch upon request.
d) Rates and volumes are measured and reported as defined in section 10.
3) The AER does not require temporary permits for the use of permanent flares or incinerators
installed in AER-licensed facilities, including batteries, compressor stations, and gas plants
provided that licensees can show, on request from the AER Authorizations Branch or field
centre staff, that
a) the flaring or incineration volumes, rates, and gas composition are within the limits of
the facility licence;
b) the flares or incinerators are designed to operate safely under the intended conditions in
compliance with the AAAQO; and
c) the total volumes are less than the volume allowance threshold.
4) Similarly, the AER does not require temporary permits for unplanned nonroutine events such
as emergencies. Licensees must ensure that temporary nonroutine systems are adequately
designed to operate safely under anticipated emergency and upset conditions and meet the
requirements in section 7.
5) The AER does not require temporary permits for flaring at oil and bitumen batteries. The
operator must meet conservation requirements described in section 2.
28 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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a) a cover letter requesting a permit and informing the AER Authorizations Branch of any
public objections to or concerns about the proposed flaring/incineration
b) information about the site on which flaring/incineration will occur, including location,
Lahee classification, and related National Topographical System 1:50 000 scale maps
f) in situations with potential to exceed the risk-based criteria (see section 7.12.4) for SO2,
information on the licensee’s proposed air quality management plan to prevent
exceedances
2) Any inconsistencies in the request or modelling will result in the request being rejected and
returned to the licensee. Permit requests are processed in the order received, and
resubmissions will be treated as new permit requests.
3) Temporary permit requests can be submitted electronically by the licensee. A permit will be
in the name of the licensee.
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2) All requests for volumes greater than the volume allowance threshold regardless of H2S
content must be submitted to the AER Authorizations Branch (email
Directive060Inbox@aer.ca) and must include the following, in addition to information in
section 3.5.1 (note that 1[e] and [f] of that section do not apply to sweet gas wells).
a) Requests relating to tests to determine if enough gas supply exists to justify related
investments must include information on the scope of development required to produce
the well and necessary threshold reserves. (See appendix 5).
b) Requests relating to tests to determine the relationship between absolute open flow
(AOF) and deliverability of the well must include justification of the volume being
requested as it pertains to obtaining an accurate deliverability relationship, in accordance
with AER Directive 040.
c) Requests relating to tests to establish the stabilized flow rate of the well must include
justification of the flare volume request as it pertains to obtaining a stabilized flow rate,
including identification of any analogous wells being used for comparison purposes.
3) Should the information described above not be available or applicable, licensees must
include discussion on why it is not included with the exceedance request.
1) Blanket permits are issued on a fixed-term basis for periods not to exceed one calendar year.
Licensees must complete and submit a new flare permit request to renew blanket permits for
additional periods of time.
2) Blanket permits are limited to specific stack heights, locations, rates, maximum volumes per
event, maximum H2S concentrations, and maximum sulphur emissions per event as listed in
the permit request.
3) All wells must be licensed before they can be considered for a blanket permit.
4) For every well being considered for a blanket permit, licensees must use the AERflare.xls or
AERincin.xls spreadsheet (available on the AER website) to evaluate the temporary flaring
or incineration parameters during the period in which flaring/incineration is planned.
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a) The spreadsheets provide screening modelling. Refined modelling may be required and
must meet the risk-based criteria.
b) Any inconsistencies in the request or modelling will result in the request being rejected
and returned to the licensee.
a) projected volumes are greater than 100 103 m3 per site or flaring event;
c) an air quality management plan is necessary for compliance with the risk-based criteria
for SO2; or
Exceptions may be made only after consultation with the AER Authorizations Branch.
6) A list of wells and their bottomhole and surface locations and licence numbers must be
submitted to the AER Authorizations Branch before a blanket permit request will be
considered.
7) A sour gas flaring/incineration data summary report (see appendix 6) for each well must be
completed and submitted to the AER Authorizations Branch within 30 days of the end of
each calendar quarter-year.
If no flaring or incineration was done over the previous calendar quarter-year, a sour gas
flaring/incineration data summary report on the lack of flaring or incineration must be
submitted.
8) Licensees must comply with public and AER field centre notification requirements for each
flare event covered by the blanket permit, as described in section 3.8.
2) Licensees must limit the volumes for gas that they request, especially gas with high H2S
contents. Situations involving sulphur emissions of 50 tonnes or more are subject to closer
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018) 31
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scrutiny by the AER Authorizations Branch. The AER Authorizations Branch typically will
not approve permits where total sulphur emissions exceed 300 tonnes.
1) Temporary flares and incinerators must comply with design and operation requirements
defined in section 7.
a) Flares and incinerators must not be operated outside design operating ranges as specified
by the designing or reviewing qualified technical professional who is a member of the
Association as defined in the Engineering and Geoscience Professions Act. 9
2) Licensees must determine the H2S content of flared or incinerated gas using Tutweiller or
gas chromatography methods as soon as is practical after beginning operation if gas analysis
has not been done within the preceding 12 months.
3) If the H2S content in the gas is found to exceed 50 mol/kmol H2S and no flaring or
incineration permit has been issued by the AER Authorizations Branch, or if the H2S content
of the gas exceeds the maximum value listed in the related permit, operations must be
suspended and the appropriate AER field centre notified. Operations must not resume until a
permit or permit amendment is issued by the Authorizations Branch in response to a written
request.
4) Both high- and low-pressure gas-liquid separation stages must be used for sour gas to
minimize vapour released from produced hydrocarbon liquid and sour water storage.
5) Liquid storage must be designed to prevent the escape of sour gas to the environment. For
more detail, see the most current edition of Industry Recommended Practice [IRP]
Volume 4: Well Testing and Fluid Handling from the Canadian Petroleum Safety Council.
Section 3.7 of this directive does not apply to oil batteries. However, Directive 056 application
requirements apply to both temporary and permanent oil batteries.
1) Details on application requirements and exceptions for temporary well test facilities and
pipeline connections are in Directive 056. In the case of a discrepancy between this directive
and Directive 056, Directive 056 application requirements apply.
9
Engineering and Geoscience Professions Act, RSA 2000 c. E-11, as amended.
32 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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3) Only one test period will be approved at each site. If there are multiple events, an application
is required (see Directive 056).
4) For extended tests or multiple tests that require temporary facilities to operate for more than
21 days, the licensee or operator must complete an application (see Directive 056).
5) Proposals to install temporary compressors and other facilities for reasons other than testing
new wells must comply with Directive 056 application requirements.
b) A licensee or operator intending to install and use temporary pipelines for well testing
must complete and submit to the appropriate AER field centre the Checklist for 21-Day
Temporary Surface Pipelines for Well Testing Purposes. 10
c) AER field centre approvals for temporary facilities are valid for 21 days and include the
dismantling and removal of temporary facilities (including pipelines) from the lease.
Any exceptions, including allowances for downtime during testing, must be referred to
the appropriate AER field centre for further review.
7) Temporary facilities, including pipelines, must comply with relevant AER requirements.
a) Temporary facilities must meet noise control requirements defined in Directive 038:
Noise Control.
b) The licensee or operator must meet emergency response plan requirements for sour
wells. The plan must incorporate provisions for the temporary equipment, as appropriate.
See Directive 071: Emergency Preparedness and Response Requirements for the
Upstream Petroleum Industry.
10
Available on the Directive 056 page of the AER website, www.aer.ca.
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a) All temporary or permanent regenerative sweetening facilities require an AEP sour gas
processing plant approval.
9) Temporary pipelines and batteries must comply with Directive 056 public consultation
requirements.
1) The licensee, operator, or approval holder must notify all residents and schools of flaring,
incineration, and venting in accordance with table 2. The notification distances in table 2 are
minimum requirements.
2) Notice must be given to the appropriate AER field centre via the designated information
submission system of any planned flaring, incineration, or venting at least 24 hours in
advance.
a) Notice to the appropriate AER field centre must include a contact name and telephone
number in case of complaints or emergencies.
1
Table 2. Temporary flaring, venting, and incineration notification requirements
Duration of
2
event (hrs in Gas volume
3 3
Type of operation (applies to sweet and 24-hr (10 m in a
3,4
sour streams) period) 24-hr period) Notification
5
Temporary (i.e., for well cleanup, testing, or <4 and <30 No notification
maintenance)
Temporary (i.e., for well cleanup, testing, or >4 or >30 Residents, schools,
maintenance) if gas contains ≤10 mol/kmol H2S 1.5 km radius; AER field
centre
Temporary (i.e., for well cleanup, testing, or >4 or >30 Residents, schools,
maintenance) if gas contains >10 mol/kmol H2S 3 km radius; AER field
centre
5
Temporary (i.e., for well cleanup, testing, or <4 -- No public notification;
maintenance) through permanent battery or Notify the AER if flaring
3 3
plant flare or incinerator >30 10 m
Temporary (i.e., for well cleanup, testing, or >4 -- Residents, schools,
maintenance) through permanent battery or 0.5 km radius; AER field
plant flare or incinerator centre
34 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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Duration of
2
event (hrs in Gas volume
3 3
Type of operation (applies to sweet and 24-hr (10 m in a
3,4
sour streams) period) 24-hr period) Notification
1
See section 1.6 for information on the designated information submission system and how to notify the appropriate AER field
centre via the system.
2
Notification requirements include duration and volume from flowback operations. These gases may be hydrocarbon or gases
used in fracturing fluids (carbon dioxide or nitrogen) in any mixture. For reporting purposes, hydrocarbon volumes must be
distinguished from fracture gas volumes (see section 3.9).
3
24 to 72 hours in advance of planned flaring, venting, or incineration operations, the licensee, operator, or approval holder must
notify the appropriate AER field centre via the designated information submission system, all rural residents outside towns,
villages, and urban centres and within the specified radius, and the chief administrative officer or equivalent of a town, village, or
urban centre within the specified radius. Note that for incorporated centres and hamlets, it is sufficient to contact only the
appropriate administrator. Advance notification of more than 72 hours (but not longer than 90 days) must also offer the option for
renotification 24 to 72 hours before the start of operations. After 90 days, renotification is mandatory.
4
The AER recommends additional “good neighbour” notification for short-duration events for residents and schools that have
identified themselves to the licensee, operator, or approval holder as being sensitive to or interested in emissions from the
facility within the same notification radius as specified for events of more than four hours.
5
The AER recommends additional “good neighbour” notification for longer duration events (of more than four hours) for residents
and schools that have identified themselves to the licensee, operator, or approval holder as being sensitive to or interested in
emissions from the facility.
3) Upon AER field centre request, the licensee, operator, or approval holder must provide a list
of residents and schools notified within the specified notification radius, as well as a sample
of the information provided to residents.
4) Unless the licensee, operator, or approval holder has reached an agreement with current
residents or schools for an alternative method of notification, notification must be in writing
(see appendix 9) and include the following basic information about the flaring, incineration,
or venting:
a) licensee, operator, or approval holder’s name, contact persons, and telephone numbers
c) the duration of the event (start date and expected completion date)
e) information on the type of well (oil, gas, or coalbed methane) and, if applicable,
information on the H2S content of the flared or incinerated gas
5) The licensee, operator, or approval holder may conduct a one-time notification program for
multiple-well projects in an area unless the licensee, operator, or approval holder has reached
an agreement with current residents or schools for an alternative method of notification. In
addition to the information above, the related multiple-well project notification must provide
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6) The licensee, operator, or approval holder may limit the number of repeat notifications to
individual residents or schools if
7) The licensee, operator, or approval holder may conduct a single notification to each resident
and school within the notification area and the appropriate AER field centre, rather than a
separate notification for each flaring, venting, or incineration period throughout the program,
if this is acceptable to the current residents. The method of notification must be discussed
during the initial notification process.
8) The AER recommends that the licensee, operator, or approval holder consider placing
signage on public roads surrounding the temporary flaring or incineration operations
indicating the operation type and the contact phone number for inquiries.
