Edmonton, AB, Canada
1One Call Locators Canada Ltd provides Pipe-Locating services in Edmonton, AB.
766 companies
Pipeline covers the construction, maintenance, integrity, and contracting side of oil, gas, and liquids pipelines, from gathering lines and tie-ins through mainline construction. Qualified pipeline contractors carry welder tickets, NDE crews, right-of-way experience, and the heavy equipment to deliver linefill-ready infrastructure. Compare pipeline builders, integrity specialists, and midstream service providers.
Edmonton, AB, Canada
1One Call Locators Canada Ltd provides Pipe-Locating services in Edmonton, AB.

Warburg, AB, CAN
Damage prevention starts before excavation equipment reaches the right-of-way. 3-D Line Locating supports pipeline and utility locating from Warburg, helping field teams identify buried facilities before construction, maintenance, or ground disturbance begins. We support pipe locating, buried utility locating, one-call ticket management, ground disturbance management, pipeline damage prevention, and Western Canadian field coordination. Across Alberta and British Columbia, 3-D combines pipeline and utility locating with one-call workflow management and long damage-prevention experience on pipeline and civil jobs. On pipeline, civil, oilfield, and industrial projects, the decision point is whether buried-facility risk is understood before ground disturbance starts. Reliable locating records, responsive dispatch, and practical right-of-way experience are the value 3-D brings to that stage of the job.
Fort St John, BC, Canada
Buried line strikes can shut down a wellsite, pipeline corridor, plant yard, or road project. Badger uses hydrovac excavation from Fort St John and other Canadian and U.S. locations to expose underground utilities with water and vacuum instead of open mechanical digging. We have worked since 1992 across oil and gas, energy, industrial, construction, transportation, telecommunications, and government markets. The Badger Hydrovac is built for non-destructive excavation where soil removal must be controlled around pipe, cable, conduit, and other buried assets. Daylighting helps confirm the location and depth of underground infrastructure before trenching, tie-ins, repairs, or civil construction. Our hydrovac process is suited to pipeline-adjacent excavation and transportation-related infrastructure exposure where access, spoil handling, and asset protection need to be planned together. For estimating, we focus the conversation on the excavation target, site access, soil conditions, disposal needs, and schedule. Our hydrovac team plans daylighting and trenching scopes around the asset being exposed and the field conditions around it.

Edmonton, AB, Canada
Pipeline and water infrastructure projects depend on pipe, fusion equipment, and field support that fit the material system being installed. A.H. McElroy now routes to ISCO Industries, which supplies HDPE and PE-RT piping products, fusion equipment, training, and technical support. We support pipeline equipment, HDPE pipe, PE-RT pipe, fusion equipment, piping materials, field-store supply, training resources, and technical assistance for waterworks, industrial, mining, municipal, landfill, geothermal, and energy-related applications. The acquired-company path is important because customers looking for McElroy-related supply now land on the current ISCO operation. Pipeline, water, industrial, and energy infrastructure projects can use ISCO when the pipe system, joining method, equipment, and technical guidance need to line up before installation starts.

Olds, AB, CAN
Directional boring and hydrovac excavation reduce surface disruption when underground work has to cross roads, yards, utilities, or pipeline corridors. Aable Directional Boring provides horizontal boring, directional drilling, excavation, hydrovac, and water hauling support from Olds for Alberta and surrounding-area projects. We support directional boring, horizontal crossings, horizontal boring, hydrovac excavation, utility exposure, pipeline-related boring, excavation equipment, trenching, and water hauling. COR certification, EPAC and CEPA memberships, a toll-free number, and 24-hour availability give project teams strong readiness signals. For pipeline, utility, construction, and oilfield access work, Aable is valuable when the crossing or excavation method has to protect existing infrastructure while keeping the project moving.

Calgary, AB, Canada
Aaron Machine Shop supports Calgary manufacturing and repair work when a component needs more than a simple part order. The shop brings design and drafting, CNC and manual machining, waterjet cutting, fabrication, welding, assembly, finishing, and installation into one workflow for metal and plastic components. Energy, transportation, construction, packaging, and industrial projects can move from drawing to finished part without handing the job between several shops. Aaron also supports industrial repair when hydraulic cylinders, millwright work, on-site welding, line boring, or material supply have to be handled around an operating asset. Aaron Machine Shop has operated in Calgary since 1996 and describes more than 28 years of manufacturing and repair experience. For machining, fabrication, welding, or repair work tied to an energy or industrial project, start with the drawing, damaged component, or operating problem and Aaron can help shape the manufacturing path.

