Athabasca Oil Corp has suspended the production of 4,200 barrels of oil equivalent a day (boe/d) of light oil, becoming the latest western Canadian producer to curb output due to the Alliance Pipeline natural gas mainline shutdown.

Alliance declared force majeure on its 2,400-mile (3,850- km) pipeline, which delivers gas and natural gas liquids from western Canada and North Dakota's Williston Basin to the Chicago market, last week after poisonous hydrogen sulfide entered the system.

The pipeline company, a limited partnership owned by affiliates of Enbridge Income Fund Holdings and Veresen Inc, called on shippers to suspend injections into the pipeline on Friday so the affected gas could be flared off.

The Alliance mainline accounts for about a third of Canada's daily net exports to the United States and the shutdown is expected to last several more days.

Athabasca said on Aug. 10 it managed to shift a portion of its production from the Kaybob region in west central Alberta to other pipeline systems, but approximately 84 percent of its light oil output was impacted nonetheless.

It joins a number of other oil and gas producers, including Seven Generations Energy and NuVista Energy Ltd , that have been forced to trim some or all production.

Athabasca said five days of downtime on the Alliance pipeline would cut its third quarter light oil production guidance of 5,000 boe/d by approximately 250 boe/d.

The hydrogen sulfide gas entered the pipeline system as a result of complications experienced by an upstream operator that Alliance did not name.

However, midstream company Keyera Corp said it had a brief operational upset Aug. 5 at its Simonette, Alberta, gas plant, which resulted in gas that did not meet sales gas specifications entering the Alliance Pipeline.

Keyera said it had offered assistance to Alliance and was working with producer customers to divert their gas.