Find pressure vessels companies within the supplies rental and sales category supporting upstream, midstream, and downstream oil and gas work across North America.
Pressure equipment safety affects boilers, vessels, piping, fittings, and regulated repairs across Alberta industry. ABSA oversees Alberta pressure-equipment safety administration, including design registration, inspections, quality management systems, permits, examinations, certification, and learning services.
We support pressure equipment inspection, design registration, quality management system certificates of authorization, permit examination, certification services, pressure-equipment learning, and safety-program administration. The role is regulatory and technical, not a general welding contractor listing.
For oil and gas facilities, fabrication shops, pressure-vessel owners, and repair organizations, ABSA is important when regulated pressure equipment needs Alberta compliance, documentation, or certification pathways.
Our Regina shop has been locally owned since 1946.
We repair boilers, pressure vessels, and pressure piping. We also handle retube jobs and preventative maintenance. Steel fabrication keeps critical gear moving when schedules tighten.
Storage tanks for energy, mining, fleet, construction, waste-handling, and bulk-storage applications have to be built for safety as much as capacity. AGI Envirotank manufactures environmentally safe steel storage tanks from Saskatchewan, including shop-built and field-erected tank systems.
We support enviro tanks, steel storage tanks, secondary containment, waste-management tanks, API tanks, ULC tanks, ASME pressure vessels, custom plate work, bins, silos, DSAW spiral welded pipe, pumps, sandblasting, and transportation-related tank needs. COR certification and a documented safety program support industrial procurement.
For oilfield storage, waste handling, bulk fuel, and industrial containment, AGI Envirotank is valuable when tank design, fabrication, safety, and environmental protection need to be considered together.
At Alberta Exchanger, we handle heat-transfer repair, fabrication, replacement-in-kind, and parts support from Edmonton for Western Canadian industrial facilities.
We have supported heat-exchanger work since 1993, coordinating field and shop needs for repair, replacement, fabrication, and parts. When a bundle, exchanger, or related component moves from inspection to repair planning, quality control, and return-to-service timing, the repair path has to stay tied to the shutdown window.
Our Edmonton operation brings product integrity, responsive service, quality control, certifications, fabrication capability, and a safety program tied to employee and environmental protection. Plant maintenance teams can bring exchanger condition, drawings, inspection findings, and fabrication needs into the same repair conversation.
For exchanger repair, replacement-in-kind, fabrication, or parts support, start with the equipment condition, service history, drawings, inspection findings, and shutdown window.
From Delta, we build custom equipment for oil and gas and heavy industry.
Our shop handles pressure vessels, heat exchangers, and special fabrication for complex industrial projects. We also cover machining and mechanical assembly.
Testing, painting, and logistics support keep larger jobs moving. We have served industry since 1976 and we hold ASME pressure vessel certifications.
Bilton Welding & Manufacturing Ltd connects design to the job problem behind the request around Innisfail and Western Canada. Manufacturing and repair planning 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 manufacturing side helps customers build equipment around the pressure, fit, and operating need. For customers in Innisfail and Western Canada, that means the first call can start with the asset, access point, schedule, or part that actually drives the job.
With repair planning, the important details are fit, access, timing, and handoff. It can find the fault and choose a repair path. The flowback assets side helps customers support flowback and production jobs with purpose-built assets. 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. Welding works best when it is tied to the way the job will be installed or repaired. It can repair or modify metal when fit and access are tight. The insulation side helps customers connect the request to the job condition and next decision. This works for maintenance, shutdown, fabrication, repair, and supply decisions where a poor handoff costs time.
Design is easier to judge when the market context is clear. The source material points to oil and gas, custom work, maintenance and repair. That gives the capability an operating frame tied to the published evidence.
Customers usually arrive with a constraint, not a perfect scope. The part may be worn. The schedule may be tight. The site may need a safer handoff. We connect design with manufacturing so the request can move from a rough need into a clearer service discussion around Innisfail and Western Canada.