Calgary, AB, Canada
Able Machine Shop is a Calgary, AB-based company that supports machining, fabrication, welding, pipeline and electrical for energy and industrial customers. The strongest source signals are shop and field fabrication needs and technical planning and project documentation, so the listing is most useful for buyers comparing capability, location, and field readiness.
Oxbow, SK, CAN
Before excavation starts, pipeline and utility owners need the buried line marked clearly and backed by a record they can trust. Absolute Locating has served southeast Saskatchewan and southwest Manitoba since 2002, with field coverage extending into northwest North Dakota. Our damage-prevention team handles underground facility locating and specialty locating. GPS mapping through AbsoMap creates a permanent locate record, giving ground-disturbance projects more than paint marks in the field. Pipeline right-of-way service extends beyond a single locate request. Annual inspections and signage installation can be paired with depth-of-cover reporting or UAV-based inspection when the corridor needs documented condition records. Safety has been part of our history in the locating business, not a separate checkbox at the end of the job. COR and ISNetworld are listed with ComplyWorks, while CAPULC and Saskatchewan Common Ground Alliance participation connect our team to established locating practice. For pipeline locating or right-of-way inspection in the Saskatchewan-Manitoba-North Dakota border region, we can help define the locate area and field documentation before digging begins.
Edson, AB, CAN
Access Waterwells Inc gives electrical a practical operating frame around Western Canada. Pump work is treated as a related part of the same decision, not as a copied source list. Confirmed capabilities are tied to operating context a customer can act on. Our electrical scope starts with the condition of the asset. It can connect the request to the job condition and next decision. The pump work side helps customers match fluid movement and repair choices to the site. For customers in Western Canada, that means the first call can start with the asset, access point, schedule, or part that actually drives the job. Electrical changes from one setting to another. A shop repair, plant issue, field call, or branch pickup can all create a different kind of request. The job context here includes oil and gas. That keeps the page close to the source facts without drifting into broad claims. The service conversation should move quickly from label to task. With electrical and pump work, that means naming the asset, the failure point, the supply need, or the site condition early. Around Western Canada, that keeps the request grounded in the place where the job will actually happen. The practical benefit is less confusion at the start of the job. When electrical is explained through real use cases, the customer can ask a sharper question about the asset, schedule, or site condition. Pump work gives that request a related path when the first issue turns into a part or repair question. Around Western Canada, local access and response planning can shape the schedule. The result is a clearer path from first contact to workable scope. Planning stays clearer when electrical remains close to pump work. The two can affect repair timing and supply choices. They can also shape field access or shop scheduling. Western Canada sets the local context without turning the description into a street-address block. The handoff should stay clear. A request may begin with one need and then move into a related part or repair question. It may also become a rental or inspection question. We use electrical as the anchor, then bring in pump work where it helps clarify the next step. That adds depth without copying a loose series from the source page. The right next step depends on the job. It may be a worn part, a planned build, a field repair, a shop drawing, a rental need, or a supply decision. Starting with electrical and then connecting it to pump work keeps that conversation anchored. This scope connects to oil and gas. Listed as established in 1969, the operation also has a continuity signal for repeat local purchasing. Around Western Canada, the scope is tied to what a customer can discuss and the operating setting it fits. That is why the surrounding details stay tied to confirmed capabilities instead of broad claims. The customer should be able to connect the published scope to a real asset before sending a request. That keeps the page focused on practical fit rather than a copied list of every nearby term. That extra context helps connect electrical to the equipment, people, and schedule behind the request. Western Canada also shapes travel, pickup, branch, or dispatch timing. The customer can then ask about the asset and the next practical step. When pump work enters the same conversation, the request can stay tied to the original asset instead of drifting into unrelated categories. A stronger request usually names the asset, the location, the timing, and the condition that created the need. Those details help show whether the need is a quick supply question or a deeper repair discussion. If the same job moves toward fabrication or inspection, the customer still has a way to keep the conversation connected. Rental planning and field response can also change the schedule when the source evidence supports those capabilities. The goal is a practical first conversation: what is needed, where it will be used, and what has to happen next.
Red Deer County, AB, CAN
Mobile production testing has to follow Alberta oil and gas jobs without turning the lease into a larger footprint than the program requires. Accuracy Online Production Testing has served the Alberta oil and gas industry from Red Deer since 2000. We focus on low-imprint testing applications for wells and field projects that need a mobile setup. Frac recovery and pipeline bleed-offs are part of the testing scope. Those applications give field teams a mobile option when fluids and pressure have to be managed on location. Equipment, quality, and safety are presented as core parts of the operation rather than afterthoughts. That structure is important on testing jobs where measurement, containment, and field readiness have to move together. For Alberta production testing or frac-recovery work, we can help scope the mobile testing requirement and site constraints before the equipment is scheduled.
Innisfail, AB, CAN
AccuTech Ground Disturbance Ltd provides Pipe-Locating services to oil and gas operators in Innisfail, AB and across Western Canada.
Nisku, AB, CAN
Vegetation control on pipelines, roadsides, and utility corridors has to protect access while matching the site’s environmental and operational needs. Ace Vegetation Control provides weed control, mulching, mowing, brush spraying, consultation, and right-of-way vegetation management from Nisku. We support brush clearing, weed control, mulching, pipeline right-of-way work, reclamation-related vegetation support, brush spraying, mowing programs, and vegetation consultation. A toll-free line and regional Alberta base make the service practical for recurring corridor maintenance. For pipeline operators, utilities, municipalities, and oilfield access roads, Ace is valuable when vegetation has to be managed before it affects visibility, access, compliance, or asset integrity.
Athabasca, AB, CAN
Active Line Locating offers Pipe-Locating services from Athabasca, AB.