1) The AER encourages the licensee, operator, or approval holder to work with nearby
residents and schools prior to commencing proposed and existing flaring or incineration
activities.
2) The licensee, operator, or approval holder must immediately disclose any unresolved
concerns of nearby residents and schools about those activities to the appropriate AER field
centre in order to discuss concerns or complaints related to those activities.
3) Residents and schools may subsequently contact the appropriate AER field centre to discuss
concerns or complaints related to those activities.
The AER may work further with the licensee, operator, or approval holder to modify one or
more operational aspects of the proposed or existing flaring or incineration activities to address
the concerns of nearby resident and schools, but it will not suspend flaring or incineration
36 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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activities in response to a concern or complaint unless there is clear evidence that the licensee,
operator, or approval holder is not in compliance with Directive 060.
a) All well test reports must be submitted within three months of completing the fieldwork.
This information must include the volume of gas produced to flare, vent, or pipeline, as
well as all gas analyses from samples gathered at the wellhead. Submissions must be in
a pressure ASCII standard (PAS) format and submitted via the well test data capture
system in the designated information submission system. For questions on these
submissions, email the well test help line at Welltest-Helpline@aer.ca.
2) For all well tests that require permits, a sour gas flaring/incineration data summary report
must be submitted to the AER Authorizations Branch within three weeks of the completion
of flaring or incineration (see section 10.1, appendix 6, and AERflare.xls or AERincin.xls
spreadsheet).
3) All flaring, incineration, and venting at a well site (including well tests) must be reported on
the appropriate production reporting submissions, including Petrinex (see Directive 007:
Volumetric and Infrastructure Requirements).
a) In order to be able to report to the AER, the licensee, operator, or approval holder must
obtain a battery code. Any produced volumes, including those flared, incinerated, or
vented, must be reported (see Directive 007).
b) Fluid volumes and fuel consumption must be recorded and reported on the monthly
production submissions (see section 10).
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licensee, operator, or approval holder fail to adhere to this agreement, operations at the well may
be suspended. This agreement, including the condition, expires when production begins.
Once the well or facility is licensed, if the licensee, operator, or approval holder needs to change
this zero flaring agreement, it must file an application to change the agreement with the AER
Authorizations Branch, with a copy to the co-signers.
d) a summary of the consultation and notification that have been done, including
confirmation of agreements reached with the parties affected by this agreement.
Until the AER decides on this application, flaring may only occur as set out in the zero flaring
agreement. For oil wells, agreement not to flare during well testing means that the licensee,
operator, or approval holder has agreed to initially conserve the gas. Later, if it becomes
uneconomic to conserve the gas, the licensee, operator, or approval holder must follow the
process in section 2.6(6) of this directive to discontinue conservation.
The licensee, operator, or approval holder must try to address the landowner or occupant
concerns and may use the AER’s alternative dispute resolution process if that becomes necessary
before applying with the AER to change this zero flaring agreement.
38 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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4.1 Gas Battery, Dehydrator, and Compressor Station Flaring, Incinerating, and
Venting Decision Tree
1) The licensee or operator must use the decision tree analysis shown in figure 5 to evaluate all
new and existing gas battery, dehydrator, and compressor station flares, incinerators, and
vents regardless of volume except for intermittent small sources (less than 100 m3 per
month) such as pig trap depressurizing.
Figure 5. Facility flaring, incinerating, and venting decision tree (adapted from CASA)
2) The licensee or operator must document alternatives that were considered in order to
eliminate or reduce flaring, incineration, and venting, how they were evaluated, and the
outcome of the evaluation.
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3) New batteries proposing routine flaring, venting, or incineration must be evaluated before
application as part of the facility design. All existing batteries with routine sources were
required to have been evaluated by December 31, 2004.
4) The licensee or operator must assess opportunities to eliminate or reduce nonroutine flaring,
incineration, and venting of gas due to frequent (i.e., one event per month) maintenance or
facility shutdowns.
a) The licensee or operator must investigate and correct frequent nonroutine events at gas
batteries.
b) The licensee or operator must address concerns or objections of residents and schools
related to nonroutine gas battery flaring.
5) Flare, incinerator, and vent systems must be designed and operated in compliance with
sections 7 and 8, good engineering practice, and any other safety codes and regulations
required by other agencies.
4.2 Notification
1) The licensee or operator must notify residents, schools, and the appropriate AER field centre
of nonroutine flaring at gas batteries as follows:
a) If gas battery flaring exceeds four hours in duration, the licensee or operator must notify
residents and schools as described in section 3.8 and table 2.
b) If a gas battery flaring event exceeds 30 103 m3 and/or four hours in duration or is likely
to cause concern for residents or schools, the appropriate AER field centre must be
notified (see table 2). If Directive 060 notification requirements differ from those of IL
98-01: A Memorandum of Understanding Between Alberta Environmental Protection
and the Alberta Energy and Utilities Board Regarding Coordination of Release
Notification Requirements and Subsequent Regulatory Response, the licensee or
operator must comply with the more stringent requirement.
2) The licensee or operator must give the AER field centre at least 24 hours’ notice of planned
gas battery outages and turnarounds that will result in flaring of more than 30 103 m3 or for
more than four hours duration. The licensee or operator must give residents and schools
notification without delay or as soon as practical of unplanned gas battery outages that result
in flaring of more than 30 103 m3 or for more than four hours.
40 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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4.3 Reporting
1) All monthly flared and vented volumes must be reported separately on Petrinex in
accordance with section 10 and Directive 007. Incinerated volumes must be combined with
and reported as flared volumes.
2) Gas burned in an incinerator must be reported as flared. Fuel gas burned in an incinerator
must be reported as fuel gas.
3) Gas flared or vented at gas batteries must be reported at the flaring or venting location. For
facilities that do not require a licence (such as small booster compressors), the flared and
vented volumes must be reported at the nearest upstream reporting well, battery, or pipeline
facility.
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018) 41
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• routine flaring, incineration, and venting of low-pressure flash-gas and other gas streams,
and
• nonroutine flaring, incineration, and venting for equipment depressurizing for maintenance
process upsets, and emergency depressurizing for safety reasons.
1) Licensees must document alternatives that were considered in order to eliminate or reduce
flaring, incineration, or venting, how they were evaluated, and the outcome of the
evaluation.
a) address concerns and objections of residents and schools notified in accordance with
table 2 related to nonroutine flaring, and
b) comply with the limitations on total flared, incinerated, and vented volumes and the
number of repeat events defined in sections 5.2 and 5.3.
3) Flare, incinerator, and vent systems must be designed and operated in compliance with
sections 7 and 8, good engineering practice, and any other safety codes and regulations
required by other agencies.
a) Gas streams directed to continuous gas plant flares must have a minimum heating value
as defined in section 7.1.1.
42 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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Figure 6. Facility flaring, incinerating, and venting decision tree (adapted from CASA)
1) For gas plants processing less than 1.0 billion (109) m3 per year (raw gas inlet volume),
flaring, incineration, and venting must not exceed 1 per cent of raw gas receipts in the first
year of operation and must not exceed 0.5 per cent of receipts in any subsequent year.
2) For gas plants processing more than 1.0 109 m3 per year, flaring, incineration, and venting
must not exceed the greater of 0.2 per cent of receipts or 5.0 106 m3 per year.
3) If multiple flare stacks are available in gas production, gathering, and processing systems,
licensees must use the flare stack that is the most efficient and capable of providing the best
dispersion. In most cases this would be the gas plant flare stack.
a) Licensees can deduct solution gas flared at gas plants during plant shutdowns lasting
more than seven days in calculating the annual flared volumes applicable to (1) and (2)
above. These solution gas volumes must be documented and provided to the AER upon
request.
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018) 43
Alberta Energy Regulator
4) Licensees must comply with the solution gas reduction limitations in section 2.11 during
facility outages.
6) The AER recommends that solution gas processing take priority over the processing of
nonassociated gas.
2) Gas plants must not exceed six major nonroutine flaring events in any consecutive (rolling)
six-month period (6-in-6). Major flaring events are defined in table 3.
Table 3. Major flaring event definition
Approved plant inlet capacity Major flaring event definition*
3 3 3 3
>500 10 m /d 100 10 m or more
3 3
150–500 10 m /d 20 per cent of plant design daily inlet or more
3 3 3 3
<150 10 m /d 30 10 m or more
* The definition of a flaring event includes situations where
- volumes greater than or equal to those specified in the table are flared in any single day; each day that
specified flared volumes are exceeded is considered to be a separate, individual event; or
- volumes greater than or equal to those specified in the table are flared in one contiguous period spanning
more than one day (e.g., flaring for four days at a continuous rate of 25 103 m3/d is considered one event).
3) Licensees must log and monitor nonroutine flaring events, as required in section 10.1. Major
flaring events must be flagged. The following applies if a sixth major flaring event occurs
within any consecutive (rolling) six-month period:
a) Licensees must submit a written “exceedance” report to the appropriate AER field
centre and copy this report to the AER Authorizations Branch within 30 days of the
occurrence of the sixth flaring event.
i) The exceedance report must provide data on all flaring events (volume and duration)
for the consecutive (rolling) six-month period in question and on their possible
causes.
ii) The report must also propose a plan and corresponding timeline for implementing
corrective actions to ensure that frequent major nonroutine flaring does not recur.
b) Licensees must obtain AER field centre approval of the proposed plan referred to in
3(a)(ii) above.
i) If facility modifications are proposed in the plan and approvals are required by
Directive 056, AER Authorizations approval must be obtained before implementing
any such actions.
44 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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ii) Upon AER field centre approval of the plan, including facility modifications,
licensees are expected to expedite schedules for implementing the plan.
c) After the plan implementation date, the AER may issue a regulatory response if another
exceedance of the 6-in-6 criterion occurs within 24 months.
5.4 Notification
1) Licensees must notify residents, schools, and the appropriate AER field centre of nonroutine
flaring at gas plants (see table 2).
a) The appropriate AER field centre must be notified if a nonroutine flaring event exceeds
30 103 m3, exceeds four hours’ duration, or is likely to cause public concern.
b) If more stringent notification requirements than required by this directive have been put
in place through IL 98-01, licensees must comply with the more stringent requirements.
c) Licensees must provide the appropriate AER field centre with at least 24 hours’ notice
of a plant turnaround.
d) The appropriate AER field centre must be notified 24 to 72 hours before planned flaring
and as soon as practical of unplanned flaring when notification is required.
1) All monthly flared and vented volumes must be reported separately on Petrinex in
accordance with section 10 and Directive 007. 11 Incinerated volumes must be combined with
and reported as flared volumes.
2) Flaring of sour gas must also be reported on the S-30 Monthly Gas Processing Plant Sulphur
Balance Report (see section 11 of Directive 017).
3) When measurement is not required, engineering estimates must be used to report any flared
gas not measured (see section 10).
4) Licensees must provide a documented system for measurement and/or estimation of flared
and vented gas volumes (as defined in section 10) upon AER Authorizations Branch request.
All flare events both minor and major must be logged (in accordance with section 10.4) and
provided upon request.
5) Fuel gas that is flared, incinerated, or vented (e.g., flare pilot gas, header purge gas, storage
tank blanket gas) must be reported as fuel gas, not flared gas.
11
This information is summarized annually in AER ST13A: Alberta Gas Plant/Gas Gathering System Activities—Annual
Statistics, and monthly in ST13B: Alberta Gas Plant/Gas Gathering System Activities—Monthly Statistics, and ST13C: Alberta
Gas Gathering System Activities—Monthly Statistics.
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018) 45
Alberta Energy Regulator
6) Licensees must monitor and minimize fuel gas use for flare header purge, flare, and
incinerator pilots.
b) The AER may require evidence of this justification on the basis of case-specific audits
and inspections.
