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All positions advertised require individuals who are focused on quality and efficiency, committed to QHSE, and have an excellent command of oral and written English.
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Colombian authorities have blamed Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) guerrillas for last week's attacks on the Cano Limon-Covenas crude pipeline, adding a crude spill from the ruptured pipe is now threatening Venezuela's Lake Maracaibo.
The governor of Norte Santander province, Luis Miguel Morelli, told reporters in the provincial capital of Cucuta that three sections of the pipeline near the Catatumbo River had been blown up by FARC.
About 4000 barrels of crude leaked from the pipeline after the explosions. The spill has now reached the waters of the Catatumbo River which flows into Lake Maracaibo.
Morelli added that the spill had contaminated an area of about 100 kilometres.
Meanwhile, it emerged that state-run Ecopetrol has warned Venezuelan authorities that the oil spill has entered the river current, and is launching a contingency plan to try to prevent further environmental damage.
The pipeline, which pumps 100,000 barrels per day to the Atlantic port of Covenas, has been shut in while repairs are carried out.
Since it came into operation in 1986, the Cano Limon-Covenas pipeline has been attacked close to 1000 times, most often by leftist rebels.
Colombian rebels have stepped up their activity in the run-up to Sunday's elections.
Opinion polls suggest that President Alvaro Uribe, who has taken a hard line with insurgency groups, is on course to win a second term.