Edmonton, AB, Canada
Pressure equipment, tanks, pipelines, and hard-to-reach structures need inspection methods that fit the asset and the access limits. Acuren delivers inspection services, NDT, NDE, engineering, rope access, and industrial services across North America and the United Kingdom. Our work in testing and inspection covers nondestructive methods in the field and laboratory, with destructive testing available in lab settings. That range lets an inspection program match the asset instead of forcing every problem into one method. Acuren teams include engineers, technologists, tradespeople, and inspection specialists. For industrial assets, findings can connect to engineering review, pressure testing, tank programs, pipeline-related inspection, or mechanical planning.

Cochrane, AB, Canada
H. G. Smith and Associates is a multi-service agency meeting human needs through collaborative, inclusive, committed and sustainable planning.

Grande Prairie, AB, Canada
At Advanced Safety Paramedics, we keep onsite medical services close to pipeline construction and industrial work in Alberta and northern British Columbia. We staff first aid, ambulance, and paramedic coverage where distance, access, weather, and shift length shape the response plan. Our team has served as a primary onsite medical services vendor for Seven Generations Energy, so our coverage is built around drilling and pipeline conditions rather than office assumptions. From Calgary, we plan medical coverage for active worksites and remote corridors that need care ready before the shift begins.

Calgary, AB, CAN
AECOM's Calgary office handles consulting and engineering for complex infrastructure that has to hold together from early design through construction. We work across cities and transportation. Buildings and water sit in the same delivery stream. New energy and environmental scopes do too, with pipeline support folded into larger programs. Planners, engineers, and program managers stay on the same path. Our consultants and construction managers keep the field work tied to design intent. That fits Calgary-based and global projects where environmental scope, construction scope, and delivery schedule have to move together. Constructability reviews, pre-installation meetings, and construction observations keep the job aligned to the original plan.
Major infrastructure work depends on construction control that can hold through permitting, access, utilities, and live-site constraints. Aecon Group Inc. works from Toronto on large construction programs across Canada. Project experience includes port modernization, water treatment renewal, and energy storage facilities. We also handle road upgrades where public access and sequencing have to stay aligned. Building Canada for more than 150 years has given us long operating depth on complex sites. We turn defined scope into staged work that stays organized across the job. For major civil or facility construction, we keep the focus on delivery, access, and the project sequence that has to hold on site.

Whitecourt, AB, Canada
Pipeline right-of-way checks need fast coverage, clear imagery, and leak-detection data that can feed integrity decisions. From Whitecourt, Airborne Energy Solutions Inc. flies helicopter charter, fixed-wing charter, and pipeline aerial surveillance across Western Canada. We inspect pipeline routes with visual review, thermal and video leak detection, gas leak detection, spring scanning, geo-referenced image survey, and GIS services. The goal is to turn aerial time into practical information for pipeline integrity and field planning. Some jobs need aircraft matched to the task. Our fleet use includes Airbus AS350 helicopter support for vegetation spray and Cessna 172 or 182 aircraft for automated meter reading programs for natural gas, water, and electrical utilities. We also handle aerial application and charter flying when ground access is slow or spread-out assets need efficient coverage. Our Whitecourt team plans flights around route length, sensor needs, and Western Canada operating conditions.

