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Athabasca oil sands

The Athabasca oil sands, also known as the Athabasca tar sands, are large deposits of bitumen, a heavy and viscous form of petroleum, located in northeastern Alberta, Canada. These reserves are one of the largest sources of unconventional oil in the world, making Canada a significant player in the global energy market.[3]

Athabasca oil sands
CountryCanada
RegionNorthern Alberta
Offshore/onshoreOnshore, mining
Coordinates57°01′N 111°39′W / 57.02°N 111.65°W / 57.02; -111.65
OperatorsSyncrude, Suncor Energy, Canadian Natural Resources, Total S.A., Imperial Oil, Petro Canada, Devon Energy, Husky Energy, Statoil, Nexen
PartnersChevron Corporation, Marathon Oil, ConocoPhillips, BP, Occidental Petroleum
Field history
Discovery1848
Start of production1967
Production
Current production of oil2,800,000 barrels per day (~1.4×10^8 t/a)[1]
Estimated oil in place133,000 million barrels (~1.81×10^10 t)[2]
Producing formationsMcMurray, Clearwater, Grand Rapids

As of 2023 Canada's oil sands industry, along with Western Canada and offshore petroleum facilities near Newfoundland and Labrador, continued to increase production and were projected to increase by an estimated 10% in 2024 representing a potential record high at the end of the year of approximately 5.3 million barrels per day (bpd).[4] The surge in production is attributed mainly to growth in Alberta's oilsands.[4] The expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline—the only oil pipeline to the West Coast—will further facilitate this increase, with its capacity set to increase significantly, to 890,000 barrels per day from 300,000 bpd currently.[5][4] Despite this growth, there are warnings that it might be short-lived, with production potentially plateauing after 2024.[4] Canada's anticipated increase in oil output exceeds that of other major producers like the United States, and the country is poised to become a significant driver of global crude oil production growth in 2024.[4] The exploitation of these resources has stirred debates regarding economic development, energy security, and environmental impacts, particularly emissions from the oilsands, prompting discussions around emissions regulations for the oil and gas sector.[4][6][7][8][9][10][11]

The Athabaska oil sands, along with the nearby Peace River and Cold Lake deposits oil sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres (54,000 sq mi) of boreal forest and muskeg (peat bogs) according to Government of Alberta's Ministry of Energy,[12] Alberta Energy Regulator (AER) and the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers (CAPP).

History edit

The Athabasca oil sands are named after the Athabasca River which cuts through the heart of the deposit, and traces of the heavy oil are readily observed on the river banks. Historically, the bitumen was used by the indigenous Cree and Dene Aboriginal peoples to waterproof their canoes.[13] The oil deposits are located within the boundaries of Treaty 8, and several First Nations of the area are involved with the sands.

Early history edit

 
Athabasca oil sands on the banks of the river, around 1900

The Athabasca oil sands first came to the attention of European fur traders in 1719 when Wa-pa-su, a Cree trader, brought a sample of bituminous sands to the Hudson's Bay Company post at York Factory on Hudson Bay where Henry Kelsey was the manager.[14] In 1778, Peter Pond, another fur trader and a founder of the rival North West Company, became the first European to see the Athabasca deposits after exploring the Methye Portage which allowed access to the rich fur resources of the Athabasca River system from the Hudson Bay watershed.[15]

In 1788, fur trader Alexander Mackenzie, after whom the Mackenzie River was later named, traveled along routes to both the Arctic and Pacific Ocean wrote: "At about 24 miles [39 km] from the fork (of the Athabasca and Clearwater Rivers) are some bituminous fountains into which a pole of 20 feet [6.1 m] long may be inserted without the least resistance. The bitumen is in a fluid state and when mixed with gum, the resinous substance collected from the spruce fir, it serves to gum the Indians' canoes." He was followed in 1799 by mapmaker David Thompson and in 1819 by British Naval officer John Franklin.[16]

John Richardson did the first serious scientific assessment of the oil sands in 1848 on his way north to search for Franklin's lost expedition. The first government-sponsored survey of the oil sands was initiated in 1875 by John Macoun, and in 1883, G. C. Hoffman of the Geological Survey of Canada tried separating the bitumen from oil sand with the use of water and reported that it separated readily. In 1888, Robert Bell, the director of the Geological Survey of Canada, reported to a Senate Committee that "The evidence ... points to the existence in the Athabasca and Mackenzie valleys of the most extensive petroleum field in America, if not the world."[15]

 
Athabasca oil sand of the McMurray Formation as seen in drill cores.

Count Alfred von Hammerstein (1870–1941), who arrived in the region in 1897, promoted the Athabasca oil sands for over forty years, taking photos with descriptive titles such as "Tar Sands and Flowing Asphaltum in the Athabasca District," that are now in the National Library and National Archives Canada. Photos of the Athabasca oil sands were also featured in Canadian writer and adventurer, Agnes Deans Cameron's, best-selling book The New North which recounted her 10,000 mi (16,000 km) roundtrip to the Arctic Ocean.[17] Her photographs were reproduced in 2011–2012 in an exhibit at the Canadian Museum of Civilization in Ottawa,[18] and included photos of Count Alfred Von Hammerstein's oil drill works along the Athabasca River.

In 1926, Karl Clark of the University of Alberta received a patent for a hot water separation process which was the forerunner of today's thermal extraction processes. Several attempts to implement it had varying degrees of success.[citation needed]

Project Oilsand edit

Project Oilsand was a 1958 proposal to exploit the Athabasca oil sands using the underground detonation of nuclear explosives;[19] hypothetically, the heat and pressure created by an underground detonation would boil the bitumen deposits, reducing their viscosity to the point that standard oilfield techniques could be used. The plan was discussed in the October 1976 Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.[20] A patent was granted for the intended process in 1964.[21][22] The nuclear heating option is considered a forerunner to some of the conventional heating methods used to extract tar sands oil.[23]

In April 1959, the Federal Mines Department approved Project Oilsand.[24] However, it was subsequently cancelled in 1962.[25]

Great Canadian Oil Sands edit

The oil sands, which are typically 40 to 60 metres (130 to 200 ft) thick and sit on top of relatively flat limestone, are relatively easy to access. They lie under 1 to 3 m (3 ft 3 in to 9 ft 10 in) of waterlogged muskeg, 0 to 75 metres (0 to 246 ft) of clay and barren sand. As a result of the easy accessibility, the world's first oil-sands mine was in the Athabasca oil sands.

Commercial production of oil from the Athabasca oil sands began in 1967, with the opening of the Great Canadian Oil Sands (GCOS) plant in Fort McMurray. It was the first operational oil sands project in the world, owned and operated by the American parent company, Sun Oil Company. When the US$240 million plant officially opened with a capacity of 45,000 barrels per day (7,200 m3/d), it marked the beginning of commercial development of the Athabasca oil sands. In 2013 McKenzie-Brown listed industrialist J. Howard Pew as one of the six visionaries who built the Athabasca oil sands.[26] By the time of his death in 1971, the Pew family were ranked by Forbes magazine as one of the half-dozen wealthiest families in America.[27] The Great Canadian Oil Sands Limited (then a subsidiary of Sun Oil Company but now incorporated into an independent company known as Suncor Energy Inc.) produced 30,000 barrels per day (4,800 m3/d) of synthetic crude oil.[28]

Oil crisis edit

The true size of the Canadian oil sands deposits became known in the 1970s. The Syncrude mine is now the largest mine (by area) in the world, with mines potentially covering 140,000 km2 (54,000 sq mi).[citation needed] (Although there is oil underlying 142,200 km2 (54,900 sq mi), which may be disturbed by drilling and in situ extraction, only 4,800 km2 (1,900 sq mi) may potentially be surface mined, and 904 km2 (349 sq mi) has to date been mined.)

Development was inhibited by declining world oil prices, and the second mine, operated by the Syncrude consortium, did not begin operating until 1978, after the 1973 oil crisis sparked investor interest. However, the price of oil subsided afterwards and although the 1979 energy crisis caused oil prices to peak again, during the 1980s, oil prices declined to very low levels causing considerable retrenchment in the oil industry.

In 1979, Sun formed Suncor by merging its Canadian refining and retailing interests with Great Canadian Oil Sands and its conventional oil and gas interests. In 1981, the Government of Ontario purchased a 25% stake in the company but divested it in 1993. In 1995, Sun Oil also divested its interest in the company, although Suncor maintained the Sunoco retail brand in Canada. Suncor took advantage of these two divestitures to become an independent, widely held public company.

Suncor continued to grow and continued to produce more and more oil from its oil sands operations regardless of fluctuating market prices, and eventually became bigger than its former parent company. In 2009, Suncor acquired the formerly Canadian government owned oil company, Petro-Canada,[29][30] which turned Suncor into the largest petroleum company in Canada and one of the biggest Canadian companies. Suncor Energy is now a Canadian company completely unaffiliated with its former American parent company. Sun Oil Company became known as Sunoco, but later left the oil production and refining business, and has since become a retail gasoline distributor owned by Energy Transfer Partners of Dallas, Texas. In Canada, Suncor Energy converted all of its Sunoco stations (which were all in Ontario) to Petro-Canada sites in order to unify all of its downstream retail operations under the Petro-Canada banner and discontinue paying licensing fees for the Sunoco brand. Nationwide, Petro-Canada's upstream product supplier and parent company is Suncor Energy. Suncor Energy continues to operate just one Sunoco retail site in Ontario.[31]

Oil sands production in the 21st century edit

At the turn of the 21st century, oil sands development in Canada started to take off, with an expansion at the Suncor mine, a new mine and expansion at Syncrude, and a new mine by Royal Dutch Shell associated with their new Scotford Upgrader near Edmonton. Three new large steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) projects were added – Foster Creek, Surmont, and MacKay River – by different companies, all of which have since been bought by larger companies.[32]

Shell Canada's third mine began operating in 2003. However, as a result of oil price increases since 2003, the existing mines have been greatly expanded and new ones were built.

According to the Alberta Energy and Utilities Board, 2005 production of crude bitumen in the Athabasca oil sands was as follows:

2005 production of crude bitumen
Mine (m3/day) Barrels per day
Suncor mine 31,000 195,000
Syncrude mine 41,700 262,000
Shell Canada mine 26,800 169,000
In situ projects 21,300 134,000
Total 120,800 760,000

As of 2006, oil sands production had increased to 1,126,000 barrels per day (179,000 m3/d). Oil sands were by then the source of 62% of Alberta's total oil production and 47% of all oil produced in Canada.[33] As of 2010, oil sands production had increased to over 1.6 million barrels per day (250,000 m3/d) to exceed conventional oil production in Canada. 53% of this was produced by surface mining and 47% by in-situ techniques. In 2012, oil production from oil sands was 1.8 million barrels per day (290,000 m3/d).[34]

Shale oil boom edit

The massive development of tight oil extraction in the Bakken and Permian Basin in the United States transformed the oil industry rapidly, reducing importation of foreign oil dramatically. As with the oil sands, production costs of shale oil are higher than those of conventional oil. A combination of factors, among them oversupply and geopolitical rivalries, drove the price of oil down from more than 100 dollars a barrel in 2013 to less than 40 dollars three years later. Lingering low oil prices prompted companies to cancel new investments in the oil sands.

Fort McMurray wildfire edit

 
Satellite image of the fire at night (May 5, 2016).

From May to July 2016, a wildfire spread from Fort McMurray across northern Alberta, burning approximately 590,000 hectares (1,500,000 acres) of forested areas and destroying approximately 2,400 homes and buildings. 88,000 people were forced from their homes in what became the largest wildfire evacuation in Alberta's history and the costliest disaster in Canadian history.

The wildfire halted oil sands production at facilities north of Fort McMurray. Shell Canada shut down output at its Albian Sands mining operation. Suncor Energy and Syncrude Canada also scaled back operations and evacuated employees and their families. Approximately one million barrels of oil a day, equal to a quarter of Canada's oil production, was halted as a result of the fire in May. This continued into June at a rate of 700,000 barrels per day. The lost output was a contributing factor to rises in global oil prices. The scaled back operations, along with a refinery outage in Edmonton, caused many gas stations to run out of gas throughout Western Canada.

2015 production of crude bitumen[35]
Mine (m3/day) Barrels per day
Suncor mine 80,000 501,000
Syncrude mine 65,000 407,000
Shell Canada mines 40,000 255,000
Imperial Oil mine 35,000 220,000
CNRL mine 24,000 152,000
In situ projects 138,000 865,000
Total 382,000 2,400,000

In 2018, oil sands production reached 3.1 million barrels per day (490,000 m3/d).

Until 2014, industry groups believed oil sands production levels could reach 5 Mbbl/d (790,000 m3/d) by 2030. As of 2021, after a slowdown in investment, analyst are predicting it could reach 3.8 Mbbl/d (600,000 m3/d) by that time.[36][37]

Transportation edit

 
Citizen demonstrating against the Keystone Pipeline and tar sands.

Canada is the largest source of oil imported by the United States, supplying 3 million barrels per day (480,000 m3/d) chiefly from oil sands sources as of 2019.[38]

Industry observers went from believing there might be excess pipeline capacity to warning that it was insufficient to accommodate oil sands production growth, after several pipeline projects were abandoned or cancelled.[39]

The North Gateway project to Kitimat, British Columbia, which would have been built by Enbridge, operator of the Enbridge Pipeline System which also serves the area, was cancelled in 2016. Similarly, after lengthy environmentalist and First Nation group opposition, Keystone XL, a pipeline project from Alberta to Gulf coast refineries, was cancelled in 2021.[40] Other projects, using existing rights of way, are being built, like Kinder Morgan's Trans Mountain Expansion, nationalized in 2018, or Enbridge's Line 9, reversed to feed refineries in Quebec.[41][42] Between January 2019 and December 2020, the Alberta government imposed a quota to adjust production to pipeline export capacity.[43]

To compensate for pipeline capacity limitations, shipment of oil by rail increased from less than 50 thousand to 400 thousand barrels per day (64,000 m3/d) between 2012 and 2020.[44]

Future production edit

As of December 2008, the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers revised its 2008–2020 crude oil forecasts to account for project cancellations and cutbacks as a result of the price declines in the second half of 2008. The revised forecast predicted that Canadian oil sands production would continue to grow, but at a slower rate than previously predicted. There would be minimal changes to 2008–2012 production, but by 2020 production could be 300,000 barrels per day (48,000 m3/d) less than its prior predictions. This would mean that Canadian oil sands production would grow from 1.2 million barrels per day (190,000 m3/d) in 2008 to 3.3 million barrels per day (520,000 m3/d) in 2020, and that total Canadian oil production would grow from 2.7 to 4.1 million barrels per day (430,000 to 650,000 m3/d) in 2020.[45] Even accounting for project cancellations, this would place Canada among the four or five largest oil-producing countries in the world by 2020.

