We keep field and plant work moving when mechanical, electrical, and control systems need repair. From Calgary, we support conventional oil and gas and oilsands work across Western Canada. Our work is built for sites where downtime is costly and the next step depends on the last one being finished cleanly. We bring the scope together around the equipment in front of us, so the job can move from diagnosis to repair without bouncing between disconnected trades. That shows up on turnarounds, maintenance windows, and live operating sites where the plan has to match the asset, the schedule, and the access limits on the ground. We stay close to the job so field teams can keep making progress instead of waiting on a new handoff.
Our maintenance and repair work keeps production and processing equipment ready for service. Mechanical work, repair and service, and field construction all play a part when a unit needs to be inspected, opened, restored, or put back in line. We focus on the parts of the job that affect uptime: worn components, damaged assemblies, and fit-up issues that can stall a larger shutdown. That shows up when a shutdown window is short and the site cannot wait for a second visit to solve the same problem. When a crew needs a practical repair path instead of a long wait, we use the tools and field experience to get the equipment back to a usable state and keep the rest of the site moving.
When a project needs a custom piece, our fabrication and machining capability shortens the gap between a broken part and a working one. We can rebuild parts that are no longer right for the field and make replacements that fit the current setup. We also support manufacturing and parts supply when a replacement has to be built, sourced, or finished to fit the current system. That reduces delay caused by missing hardware, worn surfaces, or a component that no longer matches the job. It also gives teams a tighter path when one shop needs to handle more than one step, from material selection through final fit and finish. We also keep the job practical when older assets need a correction that newer parts cannot match exactly.
Our electrical, instrumentation, and automation work keeps systems easier to install, monitor, and troubleshoot. Sensors, controls, and wiring can hold up an entire site if they are not set up cleanly. We work on the technical layers that let equipment read correctly and respond the way the operation expects. Clear measurement and stable controls reduce false alarms and make inspection and troubleshooting simpler for the next shift. Pipeline work follows the same logic. Tie-ins, operating changes, and field conditions all demand careful coordination, because one gap in the controls or one delay at a line segment can slow the rest of the schedule. We stay focused on the system the crew has to live with, not just the isolated part that failed.
Environmental work and safety training sit beside the physical repair, not after it. A clean jobsite, defined access, and a crew that understands the safety expectations make field work more predictable. FLINT emphasizes zero-injury goals, shared responsibility, and safe work for employees and clients, and that service scope shows up in how we plan and execute jobs. We carry that approach into environmental scope as well, where containment, cleanup, and site readiness need a clear plan before the job can proceed. That keeps the job controlled while the team keeps moving. It also helps field teams move through the job with fewer surprises when a site needs to stay operational or return to service quickly.
Across Calgary and Western Canada, we support energy and industrial teams that need more than one discipline on the same project. One site may need mechanical repair. Another may need fabrication. A third may need electrical or instrumentation troubleshooting. A fourth may need safety training or environmental support before the next phase can begin. We work across those combinations because downtime usually crosses trade lines. One outage, one repair, or one access issue can hold up several trades at once. By keeping the job tied to the equipment, the site condition, and the project window, we make it easier to keep maintenance moving. Rebuilds, construction, and field service can stay aligned with the plan.