46 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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• routine flaring, incineration, and venting of low-pressure flash-gas and other gas streams at
pipeline system compressor and dehydration facilities, and
• nonroutine flaring, incineration, and venting for pipeline depressurizing for maintenance,
process upsets, or emergency depressurizing for safety reasons.
2) Licensees must assess opportunities to eliminate or reduce flaring, incineration, and venting
of gas due to frequent maintenance or facility outage as follows:
a) Investigate and correct repeat events at gas pipelines and related facilities (e.g.,
compressor stations).
b) Address public complaints and concerns about pipeline facility flaring, incineration, or
venting.
c) Investigate and implement feasible measures to conserve gas from the depressurizing of
pipeline systems.
3) Licensees of gas pipeline systems must ensure that flares, incinerators, and vents are
designed and operated in compliance with sections 7 and 8, good engineering practices, and
any other safety codes and regulations required by other agencies.
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018) 47
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Figure 7. Pipeline flaring, incinerating, and venting decision tree (adapted from CASA)
2) Gas containing more than 5 parts per million (ppm) H2S must not be released from a pipeline
without the approval of the AER unless the gas is burned such that it meets the requirements
in section 7.
3) Licensees must get an AER temporary flaring/incineration permit in order to use temporary
flares or incinerators for the disposal of sour gas containing more than 50 mol/kmol (5 per
cent) H2S, as described in section 3.3.
a) Permits are not required for disposal of small amounts of sour gas if the requirements
defined in section 3.3.2 are met.
b) Permit request requirements (section 3.5) apply to temporary flares and incinerators
used for sour gas pipeline depressurizing, except in emergencies.
48 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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1) Licensees of sweet natural gas transmission pipelines must minimize venting, flaring, and
incineration volumes.
a) The economic evaluation in section 2.9 does not apply to evaluating conservation of gas
from nonroutine pipeline depressurizing for maintenance.
2) Flaring or incineration of gas from sweet natural gas transmission pipeline depressurizing
may not be practical when impacts on system customers and producers are considered. In
such situations, the appropriate AER field centre may allow the venting of gas to reduce the
duration of system outages and related impacts.
6.4 Notification
1) Licensees must notify residents, schools, and the appropriate AER field centre of nonroutine
flaring, incineration, or venting at licensed gas pipeline facilities as follows:
b) In areas where more stringent notification requirements than those defined in table 2 are
required by IL 98-01 or through other regulatory requirements, licensees must comply
with the more stringent requirements.
2) Licensees must provide the appropriate AER field centre with at least 24 hours’ notice of
planned pipeline facility outages that will result in flaring, incineration, or venting.
4) Each purchaser or transporter of sweet natural gas must report the particulars of the
disposition and delivery of its gas to the AER monthly (see section 12.051 of the Oil and
Gas Conservation Rules [OGCR]).
a) Flared and vented volumes of sweet natural gas must be reported separately. Incinerated
volumes must be combined with, and reported as, flared volumes.
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018) 49
Alberta Energy Regulator
7 Performance Requirements
These requirements apply to flares and incinerators in all upstream oil and gas industry systems
for burning sweet, sour, and acid gas, including portable equipment used for temporary
operations including well completion, servicing, and testing. Flare and incinerator systems
include associated separation equipment, piping, and controls.
For the purposes of this directive, the terms flare and incinerator are used interchangeably except
as specifically noted in sections 7.1 and 7.4. In these sections, some requirements are specific to
the type of equipment used, and this is specified in those requirements.
Although some design or operating specifications are provided, this directive is not a substitute
for comprehensive engineering design codes and guidelines. It identifies minimum AER
regulatory requirements but is not intended as a comprehensive design manual.
1) The licensee, operator, or approval holder must ensure that a qualified technical professional
who is a member of the association as defined in the Engineering and Geoscience
Professions Act 12 is responsible for the design or review of flare and incinerator systems,
including separation, related piping, and controls, and for the specification of safe operating
procedures.
a) Equipment and controls design information must be provided to the AER upon request
if the AER determines that there is a concern with the equipment or controls.
2) The licensee, operator, or approval holder must ensure that operating procedures that define
the operational limits of flare or incinerator systems are documented and implemented and
that these procedures meet the design requirements.
a) Operating limits and procedures must be provided to the AER immediately upon request.
b) Flare and incinerator systems must be operated within the operational ranges and types
of service specified by the designing or reviewing engineer, technician, or technologist.
If this equipment is used for emergency shutdowns, this must be considered in the
design.
3) If using, in a field service, a flare or incinerator that has not previously been field tested, the
licensee, operator, or approval holder must be able to provide actual monitoring data to show
that performance specifications will be met.
a) Field testing of newly designed equipment is not allowed unless there are acceptable and
redundant combustion systems to ensure that any sweet, sour, or acid gas can be
properly combusted if the new equipment fails to perform as predicted, or unless the
facility is capable of being shut in if problems arise.
12
Engineering and Geoscience Professions Act, RSA 2000 c. E-11, as amended.
50 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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5) The licensee, operator, or approval holder must comply with Alberta safety regulations with
respect to the design of pressure vessels and piping systems and the design of equipment and
operating procedures (see Pressure Equipment Safety Regulation).
6) The AER recommends that all licensees, operators, and approval holders use best
engineering practices, as well as appropriate engineering codes and standards, in the design
and operation of flare systems.
1) Flares and incinerators and other gas combustion systems, including those using sour gas as
a fuel for production or process equipment, must be designed, maintained, and operated so
that emissions do not
2) The licensee, operator, or approval holder must modify or replace existing flares or
incinerators if operations result in off-lease odours, odour complaints, or visible emissions
(e.g., black smoke).
1) The combined net or lower heating value of gas, including make-up fuel gas, directed to a
flare must not be less than 20 megajoules per cubic metre (MJ/m3), except as noted below:
a) If existing stacks have an established history of stable operation and compliance with
the AAAQO (the licensee, operator, or approval holder is expected to support claims that
existing stacks have operated satisfactorily over time), the licensee, operator, or
approval holder is allowed to maintain the current heating value provided it is not less
than 12 MJ/m3.
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018) 51
Alberta Energy Regulator
b) The combined net or lower heating value of acid gas plus make-up fuel gas directed to
existing or new flares must not be less than 12 MJ/m3 under any circumstance.
c) Sour gas plant emergency systems must be configured to ensure that the flared gas
heating value is not less than 12 MJ/m3 and that the AAAQO are met.
i) The AER recommends that 20 MJ/m3 heating value be maintained for nonroutine
flaring but recognizes that short-duration emergency flaring with a gas heating value
of less than 20 MJ/m3 may occasionally occur.
2) If fuel make-up is required, it must be specified for flare stacks by a qualified technical
professional who is a member of the association as defined in the Engineering and
Geoscience Professions Act. 13
b) Facilities must be operated in compliance with specified minimum fuel gas make-up
requirements.
3) The flare tip diameter must be properly sized for the anticipated flaring rates. The
AERflare.xls spreadsheet provides a range of recommended values.
a) The AER recommends that stacks be designed to avoid downwash due to low exit
velocities and excessive noise due to high exit velocities.
4) Equipment and controls design information must be provided to the AER upon request if the
AER determines that there is a concern with the equipment or controls.
5) Operating limits and procedures must be provided to the AER immediately upon request.
1) Incinerators must provide a minimum residence time 14 of 0.5 seconds at maximum flow rate
or more as required for complete combustion of heavier gases.
b) If the gas contains less than 10 mol/kmol (1 per cent) H2S and the unsupplemented
heating value of the gas is 20 MJ/m3 or more, no minimum residence time is required.
13
Engineering and Geoscience Professions Act, RSA 2000 c. E-11, as amended.
14
Residence time is calculated between the top of the final burner and the stack exit.
52 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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a) For combustion of gases with less than 10 mol/kmol (1 per cent) H2S and an
unsupplemented heating value of 20 MJ/m3 or more, no minimum exit temperature or
temperature monitoring is required.
b) For combustion of gases with more than 50 mol/kmol (5 per cent) H2S, the facility must
be designed to automatically shut down if the exit temperature of the incinerator drops
below either 600oC or the required temperature to meet the AAAQO, whichever is higher.
i) The incinerator must also be equipped with process temperature control and
recording.
ii) All violations, together with measures taken to prevent recurrence, must be
immediately reported by the licensee, operator, or approval holder to the appropriate
AER field centre.
3) Any operator proposing to use an enclosed combustion technology that does not meet the
above requirements (minimum exit temperature and minimum residence time) must submit
third-party verified conversion efficiency test results to the AER Authorizations Branch for
approval unless the facility is subject to an EPEA approval.
vi) discussion of extending test results to other inlet conditions, including discussion of
inlet limitations for H2S concentration and inlet gas flow rate.
15
Exit temperature must be measured within one stack diameter of the exit. A shielded thermocouple must be used if the burner
flame is visible to the temperature monitor. For further information, consult the Alberta Stack Sampling Code or contact
Alberta Environment and Parks.
16
Engineering and Geoscience Professions Act, RSA 2000 c. E-11, as amended.
17
Copies of the Alberta Stack Sampling Code are available at cost from the Queen's Printer.
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018) 53
Alberta Energy Regulator
4) Equipment and controls design information must be provided to the AER upon request if the
AER determines that there is a concern with the equipment or controls.
5) Operating limits and procedures must be provided to the AER immediately upon request.
6) Any licensee, operator, or approval holder using incinerators must be able to provide details
about the conversion efficiency of the equipment. Any of the following are considered to be
acceptable evidence of compliance with this requirement:
a) the design at the maximum specified capacity meets the residence time, temperature,
and conversion efficiency requirements (see [6][b] below), as calculated using the
AERincin.xls spreadsheet
b) the conversion efficiency for incinerators is 99 per cent or more, based on one of the
following:
ii) actual field measurements of conversion efficiency from the operating facilities
following start-up (see also section 7[3]) .
c) If conversion efficiency is less than 99 per cent, the incinerator will be considered to
operate as a flare and must meet all requirements for flares, including stack height.
a) Routine gas combustion must not result in continuous or repeat black smoke emissions.
b) Black smoke from nonroutine or emergency flaring must not exceed an average of 40
per cent opacity over six consecutive minutes or as defined, after the issue of this
directive, in Alberta’s Environmental Protection and Enhancement Act Substance
Release Regulation. 18
2) Any smoke emissions that may result in public concern must immediately be reported to the
appropriate AER field centre.
18
Substance Release Regulation, AR 124/93.
54 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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7.3 Ignition
1) Acid gas and sour gas flares and incinerators must have reliable systems that ensure
continuous ignition of any gas that may discharge to the device.
a) At all facilities (excluding gas plants and batteries regulated as crude bitumen batteries)
where the gas contains more than 10 mol/kmol H2S, a pilot or automatic ignition device
must be installed on flares and incinerators for continuous (e.g., sour water or
condensate tank flash-gas) and intermittent (e.g., emergency depressurizing) sources.
b) At crude bitumen batteries where the H2S release rate is greater than 0.04 m3/hr, a pilot
or automatic ignition device must be installed on flares and incinerators for continuous
(e.g., storage tank flash-gas) and intermittent (e.g., truck loading operations) sources.
c) At gas plants where gas contains more than 10 ppm H2S, pilots and automatic ignition
must be installed on flares and incinerators.
d) If repeat failures have occurred or off-lease odours or other impacts have resulted from
failure to ensure ignition of sour gas, regardless of H2S content, the AER may require
installation of
2) Manual flare and incinerator ignition subject to good fire safety practices will be accepted
for nonroutine purposes where
When considering a request to extinguish flare pilots, the AER field centre takes into account
both local conditions and the operating history of the facility.
1) The licensee, operator, or approval holder must get approval from the appropriate AER field
centre to extinguish flare pilots at sour gas batteries.