In early December 2007, London-based BP and Calgary-based Husky Energy announced a 50–50 joint venture to produce and refine bitumen from the Athabasca oil sands. BP would contribute its Toledo, Ohio refinery to the joint venture, while Husky would contribute its Sunrise oil sands project. Sunrise was planned to start producing 60,000 barrels per day (9,500 m3/d) of bitumen in 2012 and may reach 200,000 bbl/d (32,000 m3/d) by 2015–2020. BP would modify its Toledo refinery to process 170,000 bbl/d (27,000 m3/d) of bitumen directly to refined products. The joint venture would solve problems for both companies, since Husky was short of refining capacity, and BP had no presence in the oil sands. It was a change of strategy for BP, since the company historically has downplayed the importance of oil sands.[46]

In mid December 2007, ConocoPhillips announced its intention to increase its oil sands production from 60,000 barrels per day (9,500 m3/d) to 1 million barrels per day (160,000 m3/d) over the next 20 years, which would make it the largest private sector oil sands producer in the world. ConocoPhillips currently holds the largest position in the Canadian oil sands with over 1 million acres (4,000 km2) under lease. Other major oil sands producers planning to increase their production include Royal Dutch Shell (to 770,000 bbl/d (122,000 m3/d)); Syncrude Canada (to 550,000 bbl/d (87,000 m3/d)); Suncor Energy (to 500,000 bbl/d (79,000 m3/d)) and Canadian Natural Resources (to 500,000 bbl/d (79,000 m3/d)).[47] If all these plans come to fruition, these five companies will be producing over 3.3 Mbbl/d (520,000 m3/d) of oil from oil sands by 2028.

Operating and Approved Athabasca Oil Sands Projects (as of December 2016)[48]
Project name Type Major partners National
affiliation
2016 production
(barrels/day)
Planned production
(barrels/day)
Millenium Mining Suncor Energy   Canada 501,000 501,000
Fort Hills 180,000
Firebag SAGD 273,000 398,000
MacKay River   38,000 58,000
Mildred Lake, Aurora Mining Suncor(60%), Imperial Oil(25%), Sinopec(9%), CNOOC(7%) (Syncrude)   Canada,   China,   USA 407,000 607,000
Jackpine, Muskeg Mining Shell(10%), Chevron(20%), CNRL(70%)[49] (Albian Sands)   Canada,   UK/  Netherlands,   USA 255,000 570,000
Kearl Mining Imperial Oil(70%), ExxonMobil(30%)   USA 220,000 345,000
Horizon Mining Canadian Natural Resources Limited   Canada 197,000 277,000
Jackfish I and II, Pike SAGD 105,000 175,000
Kirby 40,000 140,000
Foster Creek SAGD Cenovus Energy[50]   Canada 180,000 260,000
Christina Lake[51] 160,800 310,000
Grand Rapids 10,000 180,000
Narrow Lake 45,000 130,000
Surmont SAGD TotalEnergies(50%), ConocoPhillips(50%)   France,   USA 149,200 206,000
Long Lake SAGD Nexen(65%), OPTI Canada(35%)[52][53]   China[54] 92,000 129,500
Sunrise SAGD Husky Energy(50%), BP(50%)[55]   Canada,   UK 60,000 200,000
Christina Lake SAGD MEG Energy Corp   Canada,   China 60,000 210,000
Mackay River SAGD Brion Energy   China 35,000 150,000
Leismer SAGD Athabasca Oil Corporation   Canada,   China 20,000 60,000
Hangingstone 12,000 12,000
Great Divide SAGD Connacher Oil and Gas   Canada 20,000 48,000
Algar Lake SAGD Grizzly Oil Sands   Canada 6,000 12,000
West Ells SAGD Sunshine Oilsands   China 5,000 10,000
Blackrod SAGD BlackPearl Resources   Canada 800 80,000
Germain, Saleski SAGD Laricina Energy(60%), OSUM(40%)   Canada 270,000[56]
Hangingstone[57] SAGD JACOS(75%), CNOOC(25%)   Japan,   China 20,000
Advanced TriStar SAGD Value Creation Inc   Canada 60,000
Black Gold SAGD Korea National Oil Corporation   South Korea  30,000[58]
Hoole SAGD Cavalier Energy   Canada 10,000
Muskwa Steam & CO2 Renergy Petroleum   China 440
Total 2,891,800 5,638,940

Governance edit

The governance of the Alberta oil sands is focused on economic development, and has historically been dominated by the interests of two primary actors; government (federal and provincial) and industry. Canadian federalism forms the functions and roles of each level of government, in that constitutional power is split so that neither is superior to the other.[59] The Constitution Act, 1867, Section 109 ensures the province full ownership of the lands and resources within its borders. The province acts as the landowner and the federal government oversees jurisdiction over trade, commerce and taxation. There is a clear overlap, as resource management influences trade, and trade management influences resources.[60] As of the 1990s, both the federal and provincial government have been aligned, focusing on regulation, technology and the development of new export markets.[61] The majority of "ground-level" governance is carried out by a number of provincial institutions.

Ottawa has avoided direct investment, preferring to improve the investment climate. A prime example of this occurred in 1994, when the federal government rolled out tax breaks allowing 100% of oil sands capital investments to be written off as accelerated capital cost allowances.[62] The provincial government had a much more direct role in development; investing directly in numerous pilot projects, undertaking joint ventures with the industry and consistently making massive investments in research and development. Some people have claimed that Alberta features one of the lowest royalty rates in the world.[63] Since Alberta, unlike US states, owns the vast majority of oil under its surface it can exercise more control over it, whereas US states are limited to severance taxes. This industry-centric royalty system has been criticised for "promoting a runaway pace of development".[64][65]

Industry is the core force of oil sands development. The first major players, Suncor Energy and Syncrude, dominated the market until the 1990s. Currently there are 64 companies operating several hundred projects.[66] The majority of production now comes from foreign-owned corporations,[67] and the maintenance of a favourable climate for these corporations grants them strong influence; much stronger than that of non-productive stakeholders, such as citizens and environmental groups.[64]

Governance (policy, administration, regulation) over the oil sands is held almost entirely by the Ministry of Energy (Alberta) and its various departments. Critics noted a clear and systemic lack of public involvement at all key stages of the governance process.[68] In answer to this, the province initiated the Oil Sands Consultations Multistakeholder Committee (MSC) in 2006. The MSC represents four organisations: the Cumulative Environmental Management Association (CEMA), the Wood Buffalo Environmental Association (WBEA), the Canadian Oil Sands Network for Research and Development (CONRAD) and the Athabasca Regional Issues Working Group (RIWG).[64] The role of the MSC is to consult and make recommendations on management principles.[69] The recommendations contained in the MSC's first 2007 Final Report were lauded by several ministers and government representatives,[70] but none have yet been effectively passed into law.

On October 17, 2012, the Alberta government announced it would follow the recommendations of a working group[71] to develop an agency that would monitor the environmental impact of the oil sands. "The new science-based agency will begin work in the oil sands region and will focus on what is monitored, how it's monitored and where it's monitored. This will include integrated and coordinated monitoring of land, air, water and biodiversity," said a press release from Diana McQueen's office, the Minister of Energy and Sustainable Development.[72] The provincial government moved to develop the agency after widespread public criticism by environmentalists, aboriginal groups and scientists, who claimed the oil sands would have a devastating, long-term effect on the environment if left unchecked.[73]

On 17 June 2013 the newly formed corporation, Alberta Energy Regulator (AER) [74] was phased in with a mandate to regulate oil, gas and coal development in Alberta including the Athabasca oil sands.[75][76] The AER brings together "the regulatory functions from the Energy Resources Conservation Board and the Alberta Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Resource Development into a one-stop shop" [77] The Alberta Energy Regulator is now "responsible for all projects from application to reclamation." They will respond to project proponents, landowners and industry regarding energy regulations in Alberta.[77] The Responsible Energy Development Act gave the Alberta Energy Regulator "the authority to administer the Public Lands Act, the Environmental Protection and Enhancement Act and the Water Act, with regards to energy development."[77] The Alberta Energy Regulator will enforce environmental laws and issue environmental and water permits, responsibilities formerly the mandate of Alberta Environment.[75][78]

Development edit

 
Map of all pipelines regulated by the Canadian Energy Regulator that originate from Alberta.

The key characteristic of the Athabasca deposit is that it is the only one shallow enough to be suitable for surface mining. About 10% of the Athabasca oil sands are covered by less than 75 metres (246 ft) of overburden. Until 2009, the surface mineable area (SMA) was defined by the ERCB, an agency of the Alberta government, to cover 37 contiguous townships (about 3,400 km2 or 1,300 sq mi) north of Fort McMurray. In June 2009, the SMA was expanded to 51+12 townships, or about 4,700 km2 or 1,800 sq mi.[79] This expansion pushes the northern limit of the SMA to within 12 miles (19 km) of Wood Buffalo National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The Albian Sands mine (operated by Shell Canada) opened in 2003. All three of these mines are associated with bitumen upgraders that convert the unusable bitumen into synthetic crude oil for shipment to refineries in Canada and the United States. For Albian, the upgrader is located at Scotford, 439 km south. The bitumen, diluted with a solvent, is transferred there in a 610 mm (24 in) corridor pipeline.

The Energy Resource Conservation Board has approved over 100 mining and in-situ projects despite the negative environmental impacts.[80] As of 2012, there were 9 active open mining projects, more than 50 approved in-situ projects as well as 190 primary recovery projects extracting bitumen that is free flowing. The ERCB has also approved 20 projects that are testing unproven technology as well as new versions of existing technologies.[81]

Bitumen extraction edit

Surface mining edit

Since Great Canadian Oil Sands (now Suncor) started operation of its mine in 1967, bitumen has been extracted on a commercial scale from the Athabasca Oil Sands by surface mining. In the Athabasca sands there are very large amounts of bitumen covered by little overburden, making surface mining the most efficient method of extracting it. The overburden consists of water-laden muskeg (peat bog) over top of clay and barren sand. The oil sands themselves are typically 40 to 60 metres (130 to 200 ft) deep, sitting on top of flat limestone rock. Originally, the sands were mined with draglines and bucket-wheel excavators and moved to the processing plants by conveyor belts.

These early mines had a steep learning curve to deal with before their bitumen mining techniques became efficient. In the intervening years, more effective in-situ production techniques were developed, particularly steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD). In-situ methods became increasingly important because only about 20% of the Athabasca oil sands were shallow enough to recover by surface mining, and the SAGD method in particular was very efficient at recovering large amounts of bitumen at a reasonable cost.

In recent years, companies such as Syncrude and Suncor have switched to much cheaper shovel-and-truck operations using the biggest power shovels (at least 100 short tons; 91 t) and dump trucks (400 short tons; 360 t) in the world.[82] This has held production costs to around US$27 per barrel of synthetic crude oil despite rising energy and labour costs.[83]

After excavation, hot water and caustic soda (sodium hydroxide) is added to the sand, and the resulting slurry is piped to the extraction plant where it is agitated and the oil skimmed from the top.[84] Provided that the water chemistry is appropriate to allow bitumen to separate from sand and clay, the combination of hot water and agitation releases bitumen from the oil sand, and allows small air bubbles to attach to the bitumen droplets. The bitumen froth floats to the top of separation vessels, and is further treated to remove residual water and fine solids.

About two short tons (1.8 t) of oil sands are required to produce one barrel (18 short ton; 110 kg) of oil. Originally, roughly 75% of the bitumen was recovered from the sand. However, recent enhancements to this method include Tailings Oil Recovery (TOR) units which recover oil from the tailings, Diluent Recovery Units to recover naphtha from the froth, inclined plate settlers (IPS) and disc centrifuges. These allow the extraction plants to recover well over 90% of the bitumen in the sand. After oil extraction, the spent sand and other materials are then returned to the mine, which is eventually reclaimed.

Alberta Taciuk Process technology extracts bitumen from oil sands through a dry retorting. During this process, oil sand is moved through a rotating drum, cracking the bitumen with heat and producing lighter hydrocarbons. Although tested, this technology is not in commercial use yet.[85]

The original process for extraction of bitumen from the sands was developed by Dr. Karl Clark, working with the Alberta Research Council in the 1920s.[86] Today, all of the producers doing surface mining, such as Syncrude Canada, Suncor Energy and Albian Sands Energy etc., use a variation of the Clark Hot Water Extraction (CHWE) process. In this process, the ores are mined using open-pit mining technology. The mined ore is then crushed for size reduction. Hot water at 50–80 °C (122–176 °F) is added to the ore and the formed slurry is transported using hydrotransport line to a primary separation vessel (PSV) where bitumen is recovered by flotation as bitumen froth. The recovered bitumen froth consists of 60% bitumen, 30% water and 10% solids by weight.[87]

The recovered bitumen froth needs to be cleaned to reject the contained solids and water to meet the requirement of downstream upgrading processes. Depending on the bitumen content in the ore, between 90 and 100% of the bitumen can be recovered using modern hot water extraction techniques.[88] After oil extraction, the spent sand and other materials are then returned to the mine, which is eventually reclaimed.

