Midstream - Pipelines | Service & Supply | Top Story | Midstream - Rail & Trucks | Oilfield Services | Incidents / Accidents
Transport Mishaps Continue as Canadian Crude Train Derails
A Canadian National Railway train derailed on Tuesday, January 7 in Northwest New Brunswick, loaded with propane and crude oil, according to a report from The Daily Mail.
This is the latest in a series of train accidents putting crude by rail business under scrutiny in North America. A similar derailment occured recently in North Dakota. The train was headed from Toronto to Moncton, New Brunswick.
The rapid growth of oil production in the U.S. and Canada has outpaced pipeline capacity, prompting a move to crude by rail transport of oil. Tighter regulations on this transport may be called for in light of such public incidents.
There have been five major accidents in the past year involving crude by rail transport, including an incident in Quebec where 47 deaths occurred.
Other recent incidents include:
- Train Carrying Bakken Crude Derails
- ONEOK Gas Pipeline Explodes in Oklahoma
- Crew Works to ID Source of Koch Oil Spill
- Chevron Makes Statement on Texas Pipeline Explosion
Related Categories :
Canada News >>>
-
Western Canada Upstream M&A: Q1 2026 Transaction Report

-
Canadan E&P 2026 Program Calls for 448 Net Wells, Up 24% vs. 2025 Plan -

-
EIA’s “Glut” Calls: The 2025 Surplus Claim — and How 2021–2024 Forecasts Actually Held Up

-
Whitecap Details 2026 Duvernay & Montney Program

-
ARC Resources: Lower 2026 Capex, Higher Volumes