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018) 55
Alberta Energy Regulator
a) the maximum design operating pressure of production piping and pressure vessel
systems is greater than 105 per cent of the maximum stabilized static wellhead pressure
of all wells connected to the battery;
d) no active injection or cycling schemes are taking place in or planned for any pools with
wells connected to the facility;
e) the facility connections to the flare are isolated with rupture disks upstream of PSVs.
This is subject to section 38(1)(b) of the Pressure Equipment Safety Regulation
(AR 49/2006) administered by the Alberta Boilers Safety Association; and
f) all manual depressurizing valves connected to the flare system contain double block
valves.
1) Flare and incinerator stacks must be designed so that the total radiant heat intensity at ground
level will not exceed 4.73 kilowatts per square metre (kW/m2).
b) Exceptions to the requirement in section 7.4(1) will be considered on request to the AER
Authorizations Branch, provided an equivalent level of safety can be ensured.
i) In such cases, the licensee, operator, or approval holder must restrict access to the
area where the radiant heat intensity guideline could be exceeded and must ensure
that this area is free of combustible materials and vegetation. Access restrictions
must include appropriate warning signs, and the area must be clearly marked.
56 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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ii) Appropriate procedures (e.g., safe-work permit system) must be in place when it is
necessary to work within the area where the radiant heat intensity guideline could be
exceeded.
2) Flares and incinerators located within a distance of 5 times the height of any neighbouring
buildings must have a height of at least 2.5 times the height of the highest building, tank, or
enclosed structure on the lease site.
• The foregoing does not apply to devices for destruction of trace vent gases, such as those
emitted from gas dehydrators.
3) Flare stacks for acid or sour gas containing more than 10 mol/kmol H2S must have a height
of at least 12 m above ground level. At crude bitumen batteries where the H2S release rate is
greater than 0.04 m3/hr, the minimum height above ground level for the flare stack is 12 m,
or such greater height as may be required to ensure that the AAAQO are not exceeded.
Existing crude bitumen batteries must meet the minimum height requirement by December
31, 2015.
4) Flares and incinerators must be high enough to provide adequate plume dispersion to comply
with the AAAQO for SO2 (see section 7.12).
a) Proper stack heights must be used in order to minimize fuel consumption. If the use of
supplemental fuel gas is proposed, all other options must be investigated first. Fuel gas
use and amounts must be justified.
Devices for combustion of sour or acid gas must be designed and evaluated to ensure
compliance with the AAAQO for SO2. Evaluations must use methodologies acceptable to the
AER Authorizations Branch and AEP. One of the methods described in section 7.12 or AEP’s
Non-Routine Flaring Modelling Guidance must be used.
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018) 57
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given area (see section 7.12.3). Even if a cumulative emissions assessment is not required,
modelling may still be required, as described in section 7.12.
a) Operating procedures must be put into place to limit the release duration if the routine
stack design is based on the above exception.
3) If operating procedures and controls are used to limit the magnitude or the duration of the
event, they must be documented and the facility must be operated in accordance with these
procedures.
a) Automated shutdowns must be installed in facilities that are not staffed 24 hours/day
(i.e., are semi-attended) to ensure compliance with this requirement.
b) Staff responsible for operations must be aware of the current operating procedures and
must be trained at following them.
4) Operating procedures and related dispersion evaluations must be provided to the AER upon
request.
Note that for the purposes of this section and section 7.6.1, the terms knockout, knockout drum,
scrubber, and separator are used interchangeably. The following requirements apply to all of
these devices.
1) Liquid separation equipment must be provided in both temporary (including well test) and
permanent flare and incinerator systems to prevent the carryover of liquid hydrocarbons,
water, or other liquids.
2) Flare and incinerator separators must be designed in accordance with good engineering
practice to remove droplets of 300 to 600 micron diameter and larger (see ANSI/API
Standard 521).
a) Designs must be based on the lowest density hydrocarbon liquids that could be released
to the flare or incinerator system.
3) The flare and incinerator separators or knockout drums must be designed to have sufficient
holding capacity for liquid that may accumulate as a result of upstream operations, such as
hydrocarbon carryover, liquid slugs, and line condensation.
58 Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018)
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4) All flare and incinerator separators and knockouts must have visual level indicators and
operating procedures to ensure that the liquid retention in the vessel will not exceed the
maximum design liquid level under all operating conditions.
a) For manually operated flares and incinerators (e.g., maintenance flares) where the flare
or incinerator is normally isolated from the process stream (i.e., manual block valve),
visual level indicators are not required when the operator has operating procedures in
place to assess and mitigate the risk of liquid carryover. In the absence of an adequate
operating procedure, the separator must be emptied before each flaring event.
i) These operating procedures must be provided to the AER immediately upon request.
5) All flare and incinerator separators and knockouts must have high-level facility shutdowns
or high-level alarms that can be responded to by the operator before liquid carryover. If
impacts such as liquid carryover or unacceptable smoke emissions (see section 7.2) have
occurred as a result of failure to control liquid level, both high-level facility shutdowns and
high-level alarms must be provided.
a) Where only manually operated flaring or incineration will occur (such as manual
equipment depressurizing, handling hydrates, or for well cleanup and initial testing) and
the operation is continuously attended, high-level facility shutdowns or high-level
alarms are not required. Where personnel are not devoted to a flaring or incineration
operation, the operation will not be considered to be continuously attended, despite a
facility being continuously staffed.
6) High-level alarms and facility shutdowns must be installed on all flare and incinerator
separators where liquid streams are directed to the separator for storage or where free liquids
are contained in continuously combusted streams.
7) Flare and incinerator separators or knockout drums must be designed and be in accordance
with AER Directive 055: Storage Requirements for the Upstream Petroleum Industry.
8) Design information on flare and incinerator system liquid separation equipment must be
submitted upon request to the AER, including Directive 056 facilities application review
processes.
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018) 59
Alberta Energy Regulator
a) The HLSD must be configured to shut down and block in, but not depressurize, the
facility. The HLSD trip level must be set so that adequate vapour-liquid separation is not
impaired at maximum liquid level and vapour flow rates.
b) If liquid carryover involving spills occurs around the flare or incinerator or if black
smoke is formed, the licensee, operator, or approval holder must install adequately sized
flare or incinerator separators.
2) The AER does not require independent flare or incinerator separators for combustion devices
that destroy trace vent gases emitted from gas dehydrators.
1) The licensee, operator, or approval holder must take precautions to prevent backflash using
appropriate engineering and operating practices, including
a) installing flame arresters between the point of combustion and the flare or incinerator
separator, or
b) providing sufficient flare header sweep gas velocities (i.e., purge or blanket gas) to
prevent oxygen intrusion into the flare or incinerator system.
3) Safe-work procedures must be in place to ensure complete purging of oxygen from flare or
incinerator systems before ignition.
4) The licensee, operator, or approval holder must provide information on backflash controls to
the AER upon request if the AER determines that there is a concern with the equipment or
controls.
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1) Flares and incinerators must be located, as measured from the base of the stack, at least
a) 50 m from wells, not including water disposal wells or water injection wells where there
is no risk of flammable vapours;
c) 25 m from any oil and gas processing equipment. This does not apply to combustion
devices that destroy trace vent gases, such as those emitted from gas dehydrators. These
devices must be designed to prevent ignition of gas that may leak from surrounding
equipment (i.e., devices must be equipped with flame arresters); and
d) 25 m from crude bitumen wells, storage tanks, or other sources of ignitable vapour,
including lined-earth excavations used to store waste oil at batteries regulated as
bitumen sites.
Flare knockout drums and integral knockout drums are exempt from flare and incinerator
spacing requirements provided they have no means to vent to the atmosphere.
The incinerator that combusts gas from the sulphur recovery process is not required to meet
incinerator spacing requirements for sulphur plant process equipment (i.e., converters and
condensers).
2) Flares and incinerators must be located, designed, and operated so that they are not a hazard
to public property. They must be at least 100 m away from surface improvements and
surface developments as defined in Directive 056 (except for surveyed roadways or road
allowances, which must be 40 m from flares and incinerators). 19
3) The area around flares and incinerators must be free of fire hazards. Flare or incinerator
spacing and operating practices must comply with the Forest and Prairie Protection Act 20
and any regulations under that act. 21
4) The licensee, operator, or approval holder also comply with the Forest and Prairie
Protection Regulations, Part I (AR 135/72), in unforested areas where there is a fire hazard
associated with flare and incinerator operations.
5) In certain circumstances, the AER Authorizations Branch may consider variances to AER
flare and incinerator spacing requirements.
b) Existing well site equipment spacing waivers in effect before the effective date of this
directive are maintained.
19
The 40 m spacing requirement applies to public road allowances and roads to which the public has open access. There is no
spacing requirement for private licensee access roadways or private roadways on operating sites.
20
Forest and Prairie Protection Act, RSA 2000, c. F-19, as amended.
21
As at the date of this directive, The Forest and Prairie Protection Regulations, AR 135/72.
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c) A licensee, operator, or approval holder requesting a spacing variance must first consult
relevant codes and engineering practices and provide related information in support of
the variance request.
7.10 Noise
1) Flares and incinerators must be designed and operate in compliance with Directive 038.
1) All existing flare pits must be decommissioned by December 31, 2015. Exemption requests
for cryogenic flare pits must be submitted to the AER Authorizations Branch by
December 31, 2015.
2) Produced liquids must not enter the pit, in accordance with section 8.080 of the OGCR.
4) Gas containing more than 10 mol/kmol H2S must not be flared in pits.
5) The licensee, operator, or approval holder must conduct evaluations of solution gas flares for
flare pits as described in sections 2.3 and 2.9 and implement the resulting decision.
6) Access restrictions and procedures must be in place in areas around flare pits where ground-
level radiant heat intensity at maximum flare rates will exceed 4.73 kW/m2.
7) If the facility is modified or if the facility increases its average annual production, the flare
pit must be replaced with a flare stack.
8) The AER can require the licensee, operator, or approval holder to replace flare pits with
flares systems if any part of the facility is in noncompliance.
9) Operation of flare pits must comply with the provisions of the Forest and Prairie Protection
Act 22 and with any regulations under that act. 23
22
Forest and Prairie Protection Act, RSA 2000, c. F-19, as amended.
23
As at the date of this directive, The Forest and Prairie Protection Regulations, AR 135/72.
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7.12 Dispersion Modelling Requirements for Sour and Acid Gas Combustion
The following requirements apply to the combustion of sour gas in process equipment, such as
steam generators and process heaters, as well as to flares and incinerators.
1) The licensee, operator, or approval holder must demonstrate, using dispersion modelling
methods outlined in AEP’s Air Quality Model Guideline, that SO2 and H2S emissions from
the burning of sour and acid gas will not result in exceedance of the AAAQO if the gas
contains the following amounts or more:
• 10 mol/kmol H2S, or
• one tonne per day of sulphur emission rate during the event.
A licensee, operator, or approval holder combusting gas below these concentrations and
emission rates is encouraged to consider dispersion modelling as part of environmental
considerations. Facilities requiring approval from AEP under the EPEA may need more
detailed evaluation. A licensee, operator, or approval holder should consult AEP directly in
these instances.
2) Dispersion modelling must be done by qualified technical personnel using computer models
and methodologies acceptable to AEP or, if appropriate, the method described in section
7.12 and appendix 7.
• be able to demonstrate that the model selected is appropriate and follows AEP accepted
methodologies and standards, and
• use representative input parameters (e.g., flow rate, gas composition) within the model
and be prepared to demonstrate that those parameters are representative.
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3) Modelling must address a full range of expected flow rate conditions and may include the
low, average, and maximum flow rate.
