[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"blog-\u002Fblog\u002Fintroducing-energy-bundle":3},{"id":4,"title":5,"author":6,"body":7,"category":225,"cover":226,"date":227,"description":228,"extension":229,"meta":230,"navigation":231,"path":232,"seo":233,"stem":234,"tags":235,"__hash__":240},"blog\u002Fblog\u002Fintroducing-energy-bundle.md","Introducing the Energy Bundle - AER Wells with Lifecycle, Pipelines, and Facilities on the DLS Grid","Township Canada",{"type":8,"value":9,"toc":214},"minimark",[10,21,24,31,36,43,77,80,89,93,96,100,103,107,141,145,160,164,178,182],[11,12,13],"blockquote",{},[14,15,16,20],"p",{},[17,18,19],"strong",{},"Update (2026):"," Crown mineral tenure (metallic, coal, ammonite) now ships as a dedicated map layer and in the parcel report alongside PNG dispositions.",[14,22,23],{},"A pipeline integrity analyst in Calgary opens five tools to plan a single inspection campaign: the AER GeoView portal for licensed pipeline segments, the AER ST37 directives portal for the wells the line connects, the Orphan Well Association inventory for closure-funded sites, the Petrinex facility lookup for batteries and gas plants, and an internal GIS to overlay treaty geography. Each tool returns part of the picture; the operator stitches the rest manually.",[14,25,26,27,30],{},"Township Canada's new ",[17,28,29],{},"Energy Bundle"," puts all of that on one map, layered against the DLS grid that every legal land description in Alberta already references.",[32,33,35],"h2",{"id":34},"whats-in-the-bundle","What's in the bundle",[14,37,38,39,42],{},"The Energy Bundle is a ",[17,40,41],{},"$50 CAD\u002Fmonth"," add-on (stacks on Pro or Business) that unlocks the Alberta energy data stack on top of the standard Township Canada feature set:",[44,45,46,53,59,65,71],"ul",{},[47,48,49,52],"li",{},[17,50,51],{},"AER Wells with full lifecycle"," - Active, Suspended, Abandoned, Reclaimed, plus the orphan flag (where the Orphan Well Association is funding closure rather than the original licensee).",[47,54,55,58],{},[17,56,57],{},"AER Pipelines"," - every licensed pipeline segment, rendered as a line layer with mid-point labels. Tile coalescing handles the southern-Alberta density.",[47,60,61,64],{},[17,62,63],{},"AER Facilities (ST102)"," - collapsed from 40+ Petrinex sub-codes into eight customer-facing buckets: battery, gas plant, compressor, disposal, custom treating, terminal, water source, other.",[47,66,67,70],{},[17,68,69],{},"Operator BA snapshot"," - per-operator counts (total \u002F active \u002F suspended \u002F abandoned \u002F orphan \u002F reclamation-certified), surfaced on the operator view of every parcel report. Programmatic API access is on our roadmap.",[47,72,73,76],{},[17,74,75],{},"Crown tenure (PNG + mineral)"," - petroleum and natural gas dispositions plus metallic, coal, and ammonite mineral agreements on the DLS grid, with expiry alerts and map presets.",[14,78,79],{},"Plus the CCS \u002F pore space tenure layers that shipped earlier - pore space rights, project boundaries, injection wells, geothermal tenure - are part of the Energy Bundle entitlement.",[14,81,82,83,88],{},"Treaty Boundaries (Treaties 4, 6, 7, 8, and 10) render as polygons at low zoom and surface as a flag on every parcel report. That flag is free at every tier, not gated behind the bundle - see ",[84,85,87],"a",{"href":86},"\u002Fblog\u002Ftreaty-boundaries-why-we-shipped-them","why we shipped Treaty Boundaries the way we did",".",[32,90,92],{"id":91},"why-bundle-these-together","Why bundle these together",[14,94,95],{},"The layers are tied at the data level. A reactivated well needs a tie-in pipeline, which needs a destination facility. An operator evaluating an acquisition target needs the per-BA rollup across all of them. A pipeline integrity team prioritizing inspection needs the lines geometry, the