Alix, AB, CAN
From Alix, we handle hydrovac and airvac excavation for ground disturbance. We also carry out electronic line locating, directional boring, and utility trenching. Fibre optic installation sits alongside our site operations on active sites.
Grande Prairie, AB, CAN
We provide line locating for pipelines and utilities that cross active construction areas, with staking support before ground is disturbed. Our team has managed one calls for several clients for more than 25 years, keeping the locating side organized across field and project schedules. From Grande Prairie, we can help with facility and line locating requests and get the details moving before excavation starts.
Grande Prairie, AB, CAN
Alberta Pipefinders Inc provides Pipe-Locating services to oil and gas operators in Grande Prairie, AB and across Western Canada.
Calgary, AB, Canada
Ticket Status Toll Free: +1 866 892 6337 Subsurface Utility Locating Firm About Us. Home About CLI Employees Leading Utility Locating Firm Providing Innovative Utility Locating Solutions Canadian Locators Inc. (CLI) has been in the locating business for more than 18 years, with over 300 Field Technicians, Administrative and Support personnel who provide the care, initiative, know-how, and experience to get the job done right. CLI also employs advanced proprietary technologies which ensure online real-time processes and cost-efficient 360 degree work-flows. CLI is considered the Premium North American Locating Company.
Edmonton, AB, CAN
Alberta Measurement Services Ltd. Alberta Measurement Services Ltd. 5327 91 Street NW, Edmonton, AB T6E 6E2 T 780 468 6387. Based in Edmonton, Edmonton, AB.
Calgary, AB, CAN
Alberta One-Call Corporation provides Pipe-Locating services to oil and gas operators in Calgary, AB and across Western Canada.

Edmonton, AB, Canada
Find Alberta government services and information. Based in Edmonton, AB.

Calgary, AB, CAN
Pipe availability can change a drilling, completion, or pipeline schedule before field work begins. Alberta Tubular Products Ltd supplies Oil Country Tubulars, new casing, new tubing, line pipe, and coated pipe across Western Canada for oil and gas projects. ATP has worked as an independent tubular distributor since 1989. Our Calgary team focuses on OCTG and line pipe inventory for wells, gathering systems, and pipeline-related builds where material grade, size, coating, and timing have to line up. Coated pipe is part of the supply conversation when corrosion control, ground conditions, or project specifications call for more than bare pipe. We source the tubular product first, then coordinate the movement needed to get it to the right stock point or job location. Our Western Canada network includes OCTG stock locations and transportation-connected delivery paths in Alberta, Saskatchewan, and northeastern British Columbia. We plan casing, tubing, and line pipe orders around the project schedule and the pipe specification.

Wanham, AB, Canada
Energy processing plants need equipment that arrives engineered, built, and ready to tie in. ALCO Energy Solutions in Wanham builds modular process equipment for single skid units and interconnected multi-skid modules. We bring process, mechanical, structural, electrical, instrumentation and controls, and civil disciplines into the same project. That integrated approach keeps each build aligned with plant process, tie-in points, and production equipment requirements. Since 1972, we have delivered more than 9,800 modularized solutions worldwide. Our under-roof shop space gives us room to fabricate and stage the job in controlled conditions before it moves to site.
Estevan, SK, Canada
Buried pipelines, tanks, and production equipment need steady corrosion control in southeast Saskatchewan and southwest Manitoba. From Estevan, Allied Cathodic Services handles cathodic protection for oil and gas production infrastructure, pipelines, and mining sites. We build corrosion-prevention systems from design and installation through monitoring. Repairs and maintenance round out the turnkey scope. Reporting stays tied to the asset record. The same approach keeps the protection plan tied to the asset as conditions change on production equipment, tanks, and treaters. Soil, moisture, and exposure can change the protection level the asset needs.
Lashburn, SK, CAN
Allied Line Locators is a Lashburn, SK-based provider of Pipe-Locating services.