4) The selected flare or incinerator design must not result in ground-level SO2 concentrations
higher than those in the AAAQO.
ii) operating procedures and process controls to prevent emission rates or durations that
would exceed the AAAQO (see sections 7.5, 7.12.4), and
iii) adding fuel gas to increase heat release and plume rise. As stated in section 7.4,
proper flare stack height must be used to minimize fuel consumption.
a) Identify the farthest downwind location where predictions exceed one-third of the
hourly average AAAQO for SO2 to define the radius of influence.
b) Identify all other continuous sources of SO2 within this radius of influence up to a
maximum of 20 km; if no other sources of SO2 are within the radius, no further
modelling is required.
c) Quantify SO2 emissions from these other sources and obtain all necessary input data,
such as stack height and other parameters (the licensee, operator, and approval holder
must share related data with each other on a timely basis). Maximum hourly flow-rate
conditions must be used for all sources in the radius of influence.
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ii) SO2 cumulative assessments are not required for nonroutine flaring, venting, and
incineration (e.g., well test or planned maintenance blowdown).
e) If the sum exceeds the AAAQO, determine the appropriate stack height required to meet
the AAAQO. All refined modelling must follow the methods outlined in the Air Quality
Model Guideline (2013).
1) The licensee, operator, or approval holder must complete either the flaring (AERflare.xls) or
incinerator (AERincin.xls) spreadsheet.
2) Information on ambient air quality impact evaluations must be included in requests to burn
sour gas or, if no permit is required, must be provided to the AER upon request. The
dispersion modelling within AERflare.xls or AERincin.xls may be sufficient if a screening
assessment is adequate.
3) Sour gas flares and incinerators must be designed for the gas composition and flow rates of
the situation for which there is a temporary permit (see section 7 for further information).
4) Equipment design or the operating procedures, or both, must address all modelled
predictions that exceed the Alberta Ambient Air Quality Objectives, excluding predicted
values that meet the risk-based criteria. The risk-based criteria only apply to temporary
events.
a) Risk-based criteria for temporary events allow limited exclusion of predicted ambient
air quality results, provided that
i) the 99th percentile predicted values at a receptor do not exceed the one-hour SO2
Alberta ambient air quality objective, and
ii) the 99.9th percentile predicted values do not exceed a predicted one-hour SO2
ambient concentration of 900 micrograms (μg) per m3.
Note that whereas model predictions up to 900 μg/m3 will be considered, actual
exceedances of the Alberta Ambient Air Quality Objectives are never permitted.
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b) Risk-based criteria are incorporated into the flare and incinerator spreadsheets for
screening modelling.
c) If refined modelling is required to determine whether the temporary event meets the
risk-based criteria, the refined modelling input files from the spreadsheet must be used.
d) The AER Authorizations Branch will also consider use of the risk-based criteria in
situations where air quality management plans (see appendix 7) are necessary to ensure
compliance with the Alberta Ambient Air Quality Objectives.
5) Concurrent temporary sour gas burning (i.e., multiple well test flaring/ incinerating) must not
occur within 20 km of each other unless a licensee can demonstrate that the cumulative
emissions from flaring can meet the AAAQO.
6) Licensees must retain, for one year after the flaring/incineration event, information on
dispersion assessments for flares or incinerators that require dispersion modelling but do not
require a flaring permit (see section 3.3.2). This information must be provided to the AER
Authorizations Branch upon request.
“Nonroutine” applies to intermittent and infrequent flaring, venting, and incineration. There are
two types of nonroutine flaring: planned flaring and unplanned flaring.
• Planned flaring—Flare events where the operator has control over when flaring will occur,
how long it will occur and the flow rates. Planned flaring results from the intentional
depressurization of processing equipment or piping systems. Examples of planned flaring
include pipeline blowdowns, equipment depressurization, start-ups, facility turnarounds, and
well tests. Note that well testing dispersion modelling criteria are addressed in section
7.12.4.
− Upset flaring occurs when one or more process parameters fall outside the allowable
operating or design limits and flaring is required to aid in bringing the production back
under control. Examples of upset flaring include: off-spec product, hydrates, loss of
electrical power, process upset, and operation error.
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− Emergency flaring occurs when safety controls within the facility are enacted to
depressurize equipment to avoid possible injury or property loss resulting from
explosion, fire, or catastrophic equipment failure. Examples of upset flaring include PSV
overpressure and emergency shutdown.
Figure 8 summarizes the process for managing the nonroutine flaring of sour gas.
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1) The licensee, operator, or approval holder must evaluate impacts of nonroutine sour gas
flaring on ambient air quality if
a) it is proposed to burn sour gas containing 10 mol/kmol H2S (1 per cent H2S) or more, or
b) 1 tonne of sulphur mass is released during the event or the day (for multiple releases).
Single nonroutine flare events that are predicted to be less than or equal to 15 minutes in
duration and predicted to emit less than 1 tonne of sulphur over a rolling 24-hour period are
exempt from modelling requirements.
2) For new permanent flare stacks the licensee, operator, or approval holder must meet
nonroutine flaring dispersion modelling criteria effective immediately upon the sanctioning
of this framework.
3) Unless the AER requires otherwise, where previous modelling reports of nonroutine flare
events show compliance with the AAAQO using tools and methods no longer accepted by
AEP (e.g., SCREEN3, RTDM, ISC3, AQMG, and AER low risk criteria), the facility can
continue to operate as is. If any emission changes occur at the respective facility or if the
AER requests that new dispersion modelling be conducted for any reason, the operator will
apply the flare management strategy flowchart (figure 9) and will reassess dispersion
modelling using current modelling methodology and tools.
4) For permanent flare stacks the licensee, operator, or approval holder must assess nonroutine
flaring dispersion modelling criteria within the following timelines where facilities lack
evidence of dispersion modelling or where facilities are unable to satisfy the AAAQO for
nonroutine flaring events using tools and methods no longer accepted by AEP:
a) Sour gas processing plants: Within one year upon sanctioning of the framework.
b) Compressor stations and oil and gas batteries: Within two years following sanctioning of
the framework.
c) Well sites and pipeline risers: Within four years following sanctioning of the framework.
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Flaring Modelling Guidance. The flare management strategy flowchart and refined
modelling must be reapplied if facility operation or design changes significantly.
7) If modelling of worst-case scenarios shows that the predicted 99.9th percentile hourly
concentrations are lower than the AER SO2 evacuation criteria from Directive 071 and the
predicted 90th percentile hourly concentration is higher than the AAAQO for SO2, then for
each unplanned flaring event at the facility, the licensee, operator, or approval holder must
do post-event dispersion modelling. (See section 7.12.5[11]).
8) For planned flaring events, the licensee, operator, or approval holder must develop flare
management plans that meet the risk-based criteria to ensure that the AAAQO are not
exceeded, and implement them during flaring. It is acceptable for modelling to be based on
actual flows and gas compositions, not licensed values.
9) If refined modelling for nonroutine flaring is required, the licensee must not exceed the risk-
based criteria maximum number of flaring hours per calendar year described in AEP’s Non-
Routine Flaring Modelling Guidance table 1. The licensee, operator, or approval holder must
log all flaring events, including flare duration, volume, and rates.
10) If nonroutine flaring exceeds the risk-based criteria maximum number of flaring hours per
year described in AEP’s Non-Routine Flaring Modelling Guidance table 1 or if the event
results in an exceedance of the Alberta Ambient Air Quality Objectives for SO2, the licensee,
operator, or approval holder must conduct post-event dispersion modelling (see section
7.12.5[11]) and contact the AER Authorizations Branch immediately.
12) If the AER Authorizations Branch determines that the dispersion modelling has not been
completed in accordance with Directive 060 requirements, the licensee, operator, or approval
holder may be subject to a regulatory response.
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13) The licensee, operator, or approval holder is not required to provide copies of nonroutine
dispersion modelling or a flare management strategy flowchart to the AER unless requested.
Upon request, the licensee, operator, or approval holder must provide the evaluation to the
AER within five working days.
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2) The licensee, operator, or approval holder must burn all nonconserved volumes of gas if
volumes and flow rates are sufficient to support stable combustion.
a) The AER may investigate vented volumes of 500 m3/day, or even lower, if it appears
that stable combustion of the gas may be feasible. Upon request, the licensee, operator,
or approval holder must provide its justification for volumes not combusted. Vented
volumes include process venting, tank venting, and surface casing vents but exclude
venting from pneumatic instrumentation and pumps.
b) Where metering is not required for gas vented in association with heavy crude or crude
bitumen production, the AER may at any time request a new GOR or hourly rate test to
be performed to verify vented volumes. Refer to Directive 017: Measurement
Requirements for Oil and Gas Operations section 12.2.2 for acceptable testing methods.
Upon request, the operator must provide the evaluation to the AER within 30 working
days.
3) Provided that all other requirements in section 8 of this directive are met, section 8.031 of
the OGCR permits the connection of pressure-relieving devices at oil production batteries to
open tanks (i.e., “pop tanks”).
5) Unless directed by the AER to flare, incinerate, or conserve all casing gas and tank-top gas,
temporary, short-term venting is allowed at wells (e.g., for well unloading and liquid
cleanup), facilities, batteries where conservation is in place (see partial equipment outages in
table 2), and pipelines (for natural gas transmission systems, see section 6.3), with the
following conditions:
a) Gas must contain less than 10 mol/kmol H2S and must not result in exceedances of the
AAAQO outside the lease boundary.
b) Gas must not contain any free hydrocarbon liquid (if free hydrocarbon liquids are
present in the produced gas, a flare [or other gas combustion device] and liquid
separation must be used).
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c) All liquids must be separated and contained in accordance with the storage requirements
of Directive 055.
d) Total gas volume must not exceed 2 103 m3, and the duration must not exceed 24 hours.
(This does not include the cleanout phase for well testing and servicing, when liquids
and noncombustible gases may prevent stable combustion. See section 8.5.)
e) The licensee, operator, or approval holder must conduct notification in accordance with
section 3.8 and table 2.
f) The AER field centre may consider alternatives to these requirements should special
circumstances warrant. The licensee, operator, or approval holder must contact the
appropriate AER field centre for approval of alternatives. For pipeline venting
exemptions to these requirements, see section 6.2.
6) The licensee or operator must notify residents and the appropriate AER field centre of
nonroutine venting within 500 m and must comply with Directive 056 in respect of
providing information about continuous flaring, incinerating, and venting to persons entitled
it. Refer to section 3.8 for nonroutine venting notification requirements.
7) Vented gas must not constitute an unacceptable fire or explosion hazard and must comply
with the spacing requirements in section 7.8. Venting must also not occur closer than
a) 25 m from any flame-type equipment (for diesel engines equipped with air intake
shutoff device, see AER Directive 036: Drilling Blowout Prevention Requirements and
Procedures);
b) 50 m from a wellhead for vent stacks other than surface casing vents, or
c) 25 m from a wellhead for heavy oil/bitumen well, storage tank, or other ignitable vapour
including lined earth excavations used for waste oil storage.
8) A flame arrester or equivalent safety device, or proper engineering and operating procedures
(e.g., sufficient sweep gas velocity) must be used on all vent lines connecting oil storage
tanks to flare or incinerator stacks.
a) Sour pressure-relief valves must be tied into flare systems if the gas contains more than
10 mol/kmol H2S or result in off-lease H2S odours.
2) At crude bitumen batteries, H2S must not be vented to the atmosphere at a release rate
greater than 0.04 m3/hr.
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a) Sour pressure-relief valves must be tied into flare systems if the total H2S release rate is
greater than 0.04 m3/hr H2S or results in off-lease H2S odours.
3) Venting and/or fugitive emissions must not result in any H2S odours outside the lease
boundary. Venting and/or fugitive emissions must not result in any offensive hydrocarbon
odours outside the lease boundary that, in the opinion of the AER, are unreasonable either
because of their frequency, their proximity to surface improvements and surface
development (as defined in Directive 056), their duration, or their strength.
a) The AER recommends that PSVs and blowdown systems be connected to a flare system
where such systems are installed.
4) Venting must not result in exceedances of the AAAQO outside the lease boundary.
2) The licensee or approval holder must ensure that vented gas from dehydrators meets all
requirements specified in Directive 039: Revised Program to Reduce Benzene Emissions
from Glycol Dehydrators.