This kind of detail also reduces handoff risk. If the first call is about design, the customer can still see when manufacturing belongs in the same discussion. Innisfail and Western Canada adds the local planning layer, especially when timing, access, or branch response affects the job. The copy groups related work around a real job instead of bouncing between unrelated categories.
A good close should leave the customer with a practical next conversation. That starts with design and may extend into manufacturing, repair planning and flowback assets. This scope connects to oil and gas, custom work, maintenance and repair. Listed as established in 1993, the operation also has a continuity signal for repeat local purchasing. Innisfail and Western Canada gives the location context without copying a full address. The next move should be clear: ask about the asset, timing, quote path, or work condition. 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 design to the equipment, people, and schedule behind the request. Innisfail and Western Canada also shapes travel, pickup, branch, or dispatch timing. The customer can then ask about the asset and the next practical step. When manufacturing enters the same conversation, the request can stay tied to the original asset instead of drifting into unrelated categories.
Bonnyville Welding Ltd connects welding to the job problem behind the request. Fabrication 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 welding scope starts with the condition of the asset. It can repair or modify metal when fit and access are tight. The fabrication side helps customers turn measurements and wear points into buildable parts. For customers in Northern Alberta and Saskatchewan, 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. It can connect the request to the job condition and next decision. The valve side helps customers plan flow control and isolation around the line. 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.
Welding 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.
Customers usually arrive with a constraint, not a perfect scope. The part may be worn. The schedule may be tight. The site may need a safer handoff. We connect welding with fabrication so the request can move from a rough need into a clearer service discussion around Northern Alberta and Saskatchewan.
The value is not just in naming welding. It is in showing how the scope connects to an asset, location, or schedule. Fabrication 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 welding belongs in the first call. They can also see when fabrication 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. Welding, fabrication, pipeline and valve should point to a real job discussion, not a loose category block. This scope connects to oil and gas. Listed as established in 1974, the operation also has a continuity signal for repeat local purchasing. In Northern Alberta and Saskatchewan, that means connecting the capability to a branch, shop, field, or project decision the customer can act on. Northern Alberta and Saskatchewan also shapes travel, pickup, branch, or dispatch timing. The customer can then ask about the asset and the next practical step. When fabrication 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. 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 welding to the equipment, people, and schedule behind the request.
Oilfield fabrication near a pipeline tie-in can fail early if the weld plan is separated from the field schedule. Bonnyville Welding Ltd has more than 50 years in construction and facility projects across Northern Alberta and Saskatchewan.
From Bonnyville, our team builds and modifies production facilities where piping, structural steel and field welding have to line up with the site schedule.
Above-ground pipeline and valve station projects can move through spool planning, controlled hot-work and hydrotesting with the same field base. That keeps tie-ins, pressure tests and repair planning connected instead of split across unrelated scopes.
For asset-integrity support, we handle pigging assistance and digs around pipeline or facility concerns. Liner work and in-service welding can be planned when the repair calls for controlled field execution.
From our Edmonton shop, we apply industrial protective coatings to tanks and pressure piping.
We also coat underground pipelines and vessels. Metallizing and urethane round out our field-applied scope.
Clean prep and careful application guide us.
We provide non-destructive examination and testing for industrial assets across Western Canada. Pipeline inspection is a core part of the offering. Pressure vessels and tanks are part of the assets we inspect.
We also use real-time reporting to keep findings organized for maintenance planning. Our head office is in Edmonton.
Production equipment leaves little room for vague drawings or weak shop control. Cado Industries Inc. designs and manufactures oil field production and processing equipment from Calgary, with pressure vessels, ASME piping, welding, mechanical assembly, and instrumentation in the supported evidence.
Our shop story is strongest where equipment has to be built around process duty and pressure requirements. Fabrication, piping, assembly, and instrumentation belong together when the final package needs to operate as one production system.
For a Cado request, the planning details are equipment function, pressure requirement, piping scope, assembly need, and instrumentation package. We keep the manufacturing path tied to the production asset being built.
We handle inspection, compliance verification, and vendor surveillance for construction and facility operations.
Our reviews help keep new construction moving and keep ongoing facility operations documented clearly.
