LATEST NEWS
July 29, 2010
SARJEANT FUELS
Fuel-supply firm Sarjeant Co. sends out a customer-service specialist to each construction site before the first delivery.
The Sargeant Co. delivers fuel security
The rest of the world continues to debate the future of fossil fuels but at Canadian construction sites, diesel remains the fuel of choice — and is likely to remain that way.
With no reliable substitute for petro-chemicals on the horizon, the biggest issue facing the sector is not what type of fuel they should burn to drive their machinery but questions around supply, security of supply and environmental safety concerns around spills.
“Diesel is by far the biggest component of our construction site deliveries,” says Bill Fligg, Petroleum Manager with The Sarjeant Co. Ltd. of Barrie, Ont.
Among other services offered, the company delivers fuel over a wide are north of the Greater Toronto Area, primarily in Simcoe County and the Muskokas, balancing its busiest construction delivery business from April to October, with foul weather delivery of home heating fuel from November to March.
Fligg says the company attempts to distinguish itself by sending out a fuel specialist to each construction site before the first order is delivered.
“Sending out a real human being gives us a better sense of their needs,” he says.
“Do they need us to directly fuel their vehicles, or would they be better off with a supplied tank? How often do they require fuel? Do they have six pieces of equipment running full out each day? Can we arrange to deliver fuel at the same time each day? What’s the best way to service them?”
Part of the visit involves a discussion of fuel security.
“Fuel theft is a big issue,” says Fligg. “Diesel fuel is furnace oil, so it’s a commodity that can be used by anybody. Most sites keep it under lock and key.”
Maintaining a steady supply of fuel for customers is also important.
The company has accounts with all of the major fuel suppliers to ensure a consistent supply and to take advantage of even a minor difference in bulk fuel pricing. It also stockpiles 1.6 million litres of fuel in four tanks and hauls it in from suppliers in B-train double tankers capable of carrying 25,000 litres in a single trip.
Fuel spills are also an important environmental issue, regardless of who spills it. “Even filling up the tank of a backhoe very carefully can create little backsplash,” he says. “You can’t even fill up a lawnmower without spilling a few drops.”
The Ontario Ministry of the Environment requires petroleum sector members to report fuel spills in excess of 25 litres in areas with public access.
While working with a remediation company to clean up a property soaked with hydrocarbons by previous owners, Sarjent was introduced to a treatment consisting of enzymes and bacteria to break down fuel spills.
“The enzymes break down the long-chain molecules in the fuel and the microbes bind to the short chain molecules and convert them to oxygen and water,” says Fligg. Approved by the Ontario Ministry of the Environment for soil remediation, Sarjent has branded the product and is marketing it as Micro-50.
The company recently went to Louisiana to offer the product to help combat oil spills released in the BP Horizon disaster.
After working their way through the chain of command at the Gulf Operations Center amidst helicopters, temporary command offices and military vehicles, Fligg and the company’s CEO, Scott Elliott, eventually presented the solution to top brass.
The brass, in turn, requested that its formulation be slightly altered to specifically attack the type of crude released in the spill.
Currently on the US Environmental Protection Agency’s fast-track approval program, the solution may be available to help clean up the spill in six to eight weeks.
Here in Ontario, the product is ready for use. “Even if a spill large enough to report to the Ministry has occurred, instead of waiting for someone to show up to look at it, you can still douse it with this solution and help to mitigate the problem immediately,” says Fligg.
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
- Four companies short-listed to renovate London, Ontario hospital
- Plenty of work ahead as Ontario construction-site safety blitz ends
- Delcan to provide enegineering services for Highway 407 extension
- Fanshawe College’s new Centre for Applied Transportation Technologies goes green
- U.S. power authority approves Tennessee nuclear facility
- 20 Most Popular Stories
| TODAY’S TOP CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS |
These projects have been selected from 314 projects with a total value of $1,837,064,835 that Reed Construction Data Building Reports reported on yesterday.
$180,000,000 Toronto ON Prebid
WASTEWATER TREATMENT PLANT UPGRADES
$55,000,000 Waterloo ON Prebid
$41,950,000 Thunder Bay ON Tenders
| CURRENT STORIES |
- Photovoltaic training program aimed at improving safety
- Construction continues on Woodgreen Community Housing development in Toronto
- TransCanada begins construction on Alberta-British Columbia pipeline
- Saskatoon bridge closed indefinitely over structural concerns
- China manufacturing, sales figures rebound
- U.S. workers rate safety standards as top priority
- Labour agreement removed from bidding process for armed forces reserve centre
- Cambodia announces plan for tallest skyscraper in Asia
- Russia opens section of China oil pipeline
- Anemic U.S. housing concerns lumber producers
- Car plows into Vancouver construction site
- Options being considered for new Pattullo Bridge in Metro Vancouver
- New British Columbia procurement model arises from hospital projects
- Columbia Bitulithic resurfaces Canada Way in Burnaby, British Columbia
- Crane falls into Saskatchewan lake, forcing bridge closure
- Construction and engineering mergers increase: Report
- BC Housing complex features Western Canada’s largest solar installation
- Construction underway on overdue sewer project in Smithers, British Columbia
- Trinidad and Tobago project designed to protect Buccoo Reef
- Manitoba invests in Winnipeg road improvements
- Contractors race to meet infrastructure stimulus deadline
- New Port Mann Bridge rises over Fraser River
- VanDusen Botanical Garden visitor centre shaping up as a living building
- Boundary Road Connector project takes shape in northern British Columbia
- Work begins on RCMP E-Division headquarters in Surrey, British Columbia
- Saskatchewan no closer to public-private partnership framework
- Dawson Bridge rehabilitation nearing completion in Edmonton
| ALEX’S ECONOMICS BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in the North American economic environment with emphasis on the construction industry.
- For Canada, the longer-term outlook is largely about commodities (September 2, 2010)
- Canada’s construction starts in a transition phase (August 27, 2010)
- U.S. initial jobless claims rise to half a million again (August 19, 2010)
- More