1) Noncombustible gas mixtures containing odorous compounds including H2S must not be
vented to the atmosphere if off-lease odours may result. Alternatives to venting such gas
include flaring or incinerating with sufficient fuel gas to ensure destruction of odourous
compounds.
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Gas conservation in long-term coalbed methane projects must be evaluated, and test durations
are limited by requirements found in section 3.2.
a) These programs must meet or exceed the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers
(CAPP) Best Management Practice for Fugitive Emissions Management.
2) The licensee, operator, or approval holder must use pressurized tank trucks or trucks with
suitable and functional emission controls when transporting sour fluids from upstream
petroleum industry facilities.
8.7.1 Background
In January 2014, a panel of AER hearing commissioners conducted an inquiry on odours and
emissions from heavy oil operations in the Peace River area of Alberta. On March 31, 2014, the
panel released Decision 2014 ABAER 005: Report of Recommendations on Odours and
Emissions in the Peace River Area. The AER accepted all of the panel’s recommendations
within its jurisdiction. The commitments the AER made in its response to the report included
requiring that heavy oil and bitumen operations in the Peace River area capture and flare,
incinerate, or conserve all casing gas and tank-top gas.
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8.7.3 Requirements
1) Unless otherwise directed in Bulletin 2014-17, licensees, operators, and approval holders
that produce heavy oil and bitumen in the Peace River area, as illustrated on figure 10, must
a) capture and flare, incinerate, or conserve all casing gas and tank-top gas; or
b) shut in all wells that are venting casing gas or tank-top gas.
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1) Guidelines in ID 2001-03 apply to sour gas plants and other upstream petroleum facilities
such as oil production batteries, gas batteries, and pipeline facilities.
2) For in situ bitumen sites, the sulphur recovery requirements in table 1 of ID 2001-03 apply.
The sulphur inlet used to determine the sulphur recovery requirement in table 1 is based on
total sulphur emissions from combustion of sour produced gas as fuel or by flaring or
incineration divided by the number of days over a calendar quarter-year.
Solution gas conservation clustering schemes that have a total inlet sulphur of between 1 and
5 tonnes/day may be considered for flexibility by AEP and the AER in the application of
ID 2001-03. Provisions for deviations from the sulphur recovery guidelines are in section 4 of
ID 2001-03.
1) The licensee or operator must apply to the AER for a variance from the sulphur recovery
guidelines as part of related production project applications submitted to the AER. The
application must take the form of a nonroutine Directive 056 application, and applicants
must indicate on the application that the facility will NOT comply with the requirements of
Directive 060.
2) The licensee or operator must demonstrate to the AER, using the methodology in section 2.9,
that implementing sulphur recovery would make the gas plant uneconomic.
a) If gas production with sulphur recovery is economic, the licensee or operator must
implement sulphur recovery.
3) The licensee or operator must demonstrate that revenues and cost estimates are reasonable.
a) Capital cost estimates for sulphur recovery must be based on appropriate technologies.
The licensee or operator must identify cost-effective processes suited to the facilities in
question.
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i) volumes of gas available, including assessment of clustering other gas sources in the
area
ii) incremental energy (e.g., fuel gas) requirements for gas compression and processing
related to gas sweetening
iii) incremental energy (fuel gas) requirements for sulphur recovery processes
iv) H2S concentration of gas, along with expected average sulphur emissions and
variability of sulphur emissions
4) The licensee or operator must consult with residents within the radius set out in Directive
056, specifically explaining that a variance of the sulphur recovery guidelines is being
applied for. Any objections must be disclosed in related facility applications.
5) The AER and AEP will consider the scope of the production project, the duration of the
sulphur emissions, and the views of the local public in making decisions on applying the
sulphur recovery guidelines.
a) The existing processes used for EPEA approvals for sour gas processing plants and for
AER approvals will be used to measure public acceptance of any proposals. If there are
no unacceptable impacts and nearby residents do not object, meeting the sulphur
recovery guidelines may not be required for solution gas facilities.
b) The AER does not allow multiple nonsulphur-recovery sour operating sites in close
proximity where it is practical to consolidate the facilities in one location and install
sulphur recovery.
i) Sour gas facility proliferation guidelines in ID 2001-03 section 6 stipulate how the
AER will assess this matter.
6) The variances do not apply to sour gas production and processing facilities handling
primarily nonassociated gas.
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a) Release reporting requirements are defined in IL 98-01 and AEP’s Release Reporting
Guideline.
b) Logs must include information on complaints related to flaring, incineration, and
venting and how these complaints were investigated and addressed.
c) Logs must describe each nonroutine flaring, incineration, and venting incident and any
changes made to prevent future nonroutine events from occurring.
d) Logs must include the date, time, duration, gas source or type (e.g., sour inlet gas, acid
gas), rates, and volumes for each incident.
e) Logs must be kept for at least 12 months.
2) Flaring, incineration, and venting records must be made available to the AER upon request
for each production facility, pipeline, and gas processing facility where flaring, incineration,
and venting occur.
a) A licensee, operator, or approval holder may retain logs for remote or semi-attended
facilities at a central location (e.g., a regional office) where public complaints related to
the facility in question would normally be received.
3) In situations governed by temporary flaring/incineration permits, a sour gas
flaring/incineration data summary report (see appendix 6) must be completed in full and
submitted to the AER Authorizations Branch within three weeks of the flaring/incineration
completion date.
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AER Documents *
Oil and Gas Conservation Rules ST13A: Alberta Gas Plant/Gas Gathering System
Activities—Annual Statistics
Directive 007: Volumetric and Infrastructure Requirements ST13B: Alberta Gas Plant/Gas Gathering System
Directive 008: Surface Casing Depth Requirements Activities—Monthly Statistics
Directive 017: Measurement Requirements for Oil and Gas ST13C: Alberta Gas Gathering System Activities—Monthly
Operations Statistics
Directive 036: Drilling Blowout Prevention Requirements ST60: Crude Oil and Crude Bitumen Batteries Monthly
and Procedures Flaring, Venting, and Production Data
Directive 037: Service Rig Inspection Manual ST60B: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring and Venting
Directive 038: Noise Control Report
Directive 039: Revised Program to Reduce Benzene
Emissions from Glycol Dehydrators Alberta Energy Document
Directive 040: Pressure and Deliverability Testing Oil and Information Letter (IL) 99-19: Otherwise Flared Solution
Gas Wells—Minimum Requirements and Recommended Gas Royalty Waiver Program
Practices
Directive 055: Storage Requirements for the Upstream Alberta Environment and Parks Documents
Petroleum Industry Air Quality Model Guideline
Directive 056: Energy Development Applications and Alberta Ambient Air Quality Objectives and Guidelines
Schedules Environmental Protection and Enhancement Act
Directive 065: Resources Applications for Conventional Oil Non-routine Flaring Management: Modelling Guidance
and Gas Reservoirs Release Reporting Guideline 1028-F
Directive 066: Requirements and Procedures for Pipelines
Directive 071: Emergency Preparedness and Response Alberta Utilities Commission Document
Requirements for the Upstream Petroleum Industry Alberta Utilities Commission Rule 007: Applications for
Power Plants, Substations, Transmission Lines, and
Interim Directive (ID) 91-03: Heavy Oil/Oil Sands Industrial System Designations
Operations
ID 2001-03: Sulphur Recovery Guidelines for the Province Other Documents
of Alberta Alberta Pressure Equipment Safety Regulations, Alberta
Safety Codes Act, The Pressure Equipment Safety
Informational Letter (IL) 98-01: A Memorandum of Authority (AR 49/2006)
Understanding Between Alberta Environment and the ANSI/API-521, Pressure-Relieving and Depressuring
Alberta Energy and Utilities Board Regarding System, American Petroleum Institute
Coordination of Release Notification Requirements and Clean Air Strategic Alliance (CASA), 1998, Management of
Subsequent Regulatory Response Routine Solution Gas Flaring in Alberta, Report and
Recommendations of the Flaring Project Team
AERflare.xls and AERincin.xls spreadsheets (Edmonton, Alberta)
AERflare: A Screening Model for Non-routine Flaring CAPP, 2013, Sour Non-routine Flaring Framework
Approvals and Routine Flare Air Dispersion Modelling for CAPP, 2006, Best Management Practices for Facility Flare
Sour Gas Facilities Reduction
ABflare: A Refined Air Quality Dispersion Model for (continued)
Evaluating Non-routine Flaring for Sour Gas Facilities
*
AER documents are available on the AER website at www.aer.ca and from AER Order Fulfillment, Suite 1000, 250 – 5 Street SW,
Calgary AB T2P 0R4; telephone: 1-855-297-8311 (option 2); fax: 403-297-7040; email: InformationRequest@aer.ca.
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Acid gas Gas that is separated in the treating of solution or nonassociated gas that contains
hydrogen sulphide (H2S), total reduced sulphur compounds, and/or carbon dioxide
(CO2).
Associated gas Gas that is produced from an oil or bitumen reservoir. This may apply to gas
produced from a gas cap or in conjunction with oil or bitumen.
Carbon The CCE quantifies the effectiveness of a device to oxidize hydrocarbons and is the
conversion relative conversion of carbon compounds in the reactants to products of complete
efficiency (CCE) and incomplete combustion. Incomplete combustion products include unburnt
hydrocarbons (hydrocarbon [HC] measured as methane [CH4]) and other partially
oxidized carbon compounds, such as carbon monoxide (CO) in the exhaust. CCE is
reported as the percentage of carbon in the fuel that is converted to CO2 and is
obtained from
Mass Rate of Carbon in the Fuel Converted to CO2
CCE =
Mass Rate of Carbon in the Fuel
With this definition, the mass and molar efficiency are the same. An adjustment
must be made if there is CO2 in the inlet stream, as it does not react. The adjustment
depends on the fraction of CO2, fuel and hydrocarbons C X H Y , fuel in the gas stream
entering the device and the number of carbon moles (X) per molecule of
hydrocarbon. CCE can be determined from exhaust and fuel concentration
measurements using
CO2, stack − (CO2, fuel ( X C X H Y , fuel ))(COstack + HCstack )
CCE =
(CO2, stack + COstack + HCstack )
This equation reduces to the following familiar expression if the inlet does not
contain CO2 (CO2,inlet = 0):
CO2, stack
CCE =
(CO2, stack + COstack + HCstack )
Clustering The practice of gathering the solution gas from several flares or vents at a common
point for conservation.
Combustion The CE quantifies the effectiveness of a device to fully oxidize a fuel. Products of
efficiency (CE) complete combustion (i.e., CO2, H2O, and sulphur dioxide [SO2]) result in all of the
chemical energy released as heat. Products of incomplete combustion (e.g., CO,
unburnt hydrocarbons, other partially oxidized carbon compounds, H2S, and other
reduced and partially oxidized sulphur compounds) reduce the amount of energy
released. CE is reported as the percentage of the net heating value that is released as
heat through combustion.
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Conservation The recovery of solution gas for use as fuel for production facilities, other useful
purposes (e.g., power generation), sale, or beneficial injection into an oil or gas
pool.
Conservation Conservation efficiency (%) =
efficiency (Solution gas production – Flared – Vented) / (Solution gas production) × 100
Conserving Any potential tie-in point that is conserving gas, such as batteries, plants,
facility compressor stations, pipelines, and pump stations.
Crude bitumen Refer to the Oil and Gas Conservation Act.
Crude bitumen A crude bitumen battery is an oil battery with crude bitumen production that has a
battery density of 920 kg/m3 or greater at 15 degrees Celsius.
Crude oil A mixture mainly of pentanes and heavier hydrocarbons that may be contaminated
with sulphur compounds, that is recovered or is recoverable at a well from an
underground reservoir and that is liquid at the conditions under which its volume is
measured or estimated, and includes all other hydrocarbon mixtures so recovered or
recoverable except raw gas, condensate or crude bitumen.
