小蓝视频

Skip to content

AECOM pulls out of Estevan and Virden

In a month when oil crested US$70 per barrel for West Texas Intermediate, AECOM, which was the last in a line of companies which had bought out the assets and operations of what was once Carson Energy Services, has closed its doors in Estevan and in
AECOM building
AECOM has closed its doors at its Estevan shop on the Shand Access Road. It was formerly occupied by Supreme Oilfield Construction.

In a month when oil crested US$70 per barrel for West Texas Intermediate, AECOM, which was the last in a line of companies which had bought out the assets and operations of what was once Carson Energy Services, has closed its doors in Estevan and in Virden, Man.

A sign posted in the door of its Estevan shop on Supreme Street, just off Shand Road, said, 鈥淎ECOM has ceased all day to day operation out of this location as of May 8, 2018. For all inquiries, please call 306-634-5233.鈥

A call to that number on May 14 got AECOM鈥檚 answering service in Regina. An AECOM spokesman from New York who preferred he not be named replied by phone with this statement, 鈥淭he decision to close any field office is not an easy one, however, we must respond to market conditions. We remain committed to our clients and to providing oil and gas services where we see long-term opportunities.鈥

In October 2011, Carson Energy Services sold to Flint Energy Services. It subsequently sold to URS, which was then sold to AECOM in 2014. At the time of the Flint deal, Pipeline News wrote, 鈥淐arson has 17 locations, 13 in Saskatchewan, three in Alberta, and one in Manitoba. There are over 1,300 employees and over 1,800 pieces of equipment. The company鈥檚 existing services include midstream pipeline and facilities construction, pipeline integrity services, site prep and civil work, trucking and pickers, environmental, directional drilling, fabrication in the field and in-shop, roustabout and maintenance services, and safety sales and services.鈥

Whereas Carson Energy had operated out of locations in almost every oil community in southeast Saskatchewan as well as oil communities in western Saskatchewan, AECOM had dramatically reduced its footprint since it acquired URS. This included closing the Lampman location, formerly the headquarters for Carson Energy. During the years of the downturn, much of their equipment assets were sold off.

As AECOM has withdrawn, a new company, Canadian Plains Energy, made up largely of former Carson employees, has filled the spaces, quite literally, vacated by AECOM. Since firing up in early 2017, Canadian Plains has occupied former Carson shops in Carlyle and Alida, and will soon be opening in Halbrite. It also has locations in Virden, North Battleford and Lloydminster. Its Regina operation will open June. 1.

AECOM鈥檚 website said the company had approximately US$18.2 billion of revenue during the 2017 fiscal year, and that it was 鈥淣amed one of Fortune magazine鈥檚 鈥榃orld鈥檚 Most Admired Companies鈥 for the fourth consecutive year.鈥

The company is based in Los Angeles and has operations in more than 150 countries. Its 2016 fact sheet said it had 90,000 employees on seven continents.

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks