Fort St John, BC, Canada
Buried line strikes can shut down a wellsite, pipeline corridor, plant yard, or road project. Badger uses hydrovac excavation from Fort St John and other Canadian and U.S. locations to expose underground utilities with water and vacuum instead of open mechanical digging. We have worked since 1992 across oil and gas, energy, industrial, construction, transportation, telecommunications, and government markets. The Badger Hydrovac is built for non-destructive excavation where soil removal must be controlled around pipe, cable, conduit, and other buried assets. Daylighting helps confirm the location and depth of underground infrastructure before trenching, tie-ins, repairs, or civil construction. Our hydrovac process is suited to pipeline-adjacent excavation and transportation-related infrastructure exposure where access, spoil handling, and asset protection need to be planned together. For estimating, we focus the conversation on the excavation target, site access, soil conditions, disposal needs, and schedule. Our hydrovac team plans daylighting and trenching scopes around the asset being exposed and the field conditions around it.