From Calgary to Grande Prairie, we stay close to the job and the schedule.
Pipeline damage, new tie-ins, and plant shutdown timing can slow an oil and gas site fast. McGillicky Oilfield in Estevan handles pipeline construction and pipeline repair for southeast Saskatchewan and southwest Manitoba.
We also work on pipeline maintenance and pipeline integrity maintenance. New line installation sits in the same workflow when the route or tie-in changes.
Well site maintenance keeps field equipment moving. Plant turnarounds, shutdowns, and setting pump jacks cover the facility side when timing shows up.
Facility construction sits alongside fabrication and welding. Tanks, treaters, and pumps move through that workflow when the scope needs shop and field work. Pressure vessels fit the same path when heavier oilfield equipment needs attention.
Our Estevan base keeps us close to the field routes across the region.
Large pressure vessels need mechanical design and fabrication that stay aligned from the first drawing to the finished shell. Dacro Industries Inc. in Edmonton builds custom pressure vessels for oil and gas, refining, petrochemical, and pulp and paper projects across North America.
We bring mechanical design, materials knowledge, welding engineering, and quality assurance into one shop workflow. That lets us handle large, complex vessels where size, pressure, and service conditions shape the fabrication plan.
Our Edmonton base sits in Western Canada's industrial center, and we have been building since 1974.
Pressure-vessel work, B-pressure installation, and oilfield fabrication all sit close together at DaPaJo’s Brooks shop. That matters on facility and modification projects where a tank, fitting, rig change, or field install has to move through proper fabrication controls before it reaches site.
We support southern Alberta oil and gas work with registered fittings, TC-44 tanks, boiler and vessel repair, welding, pipe rolling, plasma cutting, drilling-rig modifications, tapping, and installation. ABSA quality-program capability and ASME repair standards give tank, vessel, and facility projects the documentation discipline they need.
For energy producers and facility teams, the value is having fabrication and installation experience connected. DaPaJo can support regulated shop work and oilfield site modifications without treating them like separate problems.
Above-ground pipeline and valve station jobs need welding, fabrication, and pressure testing planned around live oilfield facilities. Dewan's Welding uses the Bonnyville Welding source evidence for oilfield welding across Northern Alberta and Saskatchewan.
The supported scope includes spool-to-tie-in work, controlled hot work, hydrotesting, pigging support, and in-service welding from the Bonnyville operation. Facility piping, valves, and liner repairs can be planned around access, isolation, and test documentation.
For a Dewan's Welding request, the planning points are site access, pipe or valve condition, pressure-test need, isolation plan, and field timing. We keep the welding path tied to the facility asset being changed.
From the RM of Sherwood, DynaIndustrial LP builds custom equipment with in-house engineering and state-of-the-art manufacturing. We work with steel mills and pipe mills when a project needs a single team to design and build around plant limits.
We also support mining and oil and gas operations with manufactured components and heavy industrial repairs. That works when a part has to match an existing asset, fit a shutdown window, or replace a failure point without changing the rest of the system.
With decades of experience, our shop can move a job from engineering review into fabrication and keep the scope tied to the operating conditions on site.
A live pipeline connection should not force a full shutdown when a planned hot tap can keep product moving. EnReach Hot Tap Services completes hot tap, line stop, cold tap, and valve insertion projects from Red Deer for Western Canada pipeline, refinery, drilling, water treatment, wastewater, and chemical manufacturing sites.
Our in-service solutions are built for pressure systems that need controlled access. Before HDPE drilling starts, we perform a full hydro test, then complete the tap with the fittings and tooling selected for the line.
Since 2005, we have completed more than 4,000 hot taps. That field history sits beside in-house engineering, machining, and manufacturing for split tees, spherical fittings, pipe sleeves, and engineered pressure enclosures.
We also manufacture pipe spools and pressure vessels for projects that need more than a field cut-in. EnReach can plan the tap, fitting, pressure test, and line stop sequence as one scope for pipeline or facility service.
Firebird Oilfield Services Ltd gives customers a clearer starting point for repair planning around Grande Prairie, AB. The nearby scope includes fabrication, welding and insulation. We keep the focus on actual capabilities, operating context, and the next decision a customer is likely to make.
Our repair planning scope starts with the condition of the asset. It can find the fault and choose a repair path. The fabrication side helps customers turn measurements and wear points into buildable parts. For customers in Grande Prairie, AB, that means fewer vague calls and a better start for quoting or planning.
With welding, the important details are fit, access, timing, and handoff. It can repair or modify metal when fit and access are tight. The insulation side helps customers connect the request to the job condition and next decision. It keeps the conversation practical. The customer can explain what is broken, what has to fit, and what has to move.
Pipeline works best when it is tied to the way the job will be installed or repaired. That capability helps customers connect the request to the job condition and next decision. This works for maintenance, shutdown, fabrication, repair, and supply decisions where a poor handoff costs time.
Repair planning 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, custom work and maintenance. That keeps the page close to the source facts without drifting into broad claims.
Customers usually arrive with a constraint, not a perfect scope. The part may be worn. The schedule may be tight. The site may need a safer handoff. We connect repair planning with fabrication so the request can move from a rough need into a clearer service discussion around Grande Prairie, AB.
The practical benefit is less confusion at the start of the job. When repair planning is explained through real use cases, the customer can ask a sharper question and avoid sending the request to the wrong place. Fabrication gives that request a related path when the first issue turns into a part or repair question. Around Grande Prairie, AB, local access and response planning can shape the schedule. The result is a clearer path from first contact to workable scope.
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 repair planning and then connecting it to fabrication, welding and insulation keeps that conversation anchored. This scope connects to oil and gas, custom work and maintenance. Listed as established in 1987, the operation also has a continuity signal for repeat local purchasing. Around Grande Prairie, AB, we describe the scope a customer can discuss and the operating setting it fits. Planning stays clearer when repair planning remains close to fabrication. The two can affect repair timing and supply choices. They can also shape field access or shop scheduling. Grande Prairie, AB 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 repair planning as the anchor, then bring in fabrication where it helps clarify the next step. That keeps the path helpful without adding a loose series. The detail should also help a customer decide what to do next. A person can check whether repair planning belongs in the first call. They can also see when fabrication should be part of the same conversation. That keeps the path practical without adding sectors that do not belong. Planning stays clearer when repair planning remains close to fabrication. The two can affect repair timing and supply choices. They can also shape field access or shop scheduling. Grande Prairie, AB sets the local context without turning the description into a street-address block.
Pressure equipment has to match the weld spec and the transport plan. Fourstar Resources Inc. manufactures ASME Code vessels, piping, and coils from a 10,000 square-foot shop in Nisku, Alberta.
Our shop is set up for process equipment and pressure vessels. Pipe fabrication and coded welding stay part of the same build path when the job calls for CSA W59/W47.1 welding projects.
Two indoor cranes give us 15 tons of lift capacity, and three 16-foot by 18-foot pass-through doors keep larger packages moving through the building. Nearby heat treatment and material suppliers shorten lead time, while heavy lift crane services, blasting, and paint support package movement.
Our in-house Quality Control management team and weld inspector stay on the build from start to finish. Some packages leave the shop bound for projects around the world.
High-pressure piping and shop-built steel work need clean layout and sound welds. Goodman Steel & Ironworks (1986) Ltd in Rocanville handles metal fabrication and machining for oil and gas projects and industrial steel work across southeastern Saskatchewan.
Structural steel and platework move through the same shop. Tanks and pressure vessels come through as well, along with industrial piping for projects that need shop-built steel before install.
Surface preparation and industrial paint finish parts before they leave the yard. Our engineering support stays with the job when drawings or technical review need to sit beside the fabrication plan.
The same team is a member of the Association of Professional Engineers & Geoscientists of Saskatchewan.
A pipeline closure or pigging tee has to open cleanly, seal correctly, and hold up in pressure service. In-Line Flow Products Ltd manufactures ASME-certified pipeline closures and pigging tees from Edmonton for pipeline systems in Canada, the United States, and international markets.