Steam-assisted gravity drainage edit

Steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) is an enhanced oil recovery technology for producing heavy crude oil and bitumen. It is an advanced form of steam stimulation in which a pair of horizontal wells are drilled into the oil reservoir, one a few metres above the other. High pressure steam is continuously injected into the upper wellbore to heat the oil and reduce its viscosity, causing the heated oil to drain into the lower wellbore, where it is pumped out to a bitumen recovery facility. Dr. Roger Butler, engineer at Imperial Oil from 1955 to 1982, invented steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) in the 1970s. Butler "developed the concept of using horizontal pairs of wells and injected steam to develop certain deposits of bitumen considered too deep for mining."[89][90]

More recently, in situ methods like steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) and cyclic steam stimulation (CSS) have been developed to extract bitumen from deep deposits by injecting steam to heat the sands and reduce the bitumen viscosity so that it can be pumped out like conventional crude oil.[91]

The standard extraction process requires huge amounts of natural gas. As of 2007, the oil sands industry used about 4% of the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin natural gas production. By 2015, this may increase two-and-a-half-fold.[92]

According to the National Energy Board, it requires about 1,200 cubic feet (34 m3) of natural gas to produce one barrel of bitumen from in situ projects and about 700 cubic feet (20 m3) for integrated projects.[93] Since a barrel of oil equivalent is about 6,000 cubic feet (170 m3) of gas, this represents a large gain in energy. That being the case, it is likely that Alberta regulators will reduce exports of natural gas to the United States in order to provide fuel to the oil sands plants. As gas reserves are exhausted, however, oil upgraders will probably turn to bitumen gasification to generate their own fuel. In much the same way as bitumen can be converted into synthetic crude oil, it can also be converted into synthetic natural gas.

Environmental impacts edit

 
Mining operations in the Athabasca oil sands. Image shows the Athabasca River about 600m from the tailings pond. NASA Earth Observatory photo, 2009.

Land edit

The oil sands have been described by first nations peoples, scientists, lawyers, journalists and environmental groups as ecocide.[6][7][8][9][10][11] Approximately 20% of Alberta's oil sands are recoverable through open-pit mining, while 80% require in situ extraction technologies (largely because of their depth). Open pit mining destroys the boreal forest and muskeg, while in situ extraction technologies cause less significant damage. Approximately 0.19% of the Alberta boreal forest has been disturbed by open pit mining.[94] The Alberta government requires companies to restore the land to "equivalent land capability". This means that the ability of the land to support various land uses after reclamation is similar to what existed, but that the individual land uses may not necessarily be identical.[95]

In some particular circumstances the government considers agricultural land to be equivalent to forest land. Oil sands companies have reclaimed mined land to use as pasture for wood bison instead of restoring it to the original boreal forest and muskeg. Syncrude asserts they have reclaimed 22% of their disturbed land,[96] a figure disputed by other sources, who assess Syncrude more accurately reclaimed only 0.2% of its disturbed land.[97]

Water edit

A Pembina Institute report stated "To produce one cubic metre (m3) [35 cu ft] of synthetic crude oil (SCO) (upgraded bitumen) in a mining operation requires about 2–4.5 m3 [71–159 cu ft] of water (net figures). Approved oil sands mining operations are currently licensed to divert 359 million m3 from the Athabasca River, or more than twice the volume of water required to meet the annual municipal needs of the City of Calgary."[98] It went on to say "... the net water requirement to produce a cubic metre of oil with in situ production may be as little as 0.2 m3 [7.1 cu ft], depending on how much is recycled".

The Athabasca River runs 1,231 kilometres (765 mi) from the Athabasca Glacier in west-central Alberta to Lake Athabasca in northeastern Alberta.[99] The average annual flow just downstream of Fort McMurray is 633 cubic metres per second (22,400 cu ft/s)[100] with its highest daily average measuring 1,200 cubic metres per second.[101]

Water licence allocations total about 1% of the Athabasca River average annual flow, though actual withdrawals for all uses, in 2006, amount to about 0.4%.[102] In addition, the Alberta government sets strict limits on how much water oil sands companies can remove from the Athabasca River. According to the Water Management Framework for the Lower Athabasca River, during periods of low river flow water consumption from the Athabasca River is limited to 1.3% of annual average flow.[103] The province of Alberta is also looking into cooperative withdrawal agreements between oil sands operators.[104]

Since the beginning of the oil sands development, there have been several leaks into the Athabasca River polluting it with oil and tailing pond water. The close proximity of the tailing ponds to the river drastically increases the likelihood of contamination due to ground water leakages. In 1997, Suncor admitted that their tailing ponds had been leaking 1,600 cubic metres (57,000 cu ft) of toxic water into the river a day. This water contains naphthenic acid, trace metals such as mercury and other pollutants. The Athabasca River is the largest freshwater delta in the world but with Suncor and Syncrude leaking tail ponds the amount of polluted water will exceed 1 billion cubic meters by 2020.[105]

Natural toxicants derived from bitumen in Northern Alberta pose potential ecological and human health risks to people living in the area. Oil sands development contributes arsenic, cadmium, chromium, lead, mercury, nickel and other metal elements toxic at low concentrations to the tributaries and rivers of the Athabasca.[106]

Emissions edit

As of 2024, oilsands account for 8% of the total of Canadian emissions.[107] Emissions from the oilsands continue to increase, while most other sources are decreasing.[107]

The processing of bitumen into synthetic crude requires energy generated by burning natural gas. In 2007, the oil sands used around 1 billion cubic feet (28,000,000 m3) of natural gas per day, around 40% of Alberta's total usage. Based on gas purchases, natural gas requirements are given by the Canadian Energy Resource Institute as 2.14 GJ (2.04 thousand cu ft) per barrel for cyclic steam stimulation projects, 1.08 GJ (1.03 thousand cu ft) per barrel for SAGD projects, 0.55 GJ (0.52 thousand cu ft) per barrel for bitumen extraction in mining operations not including upgrading or 1.54 GJ (1.47 thousand cu ft) per barrel for extraction and upgrading in mining operations.[108]

A 2009 study by CERA estimated that production from Canada's oil sands emits "about 5 percent to 15 percent more carbon dioxide, over the "well-to-wheels" lifetime analysis of the fuel, than average crude oil."[109] Author and investigative journalist David Strahan that same year stated that IEA figures show that carbon dioxide emissions from the oil sands are 20% higher than average emissions from oil, explaining the discrepancy as the difference between upstream emissions and life cycle emissions.[110] He goes on to say that a US government report in 2005 suggested with current technology conventional oil releases 40 kg of carbon dioxide per barrel while non-conventional oil releases 80–115 kg of carbon dioxide. Alberta energy suggests lower releases of carbon with improving technology, giving a value of 39% drop in emissions per barrel between 1990 and 2008,[111] however only a 29% reduction between 1990 and 2009.[112]

The forecast growth in synthetic oil production in Alberta also threatens Canada's international commitments. In ratifying the Kyoto Protocol, Canada agreed to reduce, by 2012, its greenhouse gas emissions by 6% with respect to 1990. In 2002, Canada's total greenhouse gas emissions had increased by 24% since 1990.

Ranked as the world's eighth largest emitter of greenhouse gases, Canada is a relatively large emitter given its population and is missing its Kyoto targets. A major Canadian initiative called the Integrated CO2 Network (ICO2N) promotes the development of large scale capture, transport and storage of carbon dioxide (CO2) as a means of helping Canada to help meet climate change objectives while supporting economic growth. ICO2N members represent a group of industry participants, many oil sands producers, providing a framework for carbon capture and storage development in Canada.[113]

Two separate fraud lawsuits were filed against "ExxonMobil involving Alberta's oilsands" in October. One was in New York and the second was filed in Massachusetts on October 24. The Massachusetts lawsuit says that ExxonMobil misled investors by "falsely" justifying to them "its riskiest long-term investments, including Canadian bitumen oilsands projects." The company did not warn investors "about what climate change measures could cost its operations — especially those in the oilsands."[114]

In December 2022, the Pathways Alliance, a consortium of six companies Canadian Natural Resources, Cenovus Energy, Imperial Oil, MEG Energy, Suncor Energy and ConocoPhillips, which together are responsible for about 95% of Canada's oil sands production, announced that exploratory drilling would begin that winter to create underground reservoirs in northern Alberta, where carbon captured during the process of oil sands extraction would be stored.[115] The proposal, which may take several years to gain regulatory approval, includes the construction of a pipeline to transport captured carbon from over twenty oil sands facilities to an underground storage facility near Cold Lake.[115]

The same month, Athabasca Oil Corporation, Canada's 10th largest oil producer, announced that it would build a carbon capture and storage facility at its Leismer oil sands well site near Conklin, Alberta in partnership with Entropy Inc., which is funding the project.[116] Athabasca Oil said that it aims for a 30% reduction in emissions from the extraction process by 2025.[116]

Animals edit

In Northern Alberta, oil development activities bring an enormous number of people into a fragile ecosystem. Historically, population figures have been very low for this region. Water is easily polluted because the water table reaches the surface in most areas of muskeg. With the ever-increasing development and extraction of resources, wildlife are recipient to both direct and indirect effects of pollution. Woodland Caribou are particularly sensitive to human activities, and as such are pushed away from their preferred habitat during the time of year when their caloric needs are greatest and food is the most scarce. Humans' effect on the Caribou is compounded by road construction and habitat fragmentation that open the area up to deer and wolves.[117]

Wildlife living near the Athabasca River have been greatly impacted due to pollutants entering the water system. An unknown number of birds die each year. Particularly visible and hard hit are migrating birds that stop to rest at tailing ponds. There have been numerous reports of large flocks of ducks landing in tailing ponds and perishing soon after.[118] Data has been recorded since the 1970s on the number of birds found on tailing ponds.[119]

There has also been a large impact on the fish that live and spawn in the area. As toxins accumulate in the river due to the oil sands, bizarre mutations, tumors, and deformed fish species have begun to appear. A study commissioned by the region's health authority found that several known toxins and carcinogens were elevated.[120] Aboriginal communities that live around the river are becoming increasingly worried about how the animals they eat and their drinking water are being affected.[121]

While there has been no link yet made between the oil sands and health issues, Matt Price of Environmental Defense says the connection makes common sense. Deformities in fish and high concentrations of toxic substances in animals have also been identified.[122]

Tailings ponds edit

Large volumes of tailings are a byproduct of bitumen extraction from the oil sands and managing these tailings is one of the most difficult environmental challenges facing the oil sands industry.[123] Tailings ponds are engineered dam and dyke systems that contain solvents used in the separation process as well as residual bitumen, salts and soluble organic compounds, fine silts and water.[123] The concentrations of chemicals may be harmful to fish and oil on the surface harmful to birds.[124] These settling basins were meant to be temporary. A major hindrance to the monitoring of oil sands produced waters has been the lack of identification of individual compounds present. By better understanding the nature of the highly complex mixture of compounds, including naphthenic acids, it may be possible to monitor rivers for leachate and also to remove toxic components. Such identification of individual acids has for many years proved to be impossible but a breakthrough in 2011 in analysis began to reveal what is in the oil sands tailings ponds.[125] Ninety percent of the tailings water can be reused for oil extraction.[123] By 2009 as tailing ponds continued to proliferate and volumes of fluid tailings increased, the Alberta Energy Resources Conservation Board issued Directive 074 to force oil companies to manage tailings based on new aggressive criteria.[126] The Government of Alberta reported in 2013 that tailings ponds in the Alberta oil sands covered an area of about 77 square kilometres (30 sq mi).[123] The Tailings Management Framework for Mineable Oil Sands is part of Alberta's Progressive Reclamation Strategy for the oil sands to ensure that tailings are reclaimed as quickly as possible.[126]

Suncor invested $1.2 billion in their Tailings Reduction Operations (TROTM) method [127] that treats mature fine tails (MFT) from tailings ponds with chemical flocculant, an anionic Polyacrylamide, commonly used in water treatment plants to improve removal of total organic content (TOC), to speed their drying into more easily reclaimable matter. Mature tailings dredged from a pond bottom in suspension were mixed with a polymer flocculant and spread over a "beach" with a shallow grade where the tailings would dewater and dry under ambient conditions. The dried MFT can then be reclaimed in place or moved to another location for final reclamation. Suncor hoped this would reduce the time for water reclamation from tailings to weeks rather than years, with the recovered water being recycled into the oil sands plant. Suncor claimed the mature fines tailings process would reduce the number of tailing ponds and shorten the time to reclaim a tailing pond from 40 years at present to 7–10 years, with land rehabilitation continuously following 7 to 10 years behind the mining operations.[128] For the reporting periods from 2010 to 2012, Suncor had a lower-than-expected fines capture performance from this technology.[126] Syncrude used the older composite tailings (CT) technology to capture fines at its Mildred Lake project. Syncrude had a lower-than-expected fines capture performance in 2011–2012 but exceeded expectations in 2010–2011.[126] Shell used atmospheric fines drying (AFD) technology combined "fluid tailings and flocculants and deposits the mixture in a sloped area to allow the water to drain and the deposit to dry" and had a lower-than-expected fines capture performance.[126]

By 2010 Suncor had transformed their first tailings pond, Pond One, into Wapisiw Lookout, the first reclaimed settling basin in the oil sands. In 2007 the area was a 220-hectare pond of toxic effluent but several years later there was firm land planted with black spruce and trembling aspen. Wapisiw Lookout represents only one percent of tailings ponds in 2011 but Pond One was the first effluent pond in the oil sands industry in 1967 and was used until 1997. By 2011 only 65 square kilometres were cleaned up and about one square kilometre was certified by Alberta as a self-sustaining natural environment. Wapisiw Lookout has not yet been certified. Closure operations of Pond One began in 2007. The jello-like mature fine tails (MFT) were pumped and dredged out of the pond and relocated to another tailings pond for long-term storage and treatment. The MFT was then replaced with 30 million tonnes clean sand and then topsoil that had been removed from the site in the 1960s. The 1.2 million cubic meters (42×10^6 cu ft) of topsoil over the surface, to a depth of 50 cm (1 ft 8 in), was placed on top of the sand in the form of hummocks and swales. It was then planted with reclamation plants.[129][130][131]

In March 2012 an alliance of oil companies called Canada's Oil Sands Innovation Alliance (COSIA) was launched with a mandate to share research and technology to decrease the negative environmental impact of oil sands production focusing on tailings ponds, greenhouse gases, water and land. Almost all the water used to produce crude oil using steam methods of production ends up in tailings ponds. Recent enhancements to this method include Tailings Oil Recovery (TOR) units which recover oil from the tailings, Diluent Recovery Units to recover naphtha from the froth, Inclined Plate Settlers (IPS) and disc centrifuges. These allow the extraction plants to recover well over 90% of the bitumen in the sand.

