Secure Energy Services

Secure Energy Services Inc. is a Canadian public energy services company, based in Calgary, Alberta. It specializes in oilfield waste treatment and disposal.[1] It is listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

Secure Energy Services Inc.
Public
Traded asTSX: SES
S&P/TSX Composite Component
IndustryMidstream Infrastructure
Founded2007
FounderRene Amirault
Headquarters
Calgary, Alberta
,
Canada
Key people
Rene Amirault (President and Chief executive officer)
Websitehttp://secure-energy.com/

History

Secure Energy Services was founded in 2007 by Rene Amirault and several partners.[1] It held an IPO in April 2010, raising C$57.5 million.[2] At the time, it had nine facilities. In 2011, it acquired Marquis Alliance Energy Group for $131 million.[1] By 2014, Secure Energy had 24 facilities, and 13% of the Canadian environmental services market.[3]

In 2014 and 2015, due to the decrease in oil prices, Secure Energy experienced significant challenges due to decreasing oil prices.[4] The company responded by laying off 300 workers, and its stock price decreased by half.[3] In 2017, it acquired Ceiba Energy Services for $26 million, as part of the consolidation among energy services firms.[5]

Operations

Secure Energy Services primarily provides oilfield waste treatment and disposal, including of wastewater.[3] As of 2018, it has 47 facilities in Western Canada and North Dakota, mostly in Alberta.[6] Most of the locations are for waste processing and disposal, but the company also runs 4 rail terminals.[6]

Controversy

In December 2017, local residents and Métis leaders protested a planned oilsands landfill by the company outside of Conklin, Alberta.[7] The protesters were concerned the landfill would contaminate waterways, scare wildlife, and create unpleasant smells.[7] SECURE held an open house on December 7, 2017[7] to inform stakeholders about the project and the measures they take to ensure safe conditions in the communities they live and work in.[8]

gollark: (although marmite rice cakes seem to be missing now?)
gollark: People were complaining about supply chain disruption and how clearly everywhere needs to be self-sufficient during the start of the whole people-noticing-COVID-19 thing, but it seems like, on the whole, there was mostly food and stuff around and it got resolved fairly fast.
gollark: Stuff does manage to mostly function, most of the time, somehow.
gollark: I kind of want to read Worm, or at least some of it, to actually understand what half of this is about.
gollark: In TCP, that is.

References

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