Our product families support Pigging and flow-line access. Closures and pigging tees are built for pipeline systems that need safe access for pigs, inspection tools, cleaning runs, or isolation points.
Engineers, procurement teams, pipe distributors, supply stores, and valve distributors work with us when a project needs a defined closure or tee package. We focus on product design and manufacturing performance for pressure and pipeline service.
ASME-certified manufacturing is part of the product being specified. Our Edmonton shop supports pipeline closure and pigging tee requirements when pressure class, connection details, and asset needs must be matched before fabrication or supply.
We build and maintain oilfield and pipeline sites from Wainwright across East Central Alberta and West Central Saskatchewan. Jaws Contracting Ltd stays on the job from construction through maintenance and pressure testing, so the same crew can carry the job from build to upkeep.
When a pipeline job moves from install to upkeep, we stay with the same site plan. Our field teams handle pressure testing, welding, and fabrication for the pieces that have to fit and hold together.
We also take on pumps and hoses when the project needs equipment support. Fencing and grading keep access and the job area ready. Hot shot work and safety training round out the field support around the same job.
High-pressure iron has to be tested, recorded, and returned with clear compliance data. JC Inspections and Valve Service performs pressure testing, valve repair, and high-pressure iron recertification from Lloydminster for oilfield customers across North America.
We were founded in 2017 with a focus on oilfield products and technologies that keep customers safe and compliant with industry standards. Inspection and recertification needs drive the job when pressure failure can stop a site.
Our mobile hydrotesting units use data logging electronics for precise records. That field capability keeps pressure testing close to oilfield iron and valve assets.
Energy projects need tank and pressure equipment fabrication that is planned around code, weld procedure, and field fit-up. Leading Manufacturing Group Inc. manufactures steel storage tanks, pressure vessels, fittings, structural assemblies, and pressure piping from Nisku for energy-sector work in Alberta and Saskatchewan.
We build around the asset first. A storage tank, pressure vessel, or piping package may need fabrication, welding, blasting, coating, painting, insulation, and quality control before it is ready for site delivery.
Our ABSA authorization covers ASME Section VIII Division 1 pressure vessels, ASME B31.1 power piping, ASME B31.3 process piping systems, Category H fittings, and pressure welder testing. Those standards are part of the pressure equipment service itself.
Since 2010, our manufacturing locations have served energy projects that need custom steel work rather than off-the-shelf equipment. Our Nisku team can plan fabrication scope for tanks, pressure vessels, structural assemblies, fittings, and pressure piping tied to Alberta and Saskatchewan facilities.
Pressure equipment for gas and oil service has to match the process, the code, and the inspection plan before it leaves the shop. In Leduc, Mar-Quinn Industries Ltd engineers, designs, and fabricates Pressure Vessels and oil and gas process equipment for field and facility use.
We manufacture welded pressure vessels, including miniature vessels, along with pressure piping process systems and structural assemblies. Tanks, scrubbers, heaters, and related process equipment are built for gas and oil applications where pressure, flow, separation, and fit-up requirements drive the design.
Code compliance is part of the build, not an afterthought. Manufactured pressure vessels and process piping are inspected and tested against the applicable codes of construction before delivery.
Since 1978, our fabrication shop has focused on engineered oil and gas process equipment from Leduc, Alberta. We plan fabrication around the vessel, piping, assembly, and inspection requirements needed for the service conditions.
MaXfield Inc provides Pressure Vessels, Gas Processing-Equipment, Fabricators, Oilfield Equipment-Manufacturing, Propane-Bullets services to oil and gas operators in Calgary, AB and across Western Canada.
Pressure loss, metal loss, and hidden corrosion call for inspection methods that see inside the asset. Mistras Canada Inc handles non-destructive inspection work for pipelines, pressure vessels, tanks, and aboveground piping around Olds.
Our TriStream MFL pipeline work uses multiple magnetic vectors, caliper data, and IMU data to map metal loss, deformation, and position along the line. That gives a tighter integrity picture when pipeline condition drives the next decision.