Bonnyville, AB, CAN
Fluid hauling and vacuum truck work has to cover more than one simple load when oilfield sites need testing, pigging, water, or pressure-related support. Canvac Oilfield Services has operated from Dawson Creek since 1986, serving northeast British Columbia and northwest Alberta with hauling and vac truck capability. We support vacuum trucks, produced-fluid movement, potable water delivery, full vac truck response, daylighting, hydrotest support, chemical handling, pipeline pigging assistance, isolation packer checks, bridge plug testing, and related pressure-service tasks. From Dawson Creek, Canvac brings vacuum service, fluid movement, pigging support, hydrotest support, and 24/7 dispatch into one regional operation. Canvac fits Dawson Creek, Fort St. John, Chetwynd, Grande Prairie, Valleyview, and Peace River projects where fluid movement, vacuum service, and pipeline support need to be coordinated through one local provider.
Taber, AB, CAN
Allwest Line Locators Ltd provides Pipe-Locating services in Taber, AB.
Edmonton, AB, Canada
Our formulations are built for natural gas and oil applications. We make foamers, paraffin modifiers and scale inhibitors. We also handle H2S scavengers, corrosion inhibitors and methanol for field chemistry. For downhole programs, we supply dissolvable water- and oil-soluble pigs and liquid downhole products. If you need chemistry for a specific field condition, our team can help narrow the fit.

Calgary, AB, Canada
We operate a diversified, lower-risk, high-growth Utilities and Midstream business that is focused on delivering resilient and durable value for our stakeholders. The company maintains an entrepreneurial culture in its continuing commitment to the development and ownership of a reliable energy infrastructure portfolio. The Board of Directors exercises responsibility for the management and supervision of the affairs of AltaGas.
Charlie Lake, BC, Canada
Get in Touch (250) 785-6295 Hours of Operation Mon - Fri - 8:00am - 5:00pm Where to find us 13020 271 Rd, Charlie Lake, BC Altec Inspection Ltd. > About Our Company Altec Inspection Ltd. is a locally owned and operated company that has been providing engineering and technical services. . has a large team of experienced Engineers, Technologists and Technicians which collectively provide.
Edmonton, AB, Canada
Altus Geomatics Limited Partnership is most helpful to understand through the job behind design around Canada. Surveying and environmental are treated as related parts of the same decision, not as a copied source list. Confirmed capabilities are tied to operating context a customer can act on. Our design scope starts with the condition of the asset. It can move a rough need into a practical build path. The surveying side helps customers connect the request to the job condition and next decision. For customers in Canada, that means the first call can start with the asset, access point, schedule, or part that actually drives the job. With environmental, the important details are fit, access, timing, and handoff. It can connect the request to the job condition and next decision. The pipeline side helps customers connect the request to the job condition and next decision. The customer can explain what is broken, what has to fit, and what has to move before the request turns into a quote or service plan. Design changes from one setting to another. A shop repair, plant issue, field call, or branch pickup can all create a different kind of request. The job context here includes oil and gas. That keeps the page close to the source facts without drifting into broad claims. Most industrial calls start with something practical. A part has to be made. A unit has to be checked. A system has to keep running. We frame design with surveying so the next step can be tied to the asset, timing, and site condition. In Canada, that may mean a shop visit, a branch conversation, a field dispatch, or a quote request tied to a real job. The practical benefit is less confusion at the start of the job. When design is explained through real use cases, the customer can ask a sharper question about the asset, schedule, or site condition. Surveying gives that request a related path when the first issue turns into a part or repair question. Around Canada, local access and response planning can shape the schedule. The result is a clearer path from first contact to workable scope. Planning stays clearer when design remains close to surveying. The two can affect repair timing and supply choices. They can also shape field access or shop scheduling. Canada sets the local context without turning the description into a street-address block. The right next step depends on the job. It may be a worn part, a planned build, a field repair, a shop drawing, a rental need, or a supply decision. Starting with design and then connecting it to surveying, environmental and pipeline keeps that conversation anchored. This scope connects to oil and gas. Around Canada, the scope is tied to what a customer can discuss and the operating setting it fits. That extra context helps connect design to the equipment, people, and schedule behind the request. Canada also shapes travel, pickup, branch, or dispatch timing. The customer can then ask about the asset and the next practical step. When surveying enters the same conversation, the request can stay tied to the original asset instead of drifting into unrelated categories. A stronger request usually names the asset, the location, the timing, and the condition that created the need. Those details help show whether the need is a quick supply question or a deeper repair discussion. If the same job moves toward fabrication or inspection, the customer still has a way to keep the conversation connected. Rental planning and field response can also change the schedule when the source evidence supports those capabilities. The goal is a practical first conversation: what is needed, where it will be used, and what has to happen next. If a branch or yard is involved, that context can change the quote path and the schedule. If a shop or site is involved, access and timing can become just as important as the capability name.
Eckville, AB, CAN
Coiled aluminum pipe is built for pipeline projects where light weight, long lengths, and field installation methods matter. Aluminum Pipe Systems supplies aluminum-coiled pipe products and services from Eckville and central Alberta. We install pipe using plough, trench, and ditching methods. That gives pipeline projects options when route conditions, ground disturbance, and installation speed shape the plan. Our fabrication and repair facilities are located in central Alberta. We pair coiled aluminum pipe with fittings and repair capability so field installation and shop service stay connected. With more than 50 years of pipeline experience, our team focuses on aluminum pipe systems for practical field use, from product selection through installation and repair.