Crude oil battery An oil battery with crude oil production excluding production that has a density of
920 kg/m3 or greater at 15 degrees Celsius.
Emergency flaring Emergency flaring occurs when safety controls within the facility are enacted to
depressurize equipment to avoid possible injury or property loss resulting from
explosion, fire or catastrophic equipment failure. Examples of upset flaring include:
PSV overpressure; and emergency shut down.
Gas battery A system or arrangement of tanks and other surface equipment (including
interconnecting piping) that receives the effluent from one or more wells that might
provide measurement and separation, compression, dehydration, dew point control,
H2S scavenging where <0.1 tonne/day of sulphur is being treated, line heating, or
other gas handling functions prior to the delivery to market or other disposition.
This does not include gas processing equipment that recovers more than 2 m3/day of
liquids or that processes more than 0.1 tonne/day of sulphur.
Gas processing A system or arrangement of equipment used for the extraction of H2S, helium,
plant ethane, natural gas liquids, or other substances from raw gas; does not include a
wellhead separator, treater, dehydrator, or production facility that recovers less than
2 m3/day of hydrocarbon liquids without using a liquid extraction process (e.g.,
refrigerant, desiccant). In addition, does not include an arrangement of equipment
that removes small amounts of sulphur (less than 0.1 tonne/day) through the use of
nonregenerative scavenging chemicals that generate no H2S or SO2.
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Nonassociated Gas produced from a gas pool (i.e., not associated with oil or bitumen reservoirs or
gas with production).
Nonroutine “Nonroutine” applies to intermittent and infrequent flaring venting and incineration.
flaring, venting, There are two types of nonroutine flaring: planned flaring and unplanned flaring.
incineration
Oil battery A system or arrangement of tanks or other surface equipment or devices receiving
the effluent of one or more wells for the purpose of separation and measurement
prior to the delivery to market or other disposition.
Planned Flaring Flare events where the operator has control over when flaring will occur, how long
it will occur and the flow rates. Planned flaring results from the intentional de-
pressurization of processing equipment or piping systems. Examples of planned
flaring include pipeline blowdowns, equipment depressurization, start-ups, facility
turnarounds, and well tests.
Qualified A person holding an accredited professional qualification and acting within that
technical person’s professional scope of practice.
professional
Risk-based Refer to AEP’s Non-Routine Flaring Management Modelling Guidance for the
criteria purpose of Directive 060 only.
Routine flaring, “Routine” applies to continuous or intermittent flaring, venting, and incineration
venting, that occurs on a regular basis due to normal operation. Examples of routine flaring
incineration include: glycol dehydrator reboiler still vapour flaring; storage tank vapour flaring;
flash tank vapour flaring; and solution gas flaring.
Schools All public, private, and charter preschool, elementary, and secondary schools. This
includes First Nations and Métis schools, but does not include a parent-provided
home education program.
Screening This is the quickest and simplest dispersion modelling approach. Screening
assessment assessments usually provide a conservative (worst-case) estimate of downwind
concentrations. If exceedances of the Alberta Ambient Air Quality Objectives and
Guidelines are predicted by a screening assessment, a refined assessment may be
necessary. Alternatively, stack design parameters may be modified until predicted
ambient air quality meets the Alberta Ambient Air Quality Objectives and
Guidelines.
Site A single surface lease (pads counted as one lease) where gas is flared or vented
Solution gas All gas that is separated from condensate, oil, or bitumen production.
Source All gas flared, incinerated, or vented from a single operating site, such as an oil
battery or multiple-well pad.
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Sulphur The SCE quantifies the effectiveness of a device to oxidize sulphur and is the
conversion relative conversion of sulphur compounds in the reactants to products of complete
efficiency (SCE) and incomplete combustion. Incomplete combustion products include unburnt H2S,
other reduced sulphur compounds (measured as H2S), such as carbonyl sulphide
and carbon disulphide (especially if present in the fuel), and other partially oxidized
sulphur compounds, such as sulphur trioxide (SO3) in the exhaust (measured as
SO3). SCE is reported as the percentage of sulphur in the fuel that is converted to
SO2 and is obtained from
Mass Rate of Sulphur in the Fuel Converted to SO2
SCE =
Mass Rate of Sulphur in the Fuel
With this definition, the mass and molar efficiency are the same. SCE can be
determined from stack gas concentration measurements using
SO2, stack
SCE =
( SO2, stack + SO3, stack + H 2 S stack )
Sulphur All air emissions of sulphur-containing compounds, including SO2, H2S, and total
emissions reduced sulphur compounds (e.g., mercaptans). Sulphur emissions from flare stacks
are expected to be primarily in the form of SO2, with minor amounts of other
compounds.
Upset Flaring Upset flaring occurs when one or more process parameters fall outside the
allowable operating or design limits and flaring is required to aid in bringing the
production back under control. Examples of upset flaring include: off-spec product;
hydrates; loss of electrical power; process upset; and operation error.
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Appendix 3 Abbreviations
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Concerns about flaring prompted the EUB (now the AER) and Alberta Environment (now Alberta
Environment and Parks) to support Alberta Research Council research on flaring. Findings reported
in 1996 suggested that the efficiency of flare stacks at destroying waste gas was not as high as
originally thought and that various products of incomplete combustion were in flare emissions.
The EUB then consulted with stakeholders from industry, the public, and other government sectors
and reviewed existing policies on solution gas conservation. CAPP brought the issue of flaring to
the CASA board of directors in November 1996 and established the Flaring Project Team in
February 1997 to develop recommendations to address potential and observed impacts of flaring. In
its 1998 final report, Management of Routine Solution Gas Flaring in Alberta: Report and
Recommendations of the Flaring Project Team, the Flaring Project Team recommended a
framework for solution gas flaring management and a decision tree process for reducing flaring.
In 2000, a new CASA team, the Flaring/Venting Project Team, convened to review progress made
on the 1998 recommendations as well as make further recommendations on flaring, incineration,
and venting. The result was the 2002 report, Gas Flaring and Venting in Alberta: Report and
Recommendations for the Upstream Petroleum Industry by the Flaring/Venting Project Team. The
report said that implementation of the solution gas management framework and the flare reduction
targets by the upstream petroleum industry had successfully resulted in a 53 per cent reduction in
solution gas flaring relative to the 1996 baseline.
On the basis of that success, the Flaring/Venting Project Team recommended that a similar decision
tree process be applied to solution gas venting, well test flaring, and facility flaring. The team
recommended that a 50 per cent reduction target be maintained for all solution gas flaring in
Alberta relative to the 1996 baseline. Additional reports and recommendations were put forward in
September 2004 and in March and June 2005. These recommendations were implemented through
a rewrite of Directive 060 released in November 2006. Significant changes included changing the
economic threshold of the feasibility test for solution gas conservation from a net present value of
zero to -$55,000. Also, economic evaluations were no longer required for sites that flared,
incinerated, or vented less than 900 m3/day of solution gas. Another significant addition to the
directive was the concept of a duration limit for well test flaring and incineration.
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Ongoing Research
The AER supports the 2004 CASA recommendations for additional research so that Alberta can
continue to move towards the use of practical flare combustion efficiency standards where flaring is
necessary. The AER expects that industry will support and participate in the funding of continued
research focusing on
• understanding the relationship between gas composition and combustion efficiency, including
the effects of H2S content;
• understanding the effects of flare stack design, including flare tips on combustion efficiency;
and
• reviewing the results of any field testing of combustion efficiency monitoring methodologies.
The AER supports the Petroleum Technology Alliance’s Alberta Upstream Petroleum Research
Fund (AUPRF). AUPRF is an industry-sponsored fund supported by CAPP and the Explorer and
Producers Association of Canada (EPAC). The objective of AUPRF is to provide an efficient and
effective mechanism to coordinate, initiate, fund, complete and communicate on environmental
research that is needed by the industry and government regulators to enable a prosperous upstream
oil and gas industry that achieves socially and environmentally responsible recovery of Canada’s
petroleum resources through effective, market-driven collaboration. AUPRF supports practical
science-based studies that develop credible and relevant information to address knowledge gaps in
the understanding and management of high priority environmental and social matters related to oil
and gas exploration and development in Alberta. Research reports are shared broadly with the oil
and gas industry as well as with regulators, government agencies, and other stakeholders.
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If flared or incinerated volumes are expected to exceed the volume allowance threshold during
temporary operations, more information must be submitted to the AER.
c) if a well test is proposed, the total volume requested for the test.
2) For well tests that are expected to exceed the volume allowance threshold, the request must
include the following information:
a) A brief description of the development required to bring the well onto production (e.g.,
length and size of pipeline to tie in well, well site facilities, compression, gas processing
facilities)
b) The minimum recoverable reserves required for the well to be economic (minimum
economic reserves)
c) Details of the analysis used to determine the minimum economic reserves. Licensees may
use simplified “netback” economics showing the current operating profit (revenues minus
operating costs) to estimate the recoverable reserves required to pay out facility investment
costs; alternatively, licensees may choose to present a more detailed economic analysis
involving features such as discounted gas flow projections)
d) The estimated recovery factor and surface loss for the pool
f) The amount of reservoir depletion being targeted by the test (the licensee must provide a
brief description justifying this depletion in relation to the minimum economic reserve).
The recommended maximum pressure depletion guidelines are
ii) 0.5 per cent of the reservoir pressure above 500 kPa.
For example, a maximum depletion guideline of 100 kPa is targeted for a reservoir with an
initial pressure of 15 000 kPa.
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g) Justification for pretest cleanup and servicing flaring or incineration if related volumes
exceed 200 103 m3
Note that an incremental volume of up to 200 103 m3 may be added to the permit request in order to
provide for pretest cleanup and servicing operations if these are needed to establish the minimum
economic reserve without additional justification.
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018) 89
Appendix 6
Sour Gas Flaring/Incineration Data Summary Report
This form must be completed in full and submitted within three weeks of the flaring completion date or, in the event no
flaring took place, within three weeks of the expiry date. Submit to
Approval no:
Company:
Approved (max.): 103 m3/d Actual (max.): 103 m3/d Actual (avg.): 103 m3/d
Actual fuel gas flared (if applicable): Volume: 103 m3 Rate: 103 m3
Flaring dates:
Meteorological monitoring conducted? No Yes (If yes, provide electronic copy of monitoring report)
Air monitoring conducted? No Yes (If yes, provide electronic copy of monitoring report)
Exceedances of the Alberta ambient air quality objectives (H2S or SO2)? No Yes (If yes, provide comments)
Comments:
If yes, was the field centre contacted? No Yes If yes, provide contact name:
Comments:
Company representative:
Signature:
Alberta Energy Regulator Suite 1000, 250 – 5 Street SW, Calgary, Alberta T2P 0R4 Page 1 of 1
Alberta Energy Regulator
If exceedances of the risk-based criteria for SO2 (see appendix 8) are predicted and it is not
proposed that flare/incinerator design parameters be altered to mitigate the potential exceedances,
approval may be granted by the AER if suitable control measures are in place. In such situations, an
air quality management plan must be submitted with the temporary permit request. The
management plan must outline how predicted exceedances of the Alberta Ambient Air Quality
Objectives and Guidelines will be avoided so that the risk-based criteria are met.
1) Restrictions during specific meteorological conditions that will limit or avoid operations under
conditions that result in predicted exceedances.
i) time of day,
2) The management plan must include specifications for locating meteorological monitoring
equipment (if used). Wind monitoring devices must be elevated above the height of trees
surrounding the site.
iii) requirements that supplemental fuel gas meet a minimum heating value or exit velocity.
5) Ambient air monitoring (mobile and/or stationary) must be located where exceedances of the
Alberta Ambient Air Quality Objectives and Guidelines are predicted.
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b) The Alberta Ambient Air Quality Objectives and Guidelines must not be exceeded, based
on a one-hour average. To accomplish this, ambient air monitoring must occur at intervals
of 15 minutes or less. If the 30-minute average exceeds the Alberta Ambient Air Quality
Objectives and Guidelines, the flaring or incineration operation must be immediately
shut in.