MONPAC acoustic emission testing checks pressure vessels, spheres, and tanks during a single pressure test. ART Crawler digital radiography looks for internal corrosion and corrosion under insulation on insulated and uninsulated aboveground piping.
Large Structure Inspections add robotic scanning for corrosion and erosion on larger assets. For pipeline integrity or pressure equipment reviews, we can match the inspection method to the asset and the access window.
Pressure vessels, pipelines, and cathodic protection systems need inspection programs that hold up under ABSA requirements and field operating conditions. Mountain West Services, also presented as MWS Integrity Solutions, supports oil and gas integrity work from Whitecourt.
MWS specializes in third-party inspections for pressure vessels and pipelines, with experience across cathodic protection, NDE, corrosion work, fabrication-related review, regulatory requirements, and safe equipment operation. The site also references work-order programs for maintenance and routine task tracking, which connects inspection findings to the ongoing field activity that follows.
ABSA and COR records make Mountain West a practical option for facilities and pipeline assets where documented inspection and corrosion-control planning are central to risk management. Contact MWS about pressure-vessel or pipeline inspection work.
Through innovative design and modern technology Nitrogen Technologies of Canada is prepared to manufacture, supply, service and transport as needed. Based in Grande Prairie, Grande Prairie, AB.
Oilfield process equipment has to match the pressure envelope before fabrication starts. NRG Process Solutions in Airdrie designs equipment for gas processing projects and pressure vessel builds.
We build around pressure vessels, flare systems, and heaters. Fittings and instrumentation stay part of the same design and drafting package. Our design and drafting package uses standard ASME code pressure vessel designs that can be built in different sizes and configurations.
We also supply the Canadian Registration Numbers needed by pressure equipment manufacturers for fittings and vessels. That keeps new process packages and replacement vessels moving toward production.
Production sites need process equipment that matches pressure, fluid flow, and layout before steel reaches the field. NWP Industries LP manufactures energy processing equipment in Innisfail, AB for oil and gas production projects across North America.
Our manufacturing history reaches back to 1962. We build pressure vessels, separators, treaters, and related production equipment for facilities that need engineered processing packages rather than loose components.
The strongest value in a package comes from matching the vessel and process design to the operating case. Separators help manage produced fluids. Treaters and other process equipment help prepare production streams for the next stage in the facility.
We also keep fabricated inventory available for projects where timing is tight. Our Innisfail team can discuss pressure vessel scope, separator requirements, and production equipment packages for North American energy processing sites.
OilPro Oilfield Production Equipment Ltd provides Filters-Oil & Gas, Oilfield Equipment-Used, Pressure Vessels, Separators-New & Used, Pumping Units, Treaters-New & Used, Gas Processing-Equipment, Production Equipment, Tanks, Propane-Bullets services to oil and gas operators in Calgary, AB and across Western Canada.
• Calgary, AB CAN • T2E 6M9 (403) 769-1799 Email Us About HELLO. WE’RE ORION SAFETY EQUIPMENT LTD. At Orion Safety Equipment Ltd. we’ve been providing expertise on safety related products, services and rental equipment in Calgary and Alberta since 2007.
Production packages have to match pressure, process flow, and field layout before they leave the fabrication floor. Panax Oil & Gas Inc. manufactures oilfield packages in Edmonton for projects across Alberta, Saskatchewan, and British Columbia.
We build pressure vessels, tanks, free water knockouts, oil emulsion treaters, separators, and headers for oil and gas facilities. Those assets help separate fluids and connect production streams before the package moves to site.
Skid fabrication gives facility teams a cleaner path from shop build to field tie-in. Pump skids, meter skids, and MCC skids can be planned around layout, access, and installation timing.
Our Edmonton shop keeps vessels, tanks, heaters, and production packages close to Western Canadian project needs.
North American industry leader in the pipeline specification and application of wear and corrosion resistant coatings - Paragon Protective Coatings Ltd. (PPC). Based in Edmonton, AB.