Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Tervita

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Predecessor
  
CCS Corporation

CFO
  
Rob Dawson

Number of employees
  
4,000

Founded
  
1979

Website
  
tervita.com

Headquarters
  
Calgary, Canada

General counsel
  
Rob Van Walleghem (HSE)

Type of business
  
Privately held company

Tervita wwwtervitacomMySitethemeimageslogopng

Industry
  
Energy equipment and services

Key people
  
John W. Gibson Jr. (CEO & President) David Paul Werklund (Founder & Chairman)

Products
  
Energy & Environmental Waste services

Subsidiaries
  
Hazco, Concord Well Servicing

Profiles

Tervita is a private company based out of Alberta, Canada that specializes in energy and environmental waste services. It was co-founded by David P. Werklund as Concord Well Servicing in 1979. It became Canadian Crude Separators Corporation (CCS Corp.) in 1984. In 2012, twelve companies under CCS Corporation, to include CCS Midstream Services and Hazco, formed under Tervita.

Contents

Profile

The company offers services to include oil field waste disposal, landfill remediation, demolition, metals recycling, water treatment, civil and environmental construction, oil sands exploration, construction drilling and oil spill clean-up. It serves clients with locations throughout Canada and the United States.

History

In 1979, David Werklund and Gordon Vivian started Concord Well Servicing out of Valleyview, Alberta. With an investment from Werklund, CCS was formed in 1984, providing oil waste services. Hazco which provided water and environmental services was formed in 1989. Five years later CCS became a publicly traded company. Over the years Hazco and CCS acquire several energy and environmental waste-related companies. CCS would acquire Hazco in 2004. In 2007, CCS renames itself CCS Corporation and goes private. In 2012, the twelve similar companies combine under CCS Corporation and form Tervita.

In January 2015 the company won a Supreme Court of Canada decision, allowing it to develop a landfill in northeastern British Columbia through the CAD$6 million acquisition of Complete Environmental Inc. The plaintiff argued that Tervita would own all three landfills in northeast British Columbia and therefore it would eliminate competition. The decision was significant as the acquisition was small and it set the framework for future decisions based on market competition in Canada.

References

Tervita Wikipedia