6) If there is more than one meteorological condition that requires a management response, or if a
combination of meteorological restrictions and ambient air monitoring is proposed, the
management plan must be summarized in a flowchart that is clear and concise and can be
applied by on-site staff during flaring or incinerating operations. Furthermore, if multiple flow
rates are proposed in the management plan, the risk-based criteria must be met for each flow
rate.
a) The management plan must clearly specify the frequency at which the meteorological or
ambient air quality monitoring data will be monitored by on-site staff. An averaging time
of no more than 15 minutes is mandatory, as this allows for observations of trends and
provides enough time to respond to elevated concentrations.
7) The management plan must clearly define under what conditions flaring or incineration may
resume if suspended or may return to normal operations if a management option such as fuel
gas is proposed. Flaring or incineration must remain suspended for at least one hour before
operations may resume in order to prevent an exceedance or to respond to an exceedance.
a) Flaring or incineration may begin again after one hour or after meteorological conditions
change and remain favourable for 30 minutes, whichever is longer.
8) Real-time dispersion modelling flare management plans must be based on maximum predicted
concentrations. Pseudo input parameters must be calculated using AERflare. If real-time
dispersion modelling goes down, the operator must revert to a conventional flare management
plan or shut in.
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The AER sour well test flaring and incineration permit spreadsheets and technical descriptions are
available on the AER website www.aer.ca under Rules & Directives : Directives : Directive 060.
They provide a screening analysis of the SO2 and H2S dispersion from permanent and temporary
flares and incinerators. If the screening level maximum concentration predictions in parallel and
complex airflow terrain for a source meet the Alberta Ambient Air Quality Objectives and
Guidelines (AAAQO), no further analysis is required. The spreadsheet can be submitted in support
of the dispersion modelling assessment.
Maximum predictions for routine sources must meet the AAAQO. Due to the short-term nature of
temporary nonroutine sources, risk-based criteria can be applied. The risk-based criteria apply to
well tests and other temporary nonroutine flaring and incineration events. For further information
about the spreadsheet refer to the AER flare User Guide: A Screening Model for Non-routine
Flaring Approvals and Routine Flare Air Dispersion Modelling for Sour Gas Facilities.
If it is not practical to modify flare or incinerator design parameters, you may consider evaluating
the proposed design with more refined dispersion modelling approaches. Additional refined
dispersion modelling is required if the screening level maximum concentration predictions in
parallel and complex airflow terrain for a source do not meet the AAAQO. A refined dispersion
modelling assessment must meet AEP’s Air Quality Model Guideline (2013) or Non-Routine
Flaring Management: Modelling Guidance (2013).
For routine flaring, a refined dispersion modelling assessment is also required if there are
continuous SO2 emission sources within 10 km of the location or within the isopleth of one-third of
the AAAQO for SO2 (as described in section 7.12.3), whichever distance is less. This requires that
the cumulative effects of the proposed flaring or incineration be assessed in combination with other
sources.
A licensee, operator, or approval holder is responsible for ensuring that appropriately trained and
qualified personnel complete the air quality evaluations.
1) A description of the meteorological data source (location, years, and months). For models that
require meteorological data, five years of meteorological data from a standard period is
recommended. Three months per year must be modelled from the data set centred about the
month of the requested permit date. The acceptable data sets are posted on the AEP website at
http://aep.alberta.ca/air/modelling/meteorological-data-for-dispersion-models.aspx. Additional
information about modelling and meteorological data requirements is on the AEP website.
2) A wind rose (a representation of the history of wind directions and wind speeds).
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018) 93
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3) Refined modelling source parameters for maximum flow rate (Qmax), average flow rate
(Qavg), and one-eighth maximum flow rate (Q/8) from the spreadsheet.
4) A summary of the model input parameters (a printed copy of the input file is preferred, as
output files may be large and need not be submitted).
5) The maximum predicted one-hour ambient air SO2 concentration for maximum flow rate
(Qmax), average flow rate (Qavg), and one-eighth maximum flow rate (Q/8).
6) If exceedances of the one-hour AAAQO for SO2 are predicted, a histogram of the overall
probability of exceedance based on meteorological data is to be calculated, as follows, by
dividing the number of hours with predicted exceedances by the total number of hours used in
the meteorological data set:
7) An interpretation of the modelling results (output files or model result printouts may be
included if not excessively large).
8) Histograms showing exceedances based on criteria (e.g., wind direction, wind speed, and
stability class).
If the risk-based criteria are not met, a management plan (see appendix 7) must be developed to
achieve the risk-based criteria. Requests with management plans must include enough information
so that the AER can assess the management plan, including
• meteorological conditions (stability class and range of wind speeds and directions) or times
of day that result in predicted exceedance of the one-hour AAAQO for SO2,
• maximum predicted SO2 concentration for each condition where exceedances are predicted,
and
• the expected overall probability of exceedances before and after implementation of the
management plan;
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• UTM coordinates of stationary monitors, as well as distance and direction from well;
3) a calculation of make-up fuel gas requirements as a percentage of the produced gas being
combusted (fuel gas may be used to increase plume rise; care should be taken to minimize fuel
gas waste); and
4) electronic copies (i.e., Microsoft Word or Excel files) of the management plan and decision tree
(if applicable).
The AERflare.xls and AERincin.xls spreadsheets also evaluate minimum and maximum exit
velocities with respect to down-wash criteria. The results will help the licensee, operator, or
approval holder optimize flare and incinerator design and verify parameters used for temporary
flaring and incineration permit requests.
1) If down-wash is predicted, the spreadsheet source parameters will conservatively account for
down-wash; however, it is recommended that the stack design parameters (e.g., stack diameter)
be modified to avoid down-wash.
2) The spreadsheet provides maximum and minimum exit diameters based on the recommended
exit velocities. You must size the exit diameter within the range of exit diameters provided in
AERflare.xls. Exit diameter is a permitted parameter. A qualified technical professional who is
a member of the association as defined in the Engineering and Geoscience Professions Act 24
must review the design parameters.
The licensee, operator, or approval holder may submit data based on modified modelling methods
for consideration; however, results from one of the accepted unmodified models must also be
submitted for comparison. Description and scientific justification of the modifications must be
provided. Generally, review of permit requests that use a modified modelling method requires more
time, and the AER may accept or reject the modified results at its discretion.
24
Engineering and Geoscience Professions Act RSA 2000 c. E-11, as amended.
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We will be flaring/incinerating/venting a (___ % H2S) well in accordance with AER Directive 060
at the location stated below.
Flaring/Incinerating/Venting Category
(check those that apply) AER Office (check one)
Well test flaring Bonnyville (780-826-5352)
Well test venting Drayton Valley (780-542-5182)
Well test incinerating Grande Prairie (780-538-5138)
Fort McMurray (780-743-7214)
(Check one) High Level (780-926-5399)
Oil well Medicine Hat (403-527-3385)
Gas well Midnapore (403-297-8303)
Red Deer (403-340-5454)
Slave Lake (780-843-2050
Edmonton - formerly St. Albert
(780-460-3800)
Wainwright (780-842-7570)
Flaring/Venting/Incinerating Comments
Well Licence No.
Well Name
Location of Well (LSD)
Estimated Flare/Incinerate/Vent Timing (30-day
window)*
Estimated Start Date
Estimated End Date
Flaring/Incinerating/Venting Duration
3 3
Estimated Volume (10 m /day)
Licensee or Operator Name
Licensee or Operator Representative
Contact Phone Number
Testing Contractor
Testing Representatives on Site
Daytime Cell Phone Number
Nighttime Cell Phone Number
Emergency Phone Number
Please phone (____) ____ - ______ if you would like notification 24 or 48 hours in advance of flaring/
incinerating/venting operations.
• 30-day window is to accommodate for weather and operational delays.
• Renotification is mandatory after 90 days.
Note:_______________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________
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The following serves to outline the agreement between __________________________ (applicant) and
__________________________ (landowner or occupant) respecting flaring at the well located at
W . The applicant agrees to not flare from the well before putting the well
on production except as stated below in this agreement or in an emergency. Venting is not to be used as
an alternative to flaring.
Exceptions
Flaring may occur as indicated below and is limited to at most two of the activities:
• Well testing Yes? ____ No?_____
• Well cleanup Yes? ____ No?_____
• Drillstem testing Yes? ____ No?_____
Emergencies
The licensee, operator, or approval holder may flare in emergency situations for safety of the public
or environmental protection.
If the ownership of the well is transferred to another licensee, operator, and/or approval holder, this
agreement will remain in effect for the new licensee, operator, or approval holder and it is the licensee,
operator, or approval holder’s responsibility to advise any successors of this agreement.
This agreement no longer applies once this well is tied into a production facility or once production
operations begin.
Location__________________________________
Telephone________________________________ Telephone_________________________________
Email/Fax________________________________ Email/Fax_________________________________
Date ____________________________
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The following minimum requirements must be met in any situation where it is proposed to
extinguish a flare pilot at a sour facility:
1) The maximum stabilized wellhead pressure must be determined based on the measured
stabilized static wellhead pressure corrected for the hydrostatic head of any liquid present in the
wellbore at the time of testing.
a) This correction for the liquid column hydrostatic head must use the density of the produced
water for the entire fluid column present in the wellbore.
b) The maximum stabilized static wellhead pressure must be determined by a qualified well
test professional using accepted engineering practices. AER Directive 040 provides
regulations for conducting pressure tests on wells.
2) The following features must be incorporated into the facility for consideration of the request to
extinguish the flare pilot:
a) Nonfragmenting rupture disks must be installed on the upstream side of all pressure safety
valves (PSVs). This is subject to section 38(1)(b) of the Pressure Equipment Safety
Regulation (AR 49/2006) administered by the Alberta Boilers Safety Association.
• A pressure gauge or suitable telltale indicator must be installed between each rupture
disk and the corresponding PSV to allow detection of leakage or a disk rupture.
b) Two block valves in series must be installed for manual depressurizing valves connected to
the flare.
c) The battery must be equipped with a pressure sensor, automatic emergency shutdown
valves (ESDVs), and a control system configured to isolate the battery from the well and
outlet gas pipeline. There must be no automatically controlled emergency depressurizing
valves connected to the flare.
3) Upstream piping to the well must be designed for the maximum pressure that might be
encountered. The minimum operating requirements for any facility approved for extinguishing
flare pilots include the following:
a) The licensee, operator, or approval holder must monitor and document on a weekly basis
the pressure between rupture disks and PSVs.
b) If a rupture disk fails or if odours result from gas released to the flare stack, the flare stack
must be lit and immediate notification must be given to the appropriate AER field centre,
followed by a written incident report giving particulars. Approval to extinguish the flare
pilot is then considered void until the licensee, operator, or approval holder demonstrates to
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the satisfaction of the appropriate AER field centre that related problems have been
successfully corrected.
c) The sweet gas or propane pilot must be ignited prior to any flaring or depressurizing at the
site.
d) The operation of the emergency shutdown system, including ESDVs, must be verified and
documented at least once a year.
e) AER approval to extinguish the flare pilot must be visibly displayed at each site.
4) Residents within the emergency planning zone (EPZ) must be notified of plans to extinguish
the flare pilot.
5) The following information must accompany the licensee’s, operator’s, or approval holder’s
request to extinguish flare pilots:
b) the maximum design operating pressure of the piping and pressure vessel systems for the
battery, including
i) a list of all PSVs connected to the flare and related release set-pressures, and
i) none of the wells connected to the facility are completed in pools that have active
injection or cycling schemes,
ii) rupture disks on PSVs and two valves in series have been installed on all streams tied
into the flare system,
iii) maximum H2S release rates will not exceed the level-1 or -2 sour well classification,
Directive 060: Upstream Petroleum Industry Flaring, Incinerating, and Venting (March 2018) 99