SaskEnergy 2018-19 Annual Report

SASKENERGY 2018-19 ANNUAL REPORT

Glossary of Key Success Measures

ONE COMPANY, ONE TEAM

Employee Experience Employee Survey

This measure was developed in 2018-19 and the survey will be conducted every two years, of which SaskEnergy will compare results.

Workforce Diversity

The workplace diversity measures provide quantitative data for the employment of Indigenous individuals, recognized by the Saskatchewan Human Rights Commission as being either underemployed or minimally employed within the province. SaskEnergy also tracks the percentage of “Youth” in the workforce, which is defined as employees who are 30 years of age or less. The measures are calculated by comparing the number of employees from these groups relative to the number of total employees that comprise the workforce. SaskEnergy statistics related to employment equity are tracked and reported internally and are also reported to the Saskatchewan Human Rights Commission annually.

Youth, First Nations/Metis

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Personal Safety

This measure is a composite of two separate metrics: • Lost Time Frequency Rate - measures the frequency in which lost time injuries have occurred. A standard duration is used to normalize the results so that company comparisons can be made despite differing workforce sizes. A lost time injury is an injury that resulted in lost work time following the day of the injury. • Medical Aid Frequency Rate - records the frequency of injuries that require medical attention. Results are normalized so that company comparisons can be made despite differing workforce sizes. A medical aid injury is an injury that requires medical attention, but no working time is lost beyond the day of the injury. The term “leak” is defined as any unplanned release of product from the distribution system. The methodology for this metric was developed and standardized in 2013 by the Canadian Gas Association (CGA) for inter-jurisdictional comparison purposes, and the SaskEnergy data on leaks per 1,000 kms of mains aligns with CGA reporting methodology. The term “failure” is defined as any unplanned release of natural gas product from the gas line body. This measure aligns with the Canadian Energy Pipeline Association’s (CEPA) definition and statistics, which the Corporation will use as a benchmark. The definition does not include small leaks on fittings and valve bodies. For reference, the CEPA five-year average is 0.153. This measure reflects, as a percentage, the current year of integrity capital spending against the Corporation’s assets as of 15 years ago. In general, older assets require greater attention from an integrity perspective, and thus it is appropriate to measure integrity spending against these older assets. This metric reflects the Corporation’s focus on safety and integrity efforts and helps ensure integrity programming remains consistent with industry best practice.

Total Recordable Injury Frequency Rate

Safety/Vigilance

SaskEnergy Leaks per 1,000 kilometres of Mains

TransGas Natural Gas Line Failures per 1,000 kilometres of Gas Line

Safety and Integrity

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