In January 2013, scientists from Queen's University published a report analyzing lake sediments in the Athabasca region over the past fifty years.[132] They found that levels of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) had increased as much as 23-fold since bitumen extraction began in the 1960s. Levels of carcinogenic, mutagenic, and teratogenic PAHs were substantially higher than guidelines for lake sedimentation set by the Canadian Council of Ministers of the Environment in 1999. The team discovered that the contamination spread farther than previously thought.[133]

The Pembina Institute suggested that the huge investments by many companies in Canadian oil sands leading to increased production results in excess bitumen with no place to store it. It added that by 2022 a month's output of waste-water could result in a 11-foot-deep (3 m) toxic reservoir the size of New York City's Central Park [840.01 acres; 339.94 hectares; 3.3994 square kilometres].[134]

The oil sands industry may build a series of up to thirty lakes by pumping water into old mine pits when they have finished excavation leaving toxic effluent at their bottoms and letting biological processes restore it to health. It is less expensive to fill abandoned open pit mines with water instead of dirt.[135] In 2012 the Cumulative Environmental Management Association (CEMA) described End Pit Lakes (EPL)[136] as

An engineered water body, located below grade in an oil sands post-mining pit. It may contain oil sands by-product material and will receive surface and groundwater from surrounding reclaimed and undisturbed landscapes. EPLs will be permanent features in the final reclaimed landscape, discharging water to the downstream environment.

— CEMA 2012

CEMA acknowledged that the "main concern is the potential for EPLs to develop a legacy of toxicity and thus reduce the land use value of the oil sands region in the future." Syncrude Canada was planning the first end pit lake in 2013 with the intention of "pumping fresh water over 40 vertical metres of mine effluent that it has deposited in what it calls 'base mine lake.'" David Schindler argued that no further end pit lakes should be approved until we "have some assurance that they will eventually support a healthy ecosystem." There is to date no "evidence to support their viability, or the 'modelled' results suggesting that outflow from the lakes will be non-toxic."[135]

Pipeline-processing pollution edit

Oil sands and especially the related projects, like the construction of a new pipeline, also have a social impact. Most of all, the local population groups would suffer from the effects of a new oil pipeline. In addition to the risk of general oil spills, there is now also the danger of gathering food due to the pollution of the fields and waters. Despite the fact that most people in those areas are not well off, the money is still used to build new projects instead of spending it on improving the quality of life there. Furthermore, adding a new pipeline to the already existing oil pipelines would increase our dependence on fossil fuels.[137]

In July 2015, one of the largest leaks in Canada's history spilled 5,000 cubic metres of emulsion — about 5 million litres of bitumen, sand and wastewater — from a Nexen Energy pipeline at a Long Lake oil sands facility, south of Fort McMurray. The subsidiary of China's CNOOC Ltd. automated safety systems had not detected the pipeline fault that caused the spill to cover an area of about 16,000 square metres prior to manual inspection.[138] Alberta Energy Regulator (AER) revealed the number of pipeline "incidents" in Alberta increased 15% last year, despite the regulator's well-publicized efforts to reduce ruptures and spills.

Occupational health and safety edit

An explosion left one worker dead and another seriously injured at the Chinese-owned Nexen Energy facility in the Long Lake oil sands near Anzac, south of Fort McMurray[139] The two maintenance workers involved were found near natural gas compression equipment used for a hydrocracker, which turns heavy oil into lighter crude, at the plant's main processing facility, known as an upgrader.[140]

Population edit

The Athabasca oil sands are located in the northeastern portion of the Canadian province of Alberta, near the city of Fort McMurray. The area is only sparsely populated, and in the late 1950s, it was primarily a wilderness outpost of a few hundred people whose main economic activities included fur trapping and salt mining. From a population of 37,222 in 1996, the boomtown of Fort McMurray and the surrounding region (known as the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo) grew to 79,810 people as of 2006, including a "shadow population" of 10,442 living in work camps.[141] The community struggled to provide services and housing for migrant workers, many of them from Eastern Canada, especially Newfoundland[citation needed]. Fort McMurray ceased to be an incorporated city in 1995 and is now an urban service area within Wood Buffalo.[142]

Estimated oil reserves edit

By 2015, Venezuela accounted for 18%, Saudi Arabia for 16.1%, and Canada for 10.3% of the world's proven oil reserves, according to NRCAN.[143]

The Alberta government's Energy and Utilities Board (EUB) estimated in 2007 that about 173 billion barrels (27.5×10^9 m3) of crude bitumen were economically recoverable from the three Alberta oil sands areas based on then-current technology and price projections from the 2006 market prices of $62 per barrel for benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI), rising to a projected $69 per barrel. This was equivalent to about 10% of the estimated 1,700 billion barrels (270×10^9 m3) of bitumen-in-place.[2] Alberta estimated that the Athabasca deposits alone contain 35 billion barrels (5.6×10^9 m3) of surface mineable bitumen and 98 billion barrels (15.6×10^9 m3) of bitumen recoverable by in-situ methods. These estimates of Canada's reserves were doubted when they were first published but are now largely accepted by the international oil industry. This volume placed Canadian proven reserves second in the world behind those of Saudi Arabia.

 
Syncrude's Mildred Lake mine site and plant

Only 3% of the initial established crude bitumen reserves have been produced since commercial production started in 1967. At rate of production projected for 2015, about 3 million barrels per day (480×10^3 m3/d), the Athabasca oil sands reserves would last over 170 years.[144] However those production levels require an influx of workers into an area that until recently was largely uninhabited. By 2007 this need in northern Alberta drove unemployment rates in Alberta and adjacent British Columbia to the lowest levels in history. As far away as the Atlantic Provinces, where workers were leaving to work in Alberta, unemployment rates fell to levels not seen for over one hundred years.[145]

The Venezuelan Orinoco Oil Sands site may contain more oil sands than Athabasca. However, while the Orinoco deposits are less viscous and more easily produced using conventional techniques (the Venezuelan government prefers to call them "extra-heavy oil"), they are too deep to access by surface mining.[146]

Economics edit

Despite the large reserves, the cost of extracting the oil from bituminous sands has historically made production of the oil sands unprofitable—the cost of selling the extracted crude would not cover the direct costs of recovery; labour to mine the sands and fuel to extract the crude.

 
Oil prices 1996–2008 (not adjusted for inflation)

In mid-2006, the National Energy Board of Canada estimated the operating cost of a new mining operation in the Athabasca oil sands to be CA$9 to CA$12 per barrel, while the cost of an in-situ SAGD operation (using dual horizontal wells) would be CA$10 to CA$14 per barrel.[147] This compares to operating costs for conventional oil wells which can range from less than one dollar per barrel in Iraq and Saudi Arabia to over six in the United States and Canada's conventional oil reserves.

The capital cost of the equipment required to mine the sands and haul it to processing is a major consideration in starting production. The NEB estimates that capital costs raise the total cost of production to CA$18 to CA$20 per barrel for a new mining operation and CA$18 to CA$22 per barrel for a SAGD operation. This does not include the cost of upgrading the crude bitumen to synthetic crude oil, which makes the final costs CA$36 to CA$40 per barrel for a new mining operation.

Therefore, although high crude prices make the cost of production very attractive, sudden drops in price leaves producers unable to recover their capital costs—although the companies are well financed and can tolerate long periods of low prices since the capital has already been spent and they can typically cover incremental operating costs.

However, the development of commercial production is made easier by the fact that exploration costs are very low. Such costs are a major factor when assessing the economics of drilling in a traditional oil field. The location of the oil deposits in the oil sands are well known, and an estimate of recovery costs can usually be made easily. There is not another region in the world with energy deposits of comparable magnitude where it would be less likely that the installations would be confiscated by a hostile national government, or be endangered by a war or revolution.[citation needed]

As a result of the oil price increases since 2003, the economics of oil sands have improved dramatically. At a world price of US$50 per barrel, the NEB estimated an integrated mining operation would make a rate return of 16 to 23%, while a SAGD operation would return 16 to 27%. Prices since 2006 have risen, exceeding US$145 in mid-2008 but falling back to less than 40 US$ as a result of the worldwide financial crisis, the oil price recovered slowly and many of the planned projects (expected to exceed CA$100 billion between 2006 and 2015) were stopped or scheduled. In 2012 and 2013 the oil price was high again, but the US production is increasing due to new technologies, while the gasoline demand is falling, so there is an overproduction of oil. But recovering economy can change this in a few years.

At present the area around Fort McMurray has seen the most effect from the increased activity in the oil sands. Although jobs are plentiful, housing is in short supply and expensive. People seeking work often arrive in the area without arranging accommodation, driving up the price of temporary accommodation. The area is isolated, with only a two-lane road, Alberta Highway 63, connecting it to the rest of the province, and there is pressure on the government of Alberta to improve road links as well as hospitals and other infrastructure.[147]

Despite the best efforts of companies to move as much of the construction work as possible out of the Fort McMurray area, and even out of Alberta, the shortage of skilled workers is spreading to the rest of the province.[148] Even without the oil sands, the Alberta economy would be very strong, but development of the oil sands has resulted in the strongest period of economic growth ever recorded by a Canadian province.[149]

Geopolitical importance edit

The Athabasca oil sands hold geopolitical significance.[150]

An agreement has been signed between PetroChina and Enbridge to build a 400,000 barrels per day (64,000 m3/d) pipeline from Edmonton, Alberta, to the west coast port of Kitimat, British Columbia. If it is built, the pipeline will help export synthetic crude oil from the oil sands to China and elsewhere in the Pacific.[151] However, in 2011, First Nations and environmental groups protested the proposed pipeline, stating that its construction and operation would be destructive to the environment. First Nations groups also claim that the development of the proposed pipeline is in violation of commitments that the Government of Canada has made through various Treaties and the UN Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.[152] A smaller pipeline will also be built alongside to import condensate to dilute the bitumen. Sinopec, the largest refining and chemical company in China, and China National Petroleum Corporation have bought or are planning to buy shares in major oil sands development.

On August 20, 2009, the U.S. State Department issued a presidential permit for an Alberta Clipper Pipeline that will run from Hardisty, Alberta, to Superior, Wisconsin. The pipeline will be capable of carrying up to 450,000 barrels (72,000 m3) of crude oil a day to refineries in the U.S.[153][154]

Indigenous peoples of the area edit

Indigenous peoples of the area include the Fort McKay First Nation. The oil sands themselves are located within the boundaries of Treaty 8, signed in 1899, which states:

It does not appear likely that the conditions of the country on either side of the Athabasca and Slave Rivers or about Athabasca Lake will be so changed as to affect hunting or trapping, and it is safe to say that so long as the fur-bearing animals remain, the great bulk of the Indians will continue to hunt and to trap.

— Treaty 8

We had to solemnly assure them that only such laws as to hunting and fishing as were in the interest of the Indians and were found necessary in order to protect the fish and fur-bearing animals would be made, and that they would be as free to hunt and fish after the treaty as they would be if they never entered into it. ... It does not appear likely that the conditions of the country on either side of the Athabasca and Slave Rivers or about Athabasca Lake will be so changed as to affect hunting or trapping, and it is safe to say that so long as the fur-bearing animals remain, the great bulk of the Indians will continue to hunt and to trap.

— The Honourable Clifford Sifton, Superintendent General of Indian Affairs, Report of Commissioners for Treaty No. 8, Winnipeg, Manitoba, September 22, 1899

The Fort McKay First Nation has formed several companies to service the oil sands industry and will be developing a mine on their territory.[155] Opposition remaining within the First Nation focuses on environmental stewardship, land rights, and health issues, like elevated cancer rates in Fort Chipewyan[156] and deformed fish being found by commercial fishermen in Lake Athabasca.[157]

The Alberta Cancer Board published research of the cancer rates of those living in Fort Chipewyan, Alberta, in 2009. While many companies argue that there are not enough chemicals and toxic material in the water due to the development of the oil sands, this report indicates that there is coincidentally a significantly higher rate of cancer within this community. There have been many speculations as to why there is a higher rate of cancer in this community; some of those speculations are contamination with the river and the oil sands as well as uranium mining that is currently in progress. The world's largest production of uranium is produced in this area as well as along the Athabasca River, allowing for easy contamination of the river.[158]

From 2010 to 2014, the Tar Sands Healing Walk, founded by Indigenous women, was held annually as a demonstration against oil extraction and the damage it caused to local communities and the environment.

Impact of oil sands and pipeline development on Indigenous groups edit

According to some environmental activists, pipeline development poses risks to the cultural, social, and economic way of life of Canada's Indigenous populations. Historically, some Indigenous groups have opposed pipeline development for two primary reasons: 1) the perception of inherent environmental risks associated with transporting harmful oil and gas products, and 2) failure by the federal government to properly consider and mitigate Indigenous groups' concerns regarding resource development on their lands. For instance, many Indigenous groups rely heavily on local wildlife and vegetation for their survival. Increased oil production in Canada requires greater oil transport through their traditional lands, which, to some, poses the perception of threats to the survival and traditional way of life of Indigenous groups, as well as the safety and preservation of the surrounding ecosystems. First Nations in Alberta have called particular attention to adverse health impacts related to oil sands emissions, asserting that the water quality testing for specific chemicals (heavy metals) has been insufficient.[159]

Aside from environmental concerns, many Indigenous groups have pushed back against pipeline development due to inadequate consultation processes by the federal government. As per Section 35 of the Canadian Constitution Act[160] Indigenous peoples in Canada are guaranteed the right to be meaningfully consulted with and accommodated when the Crown is contemplating resource development on their lands - see Duty to Consult. Through a series of Supreme Court of Canada rulings and political protests from Indigenous peoples (see Haida Nation v. British Columbia [Minister of Forests], Taku River Tlingit First Nation v British Columbia, and Tsilhqot'in Nation v British Columbia), among others, the courts have attempted to further define the Crown's consultation responsibilities and give legal recognition to Indigenous traditional territory and rights regarding resource development.