connected wells, and the surrounding facilities in a single view. Splitting the layers across separate products would force operators back into the cross-portal workflow the bundle exists to replace.",[32,97,99],{"id":98},"pricing-math","Pricing math",[14,101,102],{},"The Energy Bundle is $50 CAD\u002Fmonth and stacks on your existing plan - $70\u002Fmonth total on Pro ($20), or $90\u002Fmonth on Business ($40). For comparison: standalone AER tools that come closest to this scope (geoSCOUT, OilTrails, Petrinex enterprise APIs) sit at five-figure annual contracts. Township Canada's pricing reflects what an individual analyst or a small team can justify on a corporate card.",[32,104,106],{"id":105},"who-this-is-for","Who this is for",[44,108,109,119,129,135],{},[47,110,111,114,115,88],{},[17,112,113],{},"Oil and gas operators"," planning new wells, reactivations, or tie-ins. See ",[84,116,118],{"href":117},"\u002Ffor\u002Foil-and-gas","Township Canada for Oil and Gas",[47,120,121,124,125,88],{},[17,122,123],{},"CCS and geothermal developers"," scoping pore space tenure submissions. See ",[84,126,128],{"href":127},"\u002Ffor\u002Fccs-developers","Township Canada for CCS Developers",[47,130,131,134],{},[17,132,133],{},"Pipeline integrity, closure obligation, and surface-rights teams"," who need lifecycle status across the AER inventory.",[47,136,137,140],{},[17,138,139],{},"M&A diligence teams"," evaluating operator portfolios via the BA snapshot.",[32,142,144],{"id":143},"how-to-subscribe","How to subscribe",[14,146,147,148,152,153,159],{},"The \"Add Energy Bundle\" card appears on ",[149,150,151],"code",{},"\u002Fapp\u002Faccount"," (and on ",[84,154,156],{"href":155},"\u002Fpricing#bundles",[149,157,158],{},"\u002Fpricing",") for any Pro or Business customer. One click opens Stripe Checkout for the $50\u002Fmonth add-on, and the new layers unlock right away - no re-login.",[32,161,163],{"id":162},"whats-still-roadmapped","What's still roadmapped",[44,165,166,172],{},[47,167,168,171],{},[17,169,170],{},"Indigenous consultation overlay (beyond treaty boundaries)"," - reserve lands and provincial consultation databases, to complement the treaty flag.",[47,173,174,177],{},[17,175,176],{},"SK and BC equivalents"," - the underlying datasets exist; coverage follows once the Alberta experience proves out.",[32,179,181],{"id":180},"related","Related",[44,183,184,190,196,202,208],{},[47,185,186],{},[84,187,189],{"href":188},"\u002Flearn\u002Fhow-to\u002Faer-wells-lifecycle-status","AER Wells Lifecycle Status",[47,191,192],{},[84,193,195],{"href":194},"\u002Flearn\u002Fhow-to\u002Faer-pipelines-map","AER Pipelines Map",[47,197,198],{},[84,199,201],{"href":200},"\u002Flearn\u002Fhow-to\u002Faer-facilities-eight-categories","AER Facilities - 8 Categories",[47,203,204],{},[84,205,207],{"href":206},"\u002Flearn\u002Fhow-to\u002Ftreaty-boundaries-on-dls-grid","Treaty Boundaries on the DLS Grid",[47,209,210],{},[84,211,213],{"href":212},"\u002Flearn\u002Fhow-to\u002Forphan-well-due-diligence","Orphan Well Due Diligence",{"title":215,"searchDepth":216,"depth":216,"links":217},"",2,[218,219,220,221,222,223,224],{"id":34,"depth":216,"text":35},{"id":91,"depth":216,"text":92},{"id":98,"depth":216,"text":99},{"id":105,"depth":216,"text":106},{"id":143,"depth":216,"text":144},{"id":162,"depth":216,"text":163},{"id":180,"depth":216,"text":181},"product",null,"2026-05-21","A new $50\u002Fmo add-on (stacks on Pro or Business) that puts the Alberta energy data stack on one map: AER wells with orphan\u002Fabandoned flags, the AER pipeline network, and 8-category facilities.","md",{},true,"\u002Fblog\u002Fintroducing-energy-bundle",{"title":5,"description":228},"blog\u002Fintroducing-energy-bundle",[29,236,237,238,239],"AER Wells","Pipelines","Product Launch","Oil and Gas","pd4JC1YjqA9MuBN6rV3vJmWHaOcOXiwRe8abl9pg8z0"]