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Suncor's Syncrude Canada to pay C$ 390,000 after employee death

Oil sands producer Syncrude Canada, majorityowned by Suncor Energy, will pay C$ 390,000. ($ 287,187.04) after pleading guilty to a health and safety. charge associating with the death of a worker on among its websites in. June 2021, the Alberta federal government said on Monday.

The employee had been operating an excavator to develop a berm. at a website near Fort McKay in northern Alberta when the bank the. excavator was on plunged into water, Alberta Occupational Health. and Safety said in a statement. The excavator taxi ended up being. immersed and the worker drowned.

It was among five deaths at oil sands sites run by Suncor,. Canada's second-largest oil producer, in between late 2020 and. mid-2022. The fatalities contributed to push from U.S.-based. activist financial investment company Elliot to overhaul management and. operations at Suncor, and triggered the resignation of previous CEO. Mark Little.

Syncrude Canada pleaded guilty on April 4 to one charge of. stopping working to ensure the health and safety of an employee, while four. other charges brought under the Alberta Occupational Health and. Security Act were withdrawn.

Under a scheme referred to as imaginative sentencing, the business. will pay C$ 390,000 to 2 University of Alberta centers and the. Alberta Municipal Health And Wellness Association to help establish. much safer practices around trenching and excavation work.

Suncor is dealing with a separate set of charges, laid on March. 29, connected to the death of another worker, Brandon Nelson, in. July 2022 in Fort McMurray.

In that event, the employee was struck by a piece of. devices that fell from a crane, according to the Alberta. Occupational Health and Safety website.

That matter is now before the courts and we are going. to evaluate the charges and figure out the next actions, stated Suncor. spokesperson Sneh Seetal, including there had actually been an extensive. examination following the casualty.

Our safety procedures did not meet our expectations.

In the business's annual report, launched last month, CEO. Rich Kruger stated there had been no deaths or deadly. injuries in 2023.

(source: Reuters)