Contrarily, oil sands development also presents many positive impacts and opportunities for Indigenous groups, particularly in Western Canada. In fact, over the past two decades, First Nations participation in the energy sector has increased dramatically, from employment and business opportunities to project approval processes and environmental evaluation. Increased Indigenous participation has been encouraged by numerous collaboration agreements with industry, typically in the form of impact benefit agreements (IBAs), which provide not only employment and business ventures, but also job training and community benefits.[161] Enhanced participation in the energy sector has empowered many Indigenous groups to push for wider involvement by negotiating ownership stakes in proposed pipelines and bitumen storage projects. Perhaps the best example of such partnering in Alberta is the agreement between Suncor and Fort McKay and Mikisew Cree First Nations. The two First Nations acquired a 49% ownership in Suncor's East Tank Farm Development with shares valued at about $500 million making it the largest business investment to date by a First Nation entity in Canada.[162]

Support for resource development and desire for direct involvement is further illustrated by the First Nations' led $17-billion Eagle Spirit Energy Holding Ltd. pipeline and energy corridor between Alberta and the northern B.C. coast (with a back-up plan to site its terminal in Alaska to get around the tanker ban in B.C.). The project has secured support from 35 First Nations along the proposed route; the bands are entitled to at least 35% ownership in exchange for the land use.[163]

Oil sand companies edit

 
Planned mining operation oil production by various companies. Data from table below.

There are currently three large oil sands mining operations in the area run by Syncrude Canada Limited, Suncor Energy and Albian Sands owned by Shell Canada, Chevron, and Marathon Oil Corp.

Major producing or planned developments in the Athabasca Oil Sands include the following projects:[164]

  • Suncor Energy's Steepbank and Millennium mines currently produce 263,000 barrels per day (41,800 m3/d) and its Firebag in-situ project produces 35,000 bbl/d (5,600 m3/d).
  • Syncrude's Mildred Lake and Aurora mines currently can produce 360,000 bbl/d (57,000 m3/d).
  • Shell Canada currently operates its Muskeg River Mine producing 155,000 bbl/d (24,600 m3/d) and the Scotford Upgrader at Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta.
  • Nexen's in-situ Long Lake SAGD project is now producing 70,000 bbl/d (11,000 m3/d).
  • Total S.A.'s subsidiary Deer Creek Energy was operating a SAGD project on its Joslyn lease, producing 10,000 bbl/d (1,600 m3/d). It intended on constructing its mine by 2010 to expand its production by 100,000 bbl/d (16,000 m3/d), however this had not occurred by May 2014 when the company shelved the project while it reviewed the economic viability of the project.[165][166]
Mining Projects (2021)
Operator Project Phase Capacity Start-up Regulatory Status
Albian Sands Jackpine 1A 100,000 bbl/d (16,000 m3/d) 2010 Operating
  1B 100,000 bbl/d (16,000 m3/d) TBD Approved
  2 100,000 bbl/d (16,000 m3/d) TBD Approved
Muskeg River Existing 175,000 bbl/d (27,800 m3/d) 2002 Operating
  Expansion 115,000 bbl/d (18,300 m3/d) TBD Approved
Canadian Natural Resources Horizon 1 135,000 bbl/d (21,500 m3/d) 2009 Operating
  2A 12,000 bbl/d (1,900 m3/d) 2014 Operating
  2B 45,000 bbl/d (7,200 m3/d) 2016 Operating
  3 80,000 bbl/d (13,000 m3/d) 2017 Operating
Horizon South[167] Expansion 95,000 bbl/d (15,100 m3/d) 2022 Approved
North Pit 2031 Announced
Pierre River[168] 1 100,000 bbl/d (16,000 m3/d) TBD Approved
  2 100,000 bbl/d (16,000 m3/d) TBD Approved
Imperial Oil Kearl 1 120,000 bbl/d (19,000 m3/d) 2013 Operating
  2 120,000 bbl/d (19,000 m3/d) 2015 Operating
  3 80,000 bbl/d (13,000 m3/d) TBD Approved
  Debottleneck 45,000 bbl/d (7,200 m3/d) TBD Approved
Suncor Energy Base Plant 130,000 bbl/d (21,000 m3/d) 1967 Depleted
  Debottleneck 4,000 bbl/d (640 m3/d) 2007 Operating
  Expansion 150,000 bbl/d (24,000 m3/d) 2011 Operating
Millenium   294,000 bbl/d (46,700 m3/d) 2001 Operating
  Debottleneck 23,000 bbl/d (3,700 m3/d) 2008 Operating
  Expansion 225,000 bbl/d (35,800 m3/d) 2030 Announced
Fort Hills 1 165,000 bbl/d (26,200 m3/d) 2018 Operating
  Debottleneck 20,000 bbl/d (3,200 m3/d) TBD Approved
Voyageur South 1 250,000 bbl/d (40,000 m3/d) TBD Approved
Syncrude Mildred Lake 150,000 bbl/d (24,000 m3/d) 1978 Operating
Aurora North 1 225,000 bbl/d (35,800 m3/d) 2001 Operating
  2 116,300 bbl/d (18,490 m3/d) 2006 Operating
  3 184,000 bbl/d (29,300 m3/d) 2023 Approved
Aurora South 1 100,000 bbl/d (16,000 m3/d) TBD Announced
  2 10,000 bbl/d (1,600 m3/d) TBD Announced
Synenco Energy Northern Lights 1 160,000 bbl/d (25,000 m3/d) Cancelled[169]
Total S.A. Joslyn North 1 100,000 bbl/d (16,000 m3/d) Cancelled[170]
UTS/Teck Cominco Equinox Lease 14 50,000 bbl/d (7,900 m3/d) TBD Announced
Frontier 1 100,000 bbl/d (16,000 m3/d) Cancelled[171]

Court ordered sanctions edit

For improper diversion of water in 2008–2009, Statoil Canada Ltd. was ordered in 2012 to pay a fine of $5000 and to allocate $185,000 for a training project (The verdict was handed down by the Provincial Court of Alberta, Criminal Division).[172][173]

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

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Sources edit

  • Cameron, Agnes Deans (1909). The New North: Being Some Account of a Woman's Journey through Canada to the Arctic. New York: Appleton.
  • Gismondi, Mike; Davidson, Debra J. (September 2012). (PDF). Imaginations. Edmonton, Alberta: Campus Saint-Jean, University of Alberta. pp. 68–102. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-10-02.

Further reading edit

Video material edit

External links edit

  • Alberta's Oil Sands: Key Issues and Impacts
  • Mud, Sweat and Tears—Guardian Newspaper, 2007
  • Hugh McCullum, Fuelling Fortress America: A Report on the Athabasca Tar Sands and U.S. Demands for Canada's Energy (The Parkland Institute)
  • —Syncrude Canada
  • —Fort McMurray Tourism
  • —Alberta Department of Energy
  • -Canadian Centre for Energy Information
  • (in French) Du sable dans l'engrenage TV document by Guy Gendron and Jean-Luc Paquette describing the Athabasca oil sands issues.
  • Athabasca Oil Sands at NASA Earth Observatory. Includes a series of satellite photos from 1984 to 2011, showing how the project has developed.
  • Alberta Government Oil Sands Information Portal Interactive Map and Data Library
  • Report one Athabasca Oil Sands at Dartmouth College Library