Calgary, AB, Canada
Amar Surveys Ltd is most helpful to understand through the job behind surveying around Alberta and British Columbia. Environmental and pipeline are treated as related parts of the same decision, not as a copied source list. Confirmed capabilities are tied to operating context a customer can act on. Our surveying scope starts with the condition of the asset. It can connect the request to the job condition and next decision. The environmental side helps customers connect the request to the job condition and next decision. For customers in Alberta and British Columbia, that means the first call can start with the asset, access point, schedule, or part that actually drives the job. With pipeline, the important details are fit, access, timing, and handoff. That capability helps customers connect the request to the job condition and next decision. The customer can explain what is broken, what has to fit, and what has to move before the request turns into a quote or service plan. Surveying can mean different things in a shop, plant, field, or branch setting. Here, the published details connect it to oil and gas. That gives customers a better way to place the service in a real job. Most industrial calls start with something practical. A part has to be made. A unit has to be checked. A system has to keep running. We frame surveying with environmental so the next step can be tied to the asset, timing, and site condition. In Alberta and British Columbia, that may mean a shop visit, a branch conversation, a field dispatch, or a quote request tied to a real job. The value is not just in naming surveying. It is in showing how the scope connects to an asset, location, or schedule. Environmental gives the customer another route when the first need changes. The services are expanded into decisions and conditions instead of being left as loose terms. The detail should also help a customer decide what to do next. A person can check whether surveying belongs in the first call. They can also see when environmental should be part of the same conversation. That keeps the path practical without adding sectors that do not belong. The final test is whether the path feels clear. Surveying, environmental and pipeline should point to a real job discussion, not a loose category block. This scope connects to oil and gas. Listed as established in 1982, the operation also has a continuity signal for repeat local purchasing. In Alberta and British Columbia, that means connecting the capability to a branch, shop, field, or project decision the customer can act on. Rental planning and field response can also change the schedule when the source evidence supports those capabilities. The goal is a practical first conversation: what is needed, where it will be used, and what has to happen next. If a branch or yard is involved, that context can change the quote path and the schedule. If a shop or site is involved, access and timing can become just as important as the capability name. That is why the surrounding details stay tied to confirmed capabilities instead of broad claims. The customer should be able to connect the published scope to a real asset before sending a request. That keeps the page focused on practical fit rather than a copied list of every nearby term. That extra context helps connect surveying to the equipment, people, and schedule behind the request. Alberta and British Columbia also shapes travel, pickup, branch, or dispatch timing. The customer can then ask about the asset and the next practical step. When environmental enters the same conversation, the request can stay tied to the original asset instead of drifting into unrelated categories. A stronger request usually names the asset, the location, the timing, and the condition that created the need. Those details help show whether the need is a quick supply question or a deeper repair discussion.

Red Deer, AB, Canada
We handle oilfield anchoring and line locating for field sites across Alberta. Our scope includes rig anchors, piling-related work, and underground pipeline and utility locating. We keep the job focused on clear layouts and steady timing. That helps field teams move from locate work to anchor placement without extra back-and-forth.

Edmonton, AB, Canada
Engineering decisions in oil and gas isolation planning, utility distribution, and infrastructure design carry public-safety risk. APEGA regulates engineering and geoscience practice in Alberta from Edmonton, with a mandate focused on the health, safety, and welfare of the public. We set professional requirements for engineers and geoscientists who work across Alberta’s resource, facility, utility, and infrastructure sectors. Continuing Professional Development keeps licensed professionals engaged in annual learning tied to technical practice and public protection. Our education programming includes topics that touch oil and gas operations, such as engineering judgement in isolation planning. We also address utility distribution issues where changing electrical loads affect system planning. APEGA is best represented as an Associations profile for regulated professional practice in Alberta. Insurance is not supported by the supplied evidence, and Pipeline and Tools are only indirectly reflected through professional education topics rather than direct services.