athabasca, sands, this, article, about, bitumen, deposit, visible, sand, dunes, athabasca, sand, dunes, provincial, park, corporation, athabasca, sands, corp, also, known, athabasca, sands, large, deposits, bitumen, heavy, viscous, form, petroleum, located, no. This article is about the bitumen deposit For the visible sand dunes see Athabasca Sand Dunes Provincial Park For the corporation see Athabasca Oil Sands Corp The Athabasca oil sands also known as the Athabasca tar sands are large deposits of bitumen a heavy and viscous form of petroleum located in northeastern Alberta Canada These reserves are one of the largest sources of unconventional oil in the world making Canada a significant player in the global energy market 3 Athabasca oil sandsCountryCanadaRegionNorthern AlbertaOffshore onshoreOnshore miningCoordinates57 01 N 111 39 W 57 02 N 111 65 W 57 02 111 65OperatorsSyncrude Suncor Energy Canadian Natural Resources Total S A Imperial Oil Petro Canada Devon Energy Husky Energy Statoil NexenPartnersChevron Corporation Marathon Oil ConocoPhillips BP Occidental PetroleumField historyDiscovery1848Start of production1967ProductionCurrent production of oil2 800 000 barrels per day 1 4 10 8 t a 1 Estimated oil in place133 000 million barrels 1 81 10 10 t 2 Producing formationsMcMurray Clearwater Grand RapidsAs of 2023 Canada s oil sands industry along with Western Canada and offshore petroleum facilities near Newfoundland and Labrador continued to increase production and were projected to increase by an estimated 10 in 2024 representing a potential record high at the end of the year of approximately 5 3 million barrels per day bpd 4 The surge in production is attributed mainly to growth in Alberta s oilsands 4 The expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline the only oil pipeline to the West Coast will further facilitate this increase with its capacity set to increase significantly to 890 000 barrels per day from 300 000 bpd currently 5 4 Despite this growth there are warnings that it might be short lived with production potentially plateauing after 2024 4 Canada s anticipated increase in oil output exceeds that of other major producers like the United States and the country is poised to become a significant driver of global crude oil production growth in 2024 4 The exploitation of these resources has stirred debates regarding economic development energy security and environmental impacts particularly emissions from the oilsands prompting discussions around emissions regulations for the oil and gas sector 4 6 7 8 9 10 11 The Athabaska oil sands along with the nearby Peace River and Cold Lake deposits oil sand deposits lie under 141 000 square kilometres 54 000 sq mi of boreal forest and muskeg peat bogs according to Government of Alberta s Ministry of Energy 12 Alberta Energy Regulator AER and the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers CAPP Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Project Oilsand 1 3 Great Canadian Oil Sands 1 4 Oil crisis 2 Oil sands production in the 21st century 2 1 Shale oil boom 2 2 Fort McMurray wildfire 2 3 Transportation 3 Future production 4 Governance 5 Development 6 Bitumen extraction 6 1 Surface mining 6 2 Steam assisted gravity drainage 7 Environmental impacts 7 1 Land 7 2 Water 7 3 Emissions 7 4 Animals 7 5 Tailings ponds 7 6 Pipeline processing pollution 7 7 Occupational health and safety 8 Population 9 Estimated oil reserves 10 Economics 11 Geopolitical importance 12 Indigenous peoples of the area 13 Impact of oil sands and pipeline development on Indigenous groups 14 Oil sand companies 15 Court ordered sanctions 16 See also 17 Notes 18 References 18 1 Sources 19 Further reading 20 Video material 21 External linksHistory editSee also History of the petroleum industry in Canada oil sands and heavy oil and Timeline of the petroleum industry in Alberta The Athabasca oil sands are named after the Athabasca River which cuts through the heart of the deposit and traces of the heavy oil are readily observed on the river banks Historically the bitumen was used by the indigenous Cree and Dene Aboriginal peoples to waterproof their canoes 13 The oil deposits are located within the boundaries of Treaty 8 and several First Nations of the area are involved with the sands Early history edit nbsp Athabasca oil sands on the banks of the river around 1900This section needs expansion with First Nations history of the Athabasca oil sands You can help by adding to it July 2022 The Athabasca oil sands first came to the attention of European fur traders in 1719 when Wa pa su a Cree trader brought a sample of bituminous sands to the Hudson s Bay Company post at York Factory on Hudson Bay where Henry Kelsey was the manager 14 In 1778 Peter Pond another fur trader and a founder of the rival North West Company became the first European to see the Athabasca deposits after exploring the Methye Portage which allowed access to the rich fur resources of the Athabasca River system from the Hudson Bay watershed 15 In 1788 fur trader Alexander Mackenzie after whom the Mackenzie River was later named traveled along routes to both the Arctic and Pacific Ocean wrote At about 24 miles 39 km from the fork of the Athabasca and Clearwater Rivers are some bituminous fountains into which a pole of 20 feet 6 1 m long may be inserted without the least resistance The bitumen is in a fluid state and when mixed with gum the resinous substance collected from the spruce fir it serves to gum the Indians canoes He was followed in 1799 by mapmaker David Thompson and in 1819 by British Naval officer John Franklin 16 John Richardson did the first serious scientific assessment of the oil sands in 1848 on his way north to search for Franklin s lost expedition The first government sponsored survey of the oil sands was initiated in 1875 by John Macoun and in 1883 G C Hoffman of the Geological Survey of Canada tried separating the bitumen from oil sand with the use of water and reported that it separated readily In 1888 Robert Bell the director of the Geological Survey of Canada reported to a Senate Committee that The evidence points to the existence in the Athabasca and Mackenzie valleys of the most extensive petroleum field in America if not the world 15 nbsp Athabasca oil sand of the McMurray Formation as seen in drill cores Count Alfred von Hammerstein 1870 1941 who arrived in the region in 1897 promoted the Athabasca oil sands for over forty years taking photos with descriptive titles such as Tar Sands and Flowing Asphaltum in the Athabasca District that are now in the National Library and National Archives Canada Photos of the Athabasca oil sands were also featured in Canadian writer and adventurer Agnes Deans Cameron s best selling book The New North which recounted her 10 000 mi 16 000 km roundtrip to the Arctic Ocean 17 Her photographs were reproduced in 2011 2012 in an exhibit at the Canadian Museum of Civilization in Ottawa 18 and included photos of Count Alfred Von Hammerstein s oil drill works along the Athabasca River In 1926 Karl Clark of the University of Alberta received a patent for a hot water separation process which was the forerunner of today s thermal extraction processes Several attempts to implement it had varying degrees of success citation needed Project Oilsand edit Main article Project Oilsand Project Oilsand was a 1958 proposal to exploit the Athabasca oil sands using the underground detonation of nuclear explosives 19 hypothetically the heat and pressure created by an underground detonation would boil the bitumen deposits reducing their viscosity to the point that standard oilfield techniques could be used The plan was discussed in the October 1976 Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 20 A patent was granted for the intended process in 1964 21 22 The nuclear heating option is considered a forerunner to some of the conventional heating methods used to extract tar sands oil 23 In April 1959 the Federal Mines Department approved Project Oilsand 24 However it was subsequently cancelled in 1962 25 Great Canadian Oil Sands edit Main article Great Canadian Oil Sands The oil sands which are typically 40 to 60 metres 130 to 200 ft thick and sit on top of relatively flat limestone are relatively easy to access They lie under 1 to 3 m 3 ft 3 in to 9 ft 10 in of waterlogged muskeg 0 to 75 metres 0 to 246 ft of clay and barren sand As a result of the easy accessibility the world s first oil sands mine was in the Athabasca oil sands Commercial production of oil from the Athabasca oil sands began in 1967 with the opening of the Great Canadian Oil Sands GCOS plant in Fort McMurray It was the first operational oil sands project in the world owned and operated by the American parent company Sun Oil Company When the US 240 million plant officially opened with a capacity of 45 000 barrels per day 7 200 m3 d it marked the beginning of commercial development of the Athabasca oil sands In 2013 McKenzie Brown listed industrialist J Howard Pew as one of the six visionaries who built the Athabasca oil sands 26 By the time of his death in 1971 the Pew family were ranked by Forbes magazine as one of the half dozen wealthiest families in America 27 The Great Canadian Oil Sands Limited then a subsidiary of Sun Oil Company but now incorporated into an independent company known as Suncor Energy Inc produced 30 000 barrels per day 4 800 m3 d of synthetic crude oil 28 Oil crisis edit Main articles 1973 oil crisis 1979 energy crisis and Syncrude The true size of the Canadian oil sands deposits became known in the 1970s The Syncrude mine is now the largest mine by area in the world with mines potentially covering 140 000 km2 54 000 sq mi citation needed Although there is oil underlying 142 200 km2 54 900 sq mi which may be disturbed by drilling and in situ extraction only 4 800 km2 1 900 sq mi may potentially be surface mined and 904 km2 349 sq mi has to date been mined Development was inhibited by declining world oil prices and the second mine operated by the Syncrude consortium did not begin operating until 1978 after the 1973 oil crisis sparked investor interest However the price of oil subsided afterwards and although the 1979 energy crisis caused oil prices to peak again during the 1980s oil prices declined to very low levels causing considerable retrenchment in the oil industry In 1979 Sun formed Suncor by merging its Canadian refining and retailing interests with Great Canadian Oil Sands and its conventional oil and gas interests In 1981 the Government of Ontario purchased a 25 stake in the company but divested it in 1993 In 1995 Sun Oil also divested its interest in the company although Suncor maintained the Sunoco retail brand in Canada Suncor took advantage of these two divestitures to become an independent widely held public company Suncor continued to grow and continued to produce more and more oil from its oil sands operations regardless of fluctuating market prices and eventually became bigger than its former parent company In 2009 Suncor acquired the formerly Canadian government owned oil company Petro Canada 29 30 which turned Suncor into the largest petroleum company in Canada and one of the biggest Canadian companies Suncor Energy is now a Canadian company completely unaffiliated with its former American parent company Sun Oil Company became known as Sunoco but later left the oil production and refining business and has since become a retail gasoline distributor owned by Energy Transfer Partners of Dallas Texas In Canada Suncor Energy converted all of its Sunoco stations which were all in Ontario to Petro Canada sites in order to unify all of its downstream retail operations under the Petro Canada banner and discontinue paying licensing fees for the Sunoco brand Nationwide Petro Canada s upstream product supplier and parent company is Suncor Energy Suncor Energy continues to operate just one Sunoco retail site in Ontario 31 Oil sands production in the 21st century editAt the turn of the 21st century oil sands development in Canada started to take off with an expansion at the Suncor mine a new mine and expansion at Syncrude and a new mine by Royal Dutch Shell associated with their new Scotford Upgrader near Edmonton Three new large steam assisted gravity drainage SAGD projects were added Foster Creek Surmont and MacKay River by different companies all of which have since been bought by larger companies 32 Shell Canada s third mine began operating in 2003 However as a result of oil price increases since 2003 the existing mines have been greatly expanded and new ones were built According to the Alberta Energy and Utilities Board 2005 production of crude bitumen in the Athabasca oil sands was as follows 2005 production of crude bitumen Mine m3 day Barrels per daySuncor mine 31 000 195 000Syncrude mine 41 700 262 000Shell Canada mine 26 800 169 000In situ projects 21 300 134 000Total 120 800 760 000As of 2006 oil sands production had increased to 1 126 000 barrels per day 179 000 m3 d Oil sands were by then the source of 62 of Alberta s total oil production and 47 of all oil produced in Canada 33 As of 2010 oil sands production had increased to over 1 6 million barrels per day 250 000 m3 d to exceed conventional oil production in Canada 53 of this was produced by surface mining and 47 by in situ techniques In 2012 oil production from oil sands was 1 8 million barrels per day 290 000 m3 d 34 Shale oil boom edit Main article 2010s oil glut The massive development of tight oil extraction in the Bakken and Permian Basin in the United States transformed the oil industry rapidly reducing importation of foreign oil dramatically As with the oil sands production costs of shale oil are higher than those of conventional oil A combination of factors among them oversupply and geopolitical rivalries drove the price of oil down from more than 100 dollars a barrel in 2013 to less than 40 dollars three years later Lingering low oil prices prompted companies to cancel new investments in the oil sands Fort McMurray wildfire edit Main article 2016 Fort McMurray wildfire nbsp Satellite image of the fire at night May 5 2016 From May to July 2016 a wildfire spread from Fort McMurray across northern Alberta burning approximately 590 000 hectares 1 500 000 acres of forested areas and destroying approximately 2 400 homes and buildings 88 000 people were forced from their homes in what became the largest wildfire evacuation in Alberta s history and the costliest disaster in Canadian history The wildfire halted oil sands production at facilities north of Fort McMurray Shell Canada shut down output at its Albian Sands mining operation Suncor Energy and Syncrude Canada also scaled back operations and evacuated employees and their families Approximately one million barrels of oil a day equal to a quarter of Canada s oil production was halted as a result of the fire in May This continued into June at a rate of 700 000 barrels per day The lost output was a contributing factor to rises in global oil prices The scaled back operations along with a refinery outage in Edmonton caused many gas stations to run out of gas throughout Western Canada 2015 production of crude bitumen 35 Mine m3 day Barrels per daySuncor mine 80 000 501 000Syncrude mine 65 000 407 000Shell Canada mines 40 000 255 000Imperial Oil mine 35 000 220 000CNRL mine 24 000 152 000In situ projects 138 000 865 000Total 382 000 2 400 000In 2018 oil sands production reached 3 1 million barrels per day 490 000 m3 d Until 2014 industry groups believed oil sands production levels could reach 5 Mbbl d 790 000 m3 d by 2030 As of 2021 after a slowdown in investment analyst are predicting it could reach 3 8 Mbbl d 600 000 m3 d by that time 36 37 Transportation edit nbsp Citizen demonstrating against the Keystone Pipeline and tar sands Canada is the largest source of oil imported by the United States supplying 3 million barrels per day 480 000 m3 d chiefly from oil sands sources as of 2019 38 Industry observers went from believing there might be excess pipeline capacity to warning that it was insufficient to accommodate oil sands production growth after several pipeline projects were abandoned or cancelled 39 The North Gateway project to Kitimat British Columbia which would have been built by Enbridge operator of the Enbridge Pipeline System which also serves the area was cancelled in 2016 Similarly after lengthy environmentalist and First Nation group opposition Keystone XL a pipeline project from Alberta to Gulf coast refineries was cancelled in 2021 40 Other projects using existing rights of way are being built like Kinder Morgan s Trans Mountain Expansion nationalized in 2018 or Enbridge s Line 9 reversed to feed refineries in Quebec 41 42 Between January 2019 and December 2020 the Alberta government imposed a quota to adjust production to pipeline export capacity 43 To compensate for pipeline capacity limitations shipment of oil by rail increased from less than 50 thousand to 400 thousand barrels per day 64 000 m3 d between 2012 and 2020 44 Future production editAs of December 2008 the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers revised its 2008 2020 crude oil forecasts to account for project cancellations and cutbacks as a result of the price declines in the second half of 2008 The revised forecast predicted that Canadian oil sands production would continue to grow but at a slower rate than previously predicted There would be minimal changes to 2008 2012 production but by 2020 production could be 300 000 barrels per day 48 000 m3 d less than its prior predictions This would mean that Canadian oil sands production would grow from 1 2 million barrels per day 190 000 m3 d in 2008 to 3 3 million barrels per day 520 000 m3 d in 2020 and that total Canadian oil production would grow from 2 7 to 4 1 million barrels per day 430 000 to 650 000 m3 d in 2020 45 Even accounting for project cancellations this would place Canada among the four or five largest oil producing countries in the world by 2020 In early December 2007 London based BP and Calgary based Husky Energy announced a 50 50 joint venture to produce and refine bitumen from the Athabasca oil sands BP would contribute its Toledo Ohio refinery to the joint venture while Husky would contribute its Sunrise oil sands project Sunrise was planned to start producing 60 000 barrels per day 9 500 m3 d of bitumen in 2012 and may reach 200 000 bbl d 32 000 m3 d by 2015 2020 BP would modify its Toledo refinery to process 170 000 bbl d 27 000 m3 d of bitumen directly to refined products The joint venture would solve problems for both companies since Husky was short of refining capacity and BP had no presence in the oil sands It was a change of strategy for BP since the company historically has downplayed the importance of oil sands 46 In mid December 2007 ConocoPhillips announced its intention to increase its oil sands production from 60 000 barrels per day 9 500 m3 d to 1 million barrels per day 160 000 m3 d over the next 20 years which would make it the largest private sector oil sands producer in the world ConocoPhillips currently holds the largest position in the Canadian oil sands with over 1 million acres 4 000 km2 under lease Other major oil sands producers planning to increase their production include Royal Dutch Shell to 770 000 bbl d 122 000 m3 d Syncrude Canada to 550 000 bbl d 87 000 m3 d Suncor Energy to 500 000 bbl d 79 000 m3 d and Canadian Natural Resources to 500 000 bbl d 79 000 m3 d 47 If all these plans come to fruition these five companies will be producing over 3 3 Mbbl d 520 000 m3 d of oil from oil sands by 2028 Operating and Approved Athabasca Oil Sands Projects as of December 2016 48 Project name Type Major partners National affiliation 2016 production barrels day Planned production barrels day Millenium Mining Suncor Energy nbsp Canada 501 000 501 000Fort Hills 180 000Firebag SAGD 273 000 398 000MacKay River 38 000 58 000Mildred Lake Aurora Mining Suncor 60 Imperial Oil 25 Sinopec 9 CNOOC 7 Syncrude nbsp Canada nbsp China nbsp USA 407 000 607 000Jackpine Muskeg Mining Shell 10 Chevron 20 CNRL 70 49 Albian Sands nbsp Canada nbsp UK nbsp Netherlands nbsp USA 255 000 570 000Kearl Mining Imperial Oil 70 ExxonMobil 30 nbsp USA 220 000 345 000Horizon Mining Canadian Natural Resources Limited nbsp Canada 197 000 277 000Jackfish I and II Pike SAGD 105 000 175 000Kirby 40 000 140 000Foster Creek SAGD Cenovus Energy 50 nbsp Canada 180 000 260 000Christina Lake 51 160 800 310 000Grand Rapids 10 000 180 000Narrow Lake 45 000 130 000Surmont SAGD TotalEnergies 50 ConocoPhillips 50 nbsp France nbsp USA 149 200 206 000Long Lake SAGD Nexen 65 OPTI Canada 35 52 53 nbsp China 54 92 000 129 500Sunrise SAGD Husky Energy 50 BP 50 55 nbsp Canada nbsp UK 60 000 200 000Christina Lake SAGD MEG Energy Corp nbsp Canada nbsp China 60 000 210 000Mackay River SAGD Brion Energy nbsp China 35 000 150 000Leismer SAGD Athabasca Oil Corporation nbsp Canada nbsp China 20 000 60 000Hangingstone 12 000 12 000Great Divide SAGD Connacher Oil and Gas nbsp Canada 20 000 48 000Algar Lake SAGD Grizzly Oil Sands nbsp Canada 6 000 12 000West Ells SAGD Sunshine Oilsands nbsp China 5 000 10 000Blackrod SAGD BlackPearl Resources nbsp Canada 800 80 000Germain Saleski SAGD Laricina Energy 60 OSUM 40 nbsp Canada 270 000 56 Hangingstone 57 SAGD JACOS 75 CNOOC 25 nbsp Japan nbsp China 20 000Advanced TriStar SAGD Value Creation Inc nbsp Canada 60 000Black Gold SAGD Korea National Oil Corporation nbsp South Korea 30 000 58 Hoole SAGD Cavalier Energy nbsp Canada 10 000Muskwa Steam amp CO2 Renergy Petroleum nbsp China 440Total 2 891 800 5 638 940Governance editThe governance of the Alberta oil sands is focused on economic development and has historically been dominated by the interests of two primary actors government federal and provincial and industry Canadian federalism forms the functions and roles of each level of government in that constitutional power is split so that neither is superior to the other 59 The Constitution Act 1867 Section 109 ensures the province full ownership of the lands and resources within its borders The province acts as the landowner and the federal government oversees jurisdiction over trade commerce and taxation There is a clear overlap as resource management influences trade and trade management influences resources 60 As of the 1990s both the federal and provincial government have been aligned focusing on regulation technology and the development of new export markets 61 The majority of ground level governance is carried out by a number of provincial institutions Ottawa has avoided direct investment preferring to improve the investment climate A prime example of this occurred in 1994 when the federal government rolled out tax breaks allowing 100 of oil sands capital investments to be written off as accelerated capital cost allowances 62 The provincial government had a much more direct role in development investing directly in numerous pilot projects undertaking joint ventures with the industry and consistently making massive investments in research and development Some people have claimed that Alberta features one of the lowest royalty rates in the world 63 Since Alberta unlike US states owns the vast majority of oil under its surface it can exercise more control over it whereas US states are limited to severance taxes This industry centric royalty system has been criticised for promoting a runaway pace of development 64 65 Industry is the core force of oil sands development The first major players Suncor Energy and Syncrude dominated the market until the 1990s Currently there are 64 companies operating several hundred projects 66 The majority of production now comes from foreign owned corporations 67 and the maintenance of a favourable climate for these corporations grants them strong influence much stronger than that of non productive stakeholders such as citizens and environmental groups 64 Governance policy administration regulation over the oil sands is held almost entirely by the Ministry of Energy Alberta and its various departments Critics noted a clear and systemic lack of public involvement at all key stages of the governance process 68 In answer to this the province initiated the Oil Sands Consultations Multistakeholder Committee MSC in 2006 The MSC represents four organisations the Cumulative Environmental Management Association CEMA the Wood Buffalo Environmental Association WBEA the Canadian Oil Sands Network for Research and Development CONRAD and the Athabasca Regional Issues Working Group RIWG 64 The role of the MSC is to consult and make recommendations on management principles 69 The recommendations contained in the MSC s first 2007 Final Report were lauded by several ministers and government representatives 70 but none have yet been effectively passed into law On October 17 2012 the Alberta government announced it would follow the recommendations of a working group 71 to develop an agency that would monitor the environmental impact of the oil sands The new science based agency will begin work in the oil sands region and will focus on what is monitored how it s monitored and where it s monitored This will include integrated and coordinated monitoring of land air water and biodiversity said a press release from Diana McQueen s office the Minister of Energy and Sustainable Development 72 The provincial government moved to develop the agency after widespread public criticism by environmentalists aboriginal groups and scientists who claimed the oil sands would have a devastating long term effect on the environment if left unchecked 73 On 17 June 2013 the newly formed corporation Alberta Energy Regulator AER 74 was phased in with a mandate to regulate oil gas and coal development in Alberta including the Athabasca oil sands 75 76 The AER brings together the regulatory functions from the Energy Resources Conservation Board and the Alberta Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Resource Development into a one stop shop 77 The Alberta Energy Regulator is now responsible for all projects from application to reclamation They will respond to project proponents landowners and industry regarding energy regulations in Alberta 77 The Responsible Energy Development Act gave the Alberta Energy Regulator the authority to administer the Public Lands Act the Environmental Protection and Enhancement Act and the Water Act with regards to energy development 77 The Alberta Energy Regulator will enforce environmental laws and issue environmental and water permits responsibilities formerly the mandate of Alberta Environment 75 78 Development edit nbsp Map of all pipelines regulated by the Canadian Energy Regulator that originate from Alberta The key characteristic of the Athabasca deposit is that it is the only one shallow enough to be suitable for surface mining About 10 of the Athabasca oil sands are covered by less than 75 metres 246 ft of overburden Until 2009 the surface mineable area SMA was defined by the ERCB an agency of the Alberta government to cover 37 contiguous townships about 3 400 km2 or 1 300 sq mi north of Fort McMurray In June 2009 the SMA was expanded to 51 1 2 townships or about 4 700 km2 or 1 800 sq mi 79 This expansion pushes the northern limit of the SMA to within 12 miles 19 km of Wood Buffalo National Park a UNESCO World Heritage Site The Albian Sands mine operated by Shell Canada opened in 2003 All three of these mines are associated with bitumen upgraders that convert the unusable bitumen into synthetic crude oil for shipment to refineries in Canada and the United States For Albian the upgrader is located at Scotford 439 km south The bitumen diluted with a solvent is transferred there in a 610 mm 24 in corridor pipeline The Energy Resource Conservation Board has approved over 100 mining and in situ projects despite the negative environmental impacts 80 As of 2012 there were 9 active open mining projects more than 50 approved in situ projects as well as 190 primary recovery projects extracting bitumen that is free flowing The ERCB has also approved 20 projects that are testing unproven technology as well as new versions of existing technologies 81 Bitumen extraction editMain article Oil sands Extraction process Surface mining edit Since Great Canadian Oil Sands now Suncor started operation of its mine in 1967 bitumen has been extracted on a commercial scale from the Athabasca Oil Sands by surface mining In the Athabasca sands there are very large amounts of bitumen covered by little overburden making surface mining the most efficient method of extracting it The overburden consists of water laden muskeg peat bog over top of clay and barren sand The oil sands themselves are typically 40 to 60 metres 130 to 200 ft deep sitting on top of flat limestone rock Originally the sands were mined with draglines and bucket wheel excavators and moved to the processing plants by conveyor belts These early mines had a steep learning curve to deal with before their bitumen mining techniques became efficient In the intervening years more effective in situ production techniques were developed particularly steam assisted gravity drainage SAGD In situ methods became increasingly important because only about 20 of the Athabasca oil sands were shallow enough to recover by surface mining and the SAGD method in particular was very efficient at recovering large amounts of bitumen at a reasonable cost In recent years companies such as Syncrude and Suncor have switched to much cheaper shovel and truck operations using the biggest power shovels at least 100 short tons 91 t and dump trucks 400 short tons 360 t in the world 82 This has held production costs to around US 27 per barrel of synthetic crude oil despite rising energy and labour costs 83 After excavation hot water and caustic soda sodium hydroxide is added to the sand and the resulting slurry is piped to the extraction plant where it is agitated and the oil skimmed from the top 84 Provided that the water chemistry is appropriate to allow bitumen to separate from sand and clay the combination of hot water and agitation releases bitumen from the oil sand and allows small air bubbles to attach to the bitumen droplets The bitumen froth floats to the top of separation vessels and is further treated to remove residual water and fine solids About two short tons 1 8 t of oil sands are required to produce one barrel 1 8 short ton 110 kg of oil Originally roughly 75 of the bitumen was recovered from the sand However recent enhancements to this method include Tailings Oil Recovery TOR units which recover oil from the tailings Diluent Recovery Units to recover naphtha from the froth inclined plate settlers IPS and disc centrifuges These allow the extraction plants to recover well over 90 of the bitumen in the sand After oil extraction the spent sand and other materials are then returned to the mine which is eventually reclaimed Alberta Taciuk Process technology extracts bitumen from oil sands through a dry retorting During this process oil sand is moved through a rotating drum cracking the bitumen with heat and producing lighter hydrocarbons Although tested this technology is not in commercial use yet 85 The original process for extraction of bitumen from the sands was developed by Dr Karl Clark working with the Alberta Research Council in the 1920s 86 Today all of the producers doing surface mining such as Syncrude Canada Suncor Energy and Albian Sands Energy etc use a variation of the Clark Hot Water Extraction CHWE process In this process the ores are mined using open pit mining technology The mined ore is then crushed for size reduction Hot water at 50 80 C 122 176 F is added to the ore and the formed slurry is transported using hydrotransport line to a primary separation vessel PSV where bitumen is recovered by flotation as bitumen froth The recovered bitumen froth consists of 60 bitumen 30 water and 10 solids by weight 87 The recovered bitumen froth needs to be cleaned to reject the contained solids and water to meet the requirement of downstream upgrading processes Depending on the bitumen content in the ore between 90 and 100 of the bitumen can be recovered using modern hot water extraction techniques 88 After oil extraction the spent sand and other materials are then returned to the mine which is eventually reclaimed Steam assisted gravity drainage edit Main article Steam assisted gravity drainage Steam assisted gravity drainage SAGD is an enhanced oil recovery technology for producing heavy crude oil and bitumen It is an advanced form of steam stimulation in which a pair of horizontal wells are drilled into the oil reservoir one a few metres above the other High pressure steam is continuously injected into the upper wellbore to heat the oil and reduce its viscosity causing the heated oil to drain into the lower wellbore where it is pumped out to a bitumen recovery facility Dr Roger Butler engineer at Imperial Oil from 1955 to 1982 invented steam assisted gravity drainage SAGD in the 1970s Butler developed the concept of using horizontal pairs of wells and injected steam to develop certain deposits of bitumen considered too deep for mining 89 90 More recently in situ methods like steam assisted gravity drainage SAGD and cyclic steam stimulation CSS have been developed to extract bitumen from deep deposits by injecting steam to heat the sands and reduce the bitumen viscosity so that it can be pumped out like conventional crude oil 91 The standard extraction process requires huge amounts of natural gas As of 2007 the oil sands industry used about 4 of the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin natural gas production By 2015 this may increase two and a half fold 92 According to the National Energy Board it requires about 1 200 cubic feet 34 m3 of natural gas to produce one barrel of bitumen from in situ projects and about 700 cubic feet 20 m3 for integrated projects 93 Since a barrel of oil equivalent is about 6 000 cubic feet 170 m3 of gas this represents a large gain in energy That being the case it is likely that Alberta regulators will reduce exports of natural gas to the United States in order to provide fuel to the oil sands plants As gas reserves are exhausted however oil upgraders will probably turn to bitumen gasification to generate their own fuel In much the same way as bitumen can be converted into synthetic crude oil it can also be converted into synthetic natural gas Environmental impacts editSee also Environmental issues surrounding oil sands extraction nbsp Mining operations in the Athabasca oil sands Image shows the Athabasca River about 600m from the tailings pond NASA Earth Observatory photo 2009 Land edit The oil sands have been described by first nations peoples scientists lawyers journalists and environmental groups as ecocide 6 7 8 9 10 11 Approximately 20 of Alberta s oil sands are recoverable through open pit mining while 80 require in situ extraction technologies largely because of their depth Open pit mining destroys the boreal forest and muskeg while in situ extraction technologies cause less significant damage Approximately 0 19 of the Alberta boreal forest has been disturbed by open pit mining 94 The Alberta government requires companies to restore the land to equivalent land capability This means that the ability of the land to support various land uses after reclamation is similar to what existed but that the individual land uses may not necessarily be identical 95 In some particular circumstances the government considers agricultural land to be equivalent to forest land Oil sands companies have reclaimed mined land to use as pasture for wood bison instead of restoring it to the original boreal forest and muskeg Syncrude asserts they have reclaimed 22 of their disturbed land 96 a figure disputed by other sources who assess Syncrude more accurately reclaimed only 0 2 of its disturbed land 97 Water edit A Pembina Institute report stated To produce one cubic metre m3 35 cu ft of synthetic crude oil SCO upgraded bitumen in a mining operation requires about 2 4 5 m3 71 159 cu ft of water net figures Approved oil sands mining operations are currently licensed to divert 359 million m3 from the Athabasca River or more than twice the volume of water required to meet the annual municipal needs of the City of Calgary 98 It went on to say the net water requirement to produce a cubic metre of oil with in situ production may be as little as 0 2 m3 7 1 cu ft depending on how much is recycled The Athabasca River runs 1 231 kilometres 765 mi from the Athabasca Glacier in west central Alberta to Lake Athabasca in northeastern Alberta 99 The average annual flow just downstream of Fort McMurray is 633 cubic metres per second 22 400 cu ft s 100 with its highest daily average measuring 1 200 cubic metres per second 101 Water licence allocations total about 1 of the Athabasca River average annual flow though actual withdrawals for all uses in 2006 amount to about 0 4 102 In addition the Alberta government sets strict limits on how much water oil sands companies can remove from the Athabasca River According to the Water Management Framework for the Lower Athabasca River during periods of low river flow water consumption from the Athabasca River is limited to 1 3 of annual average flow 103 The province of Alberta is also looking into cooperative withdrawal agreements between oil sands operators 104 Since the beginning of the oil sands development there have been several leaks into the Athabasca River polluting it with oil and tailing pond water The close proximity of the tailing ponds to the river drastically increases the likelihood of contamination due to ground water leakages In 1997 Suncor admitted that their tailing ponds had been leaking 1 600 cubic metres 57 000 cu ft of toxic water into the river a day This water contains naphthenic acid trace metals such as mercury and other pollutants The Athabasca River is the largest freshwater delta in the world but with Suncor and Syncrude leaking tail ponds the amount of polluted water will exceed 1 billion cubic meters by 2020 105 Natural toxicants derived from bitumen in Northern Alberta pose potential ecological and human health risks to people living in the area Oil sands development contributes arsenic cadmium chromium lead mercury nickel and other metal elements toxic at low concentrations to the tributaries and rivers of the Athabasca 106 Emissions edit As of 2024 oilsands account for 8 of the total of Canadian emissions 107 Emissions from the oilsands continue to increase while most other sources are decreasing 107 The processing of bitumen into synthetic crude requires energy generated by burning natural gas In 2007 the oil sands used around 1 billion cubic feet 28 000 000 m3 of natural gas per day around 40 of Alberta s total usage Based on gas purchases natural gas requirements are given by the Canadian Energy Resource Institute as 2 14 GJ 2 04 thousand cu ft per barrel for cyclic steam stimulation projects 1 08 GJ 1 03 thousand cu ft per barrel for SAGD projects 0 55 GJ 0 52 thousand cu ft per barrel for bitumen extraction in mining operations not including upgrading or 1 54 GJ 1 47 thousand cu ft per barrel for extraction and upgrading in mining operations 108 A 2009 study by CERA estimated that production from Canada s oil sands emits about 5 percent to 15 percent more carbon dioxide over the well to wheels lifetime analysis of the fuel than average crude oil 109 Author and investigative journalist David Strahan that same year stated that IEA figures show that carbon dioxide emissions from the oil sands are 20 higher than average emissions from oil explaining the discrepancy as the difference between upstream emissions and life cycle emissions 110 He goes on to say that a US government report in 2005 suggested with current technology conventional oil releases 40 kg of carbon dioxide per barrel while non conventional oil releases 80 115 kg of carbon dioxide Alberta energy suggests lower releases of carbon with improving technology giving a value of 39 drop in emissions per barrel between 1990 and 2008 111 however only a 29 reduction between 1990 and 2009 112 The forecast growth in synthetic oil production in Alberta also threatens Canada s international commitments In ratifying the Kyoto Protocol Canada agreed to reduce by 2012 its greenhouse gas emissions by 6 with respect to 1990 In 2002 Canada s total greenhouse gas emissions had increased by 24 since 1990 Ranked as the world s eighth largest emitter of greenhouse gases Canada is a relatively large emitter given its population and is missing its Kyoto targets A major Canadian initiative called the Integrated CO2 Network ICO2N promotes the development of large scale capture transport and storage of carbon dioxide CO2 as a means of helping Canada to help meet climate change objectives while supporting economic growth ICO2N members represent a group of industry participants many oil sands producers providing a framework for carbon capture and storage development in Canada 113 Two separate fraud lawsuits were filed against ExxonMobil involving Alberta s oilsands in October One was in New York and the second was filed in Massachusetts on October 24 The Massachusetts lawsuit says that ExxonMobil misled investors by falsely justifying to them its riskiest long term investments including Canadian bitumen oilsands projects The company did not warn investors about what climate change measures could cost its operations especially those in the oilsands 114 In December 2022 the Pathways Alliance a consortium of six companies Canadian Natural Resources Cenovus Energy Imperial Oil MEG Energy Suncor Energy and ConocoPhillips which together are responsible for about 95 of Canada s oil sands production announced that exploratory drilling would begin that winter to create underground reservoirs in northern Alberta where carbon captured during the process of oil sands extraction would be stored 115 The proposal which may take several years to gain regulatory approval includes the construction of a pipeline to transport captured carbon from over twenty oil sands facilities to an underground storage facility near Cold Lake 115 The same month Athabasca Oil Corporation Canada s 10th largest oil producer announced that it would build a carbon capture and storage facility at its Leismer oil sands well site near Conklin Alberta in partnership with Entropy Inc which is funding the project 116 Athabasca Oil said that it aims for a 30 reduction in emissions from the extraction process by 2025 116 Animals edit In Northern Alberta oil development activities bring an enormous number of people into a fragile ecosystem Historically population figures have been very low for this region Water is easily polluted because the water table reaches the surface in most areas of muskeg With the ever increasing development and extraction of resources wildlife are recipient to both direct and indirect effects of pollution Woodland Caribou are particularly sensitive to human activities and as such are pushed away from their preferred habitat during the time of year when their caloric needs are greatest and food is the most scarce Humans effect on the Caribou is compounded by road construction and habitat fragmentation that open the area up to deer and wolves 117 Wildlife living near the Athabasca River have been greatly impacted due to pollutants entering the water system An unknown number of birds die each year Particularly visible and hard hit are migrating birds that stop to rest at tailing ponds There have been numerous reports of large flocks of ducks landing in tailing ponds and perishing soon after 118 Data has been recorded since the 1970s on the number of birds found on tailing ponds 119 There has also been a large impact on the fish that live and spawn in the area As toxins accumulate in the river due to the oil sands bizarre mutations tumors and deformed fish species have begun to appear A study commissioned by the region s health authority found that several known toxins and carcinogens were elevated 120 Aboriginal communities that live around the river are becoming increasingly worried about how the animals they eat and their drinking water are being affected 121 While there has been no link yet made between the oil sands and health issues Matt Price of Environmental Defense says the connection makes common sense Deformities in fish and high concentrations of toxic substances in animals have also been identified 122 Tailings ponds edit See also Oil sands tailings ponds Large volumes of tailings are a byproduct of bitumen extraction from the oil sands and managing these tailings is one of the most difficult environmental challenges facing the oil sands industry 123 Tailings ponds are engineered dam and dyke systems that contain solvents used in the separation process as well as residual bitumen salts and soluble organic compounds fine silts and water 123 The concentrations of chemicals may be harmful to fish and oil on the surface harmful to birds 124 These settling basins were meant to be temporary A major hindrance to the monitoring of oil sands produced waters has been the lack of identification of individual compounds present By better understanding the nature of the highly complex mixture of compounds including naphthenic acids it may be possible to monitor rivers for leachate and also to remove toxic components Such identification of individual acids has for many years proved to be impossible but a breakthrough in 2011 in analysis began to reveal what is in the oil sands tailings ponds 125 Ninety percent of the tailings water can be reused for oil extraction 123 By 2009 as tailing ponds continued to proliferate and volumes of fluid tailings increased the Alberta Energy Resources Conservation Board issued Directive 074 to force oil companies to manage tailings based on new aggressive criteria 126 The Government of Alberta reported in 2013 that tailings ponds in the Alberta oil sands covered an area of about 77 square kilometres 30 sq mi 123 The Tailings Management Framework for Mineable Oil Sands is part of Alberta s Progressive Reclamation Strategy for the oil sands to ensure that tailings are reclaimed as quickly as possible 126 Suncor invested 1 2 billion in their Tailings Reduction Operations TROTM method 127 that treats mature fine tails MFT from tailings ponds with chemical flocculant an anionic Polyacrylamide commonly used in water treatment plants to improve removal of total organic content TOC to speed their drying into more easily reclaimable matter Mature tailings dredged from a pond bottom in suspension were mixed with a polymer flocculant and spread over a beach with a shallow grade where the tailings would dewater and dry under ambient conditions The dried MFT can then be reclaimed in place or moved to another location for final reclamation Suncor hoped this would reduce the time for water reclamation from tailings to weeks rather than years with the recovered water being recycled into the oil sands plant Suncor claimed the mature fines tailings process would reduce the number of tailing ponds and shorten the time to reclaim a tailing pond from 40 years at present to 7 10 years with land rehabilitation continuously following 7 to 10 years behind the mining operations 128 For the reporting periods from 2010 to 2012 Suncor had a lower than expected fines capture performance from this technology 126 Syncrude used the older composite tailings CT technology to capture fines at its Mildred Lake project Syncrude had a lower than expected fines capture performance in 2011 2012 but exceeded expectations in 2010 2011 126 Shell used atmospheric fines drying AFD technology combined fluid tailings and flocculants and deposits the mixture in a sloped area to allow the water to drain and the deposit to dry and had a lower than expected fines capture performance 126 By 2010 Suncor had transformed their first tailings pond Pond One into Wapisiw Lookout the first reclaimed settling basin in the oil sands In 2007 the area was a 220 hectare pond of toxic effluent but several years later there was firm land planted with black spruce and trembling aspen Wapisiw Lookout represents only one percent of tailings ponds in 2011 but Pond One was the first effluent pond in the oil sands industry in 1967 and was used until 1997 By 2011 only 65 square kilometres were cleaned up and about one square kilometre was certified by Alberta as a self sustaining natural environment Wapisiw Lookout has not yet been certified Closure operations of Pond One began in 2007 The jello like mature fine tails MFT were pumped and dredged out of the pond and relocated to another tailings pond for long term storage and treatment The MFT was then replaced with 30 million tonnes clean sand and then topsoil that had been removed from the site in the 1960s The 1 2 million cubic meters 42 10 6 cu ft of topsoil over the surface to a depth of 50 cm 1 ft 8 in was placed on top of the sand in the form of hummocks and swales It was then planted with reclamation plants 129 130 131 In March 2012 an alliance of oil companies called Canada s Oil Sands Innovation Alliance COSIA was launched with a mandate to share research and technology to decrease the negative environmental impact of oil sands production focusing on tailings ponds greenhouse gases water and land Almost all the water used to produce crude oil using steam methods of production ends up in tailings ponds Recent enhancements to this method include Tailings Oil Recovery TOR units which recover oil from the tailings Diluent Recovery Units to recover naphtha from the froth Inclined Plate Settlers IPS and disc centrifuges These allow the extraction plants to recover well over 90 of the bitumen in the sand In January 2013 scientists from Queen s University published a report analyzing lake sediments in the Athabasca region over the past fifty years 132 They found that levels of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons PAHs had increased as much as 23 fold since bitumen extraction began in the 1960s Levels of carcinogenic mutagenic and teratogenic PAHs were substantially higher than guidelines for lake sedimentation set by the Canadian Council of Ministers of the Environment in 1999 The team discovered that the contamination spread farther than previously thought 133 The Pembina Institute suggested that the huge investments by many companies in Canadian oil sands leading to increased production results in excess bitumen with no place to store it It added that by 2022 a month s output of waste water could result in a 11 foot deep 3 m toxic reservoir the size of New York City s Central Park 840 01 acres 339 94 hectares 3 3994 square kilometres 134 The oil sands industry may build a series of up to thirty lakes by pumping water into old mine pits when they have finished excavation leaving toxic effluent at their bottoms and letting biological processes restore it to health It is less expensive to fill abandoned open pit mines with water instead of dirt 135 In 2012 the Cumulative Environmental Management Association CEMA described End Pit Lakes EPL 136 as An engineered water body located below grade in an oil sands post mining pit It may contain oil sands by product material and will receive surface and groundwater from surrounding reclaimed and undisturbed landscapes EPLs will be permanent features in the final reclaimed landscape discharging water to the downstream environment CEMA 2012 CEMA acknowledged that the main concern is the potential for EPLs to develop a legacy of toxicity and thus reduce the land use value of the oil sands region in the future Syncrude Canada was planning the first end pit lake in 2013 with the intention of pumping fresh water over 40 vertical metres of mine effluent that it has deposited in what it calls base mine lake David Schindler argued that no further end pit lakes should be approved until we have some assurance that they will eventually support a healthy ecosystem There is to date no evidence to support their viability or the modelled results suggesting that outflow from the lakes will be non toxic 135 Pipeline processing pollution edit See also Nexen Long Lake Oil sands and especially the related projects like the construction of a new pipeline also have a social impact Most of all the local population groups would suffer from the effects of a new oil pipeline In addition to the risk of general oil spills there is now also the danger of gathering food due to the pollution of the fields and waters Despite the fact that most people in those areas are not well off the money is still used to build new projects instead of spending it on improving the quality of life there Furthermore adding a new pipeline to the already existing oil pipelines would increase our dependence on fossil fuels 137 In July 2015 one of the largest leaks in Canada s history spilled 5 000 cubic metres of emulsion about 5 million litres of bitumen sand and wastewater from a Nexen Energy pipeline at a Long Lake oil sands facility south of Fort McMurray The subsidiary of China s CNOOC Ltd automated safety systems had not detected the pipeline fault that caused the spill to cover an area of about 16 000 square metres prior to manual inspection 138 Alberta Energy Regulator AER revealed the number of pipeline incidents in Alberta increased 15 last year despite the regulator s well publicized efforts to reduce ruptures and spills Occupational health and safety edit An explosion left one worker dead and another seriously injured at the Chinese owned Nexen Energy facility in the Long Lake oil sands near Anzac south of Fort McMurray 139 The two maintenance workers involved were found near natural gas compression equipment used for a hydrocracker which turns heavy oil into lighter crude at the plant s main processing facility known as an upgrader 140 Population editThe Athabasca oil sands are located in the northeastern portion of the Canadian province of Alberta near the city of Fort McMurray The area is only sparsely populated and in the late 1950s it was primarily a wilderness outpost of a few hundred people whose main economic activities included fur trapping and salt mining From a population of 37 222 in 1996 the boomtown of Fort McMurray and the surrounding region known as the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo grew to 79 810 people as of 2006 including a shadow population of 10 442 living in work camps 141 The community struggled to provide services and housing for migrant workers many of them from Eastern Canada especially Newfoundland citation needed Fort McMurray ceased to be an incorporated city in 1995 and is now an urban service area within Wood Buffalo 142 Estimated oil reserves editThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information January 2013 By 2015 Venezuela accounted for 18 Saudi Arabia for 16 1 and Canada for 10 3 of the world s proven oil reserves according to NRCAN 143 The Alberta government s Energy and Utilities Board EUB estimated in 2007 that about 173 billion barrels 27 5 10 9 m3 of crude bitumen were economically recoverable from the three Alberta oil sands areas based on then current technology and price projections from the 2006 market prices of 62 per barrel for benchmark West Texas Intermediate WTI rising to a projected 69 per barrel This was equivalent to about 10 of the estimated 1 700 billion barrels 270 10 9 m3 of bitumen in place 2 Alberta estimated that the Athabasca deposits alone contain 35 billion barrels 5 6 10 9 m3 of surface mineable bitumen and 98 billion barrels 15 6 10 9 m3 of bitumen recoverable by in situ methods These estimates of Canada s reserves were doubted when they were first published but are now largely accepted by the international oil industry This volume placed Canadian proven reserves second in the world behind those of Saudi Arabia nbsp Syncrude s Mildred Lake mine site and plantOnly 3 of the initial established crude bitumen reserves have been produced since commercial production started in 1967 At rate of production projected for 2015 about 3 million barrels per day 480 10 3 m3 d the Athabasca oil sands reserves would last over 170 years 144 However those production levels require an influx of workers into an area that until recently was largely uninhabited By 2007 this need in northern Alberta drove unemployment rates in Alberta and adjacent British Columbia to the lowest levels in history As far away as the Atlantic Provinces where workers were leaving to work in Alberta unemployment rates fell to levels not seen for over one hundred years 145 The Venezuelan Orinoco Oil Sands site may contain more oil sands than Athabasca However while the Orinoco deposits are less viscous and more easily produced using conventional techniques the Venezuelan government prefers to call them extra heavy oil they are too deep to access by surface mining 146 Economics editDespite the large reserves the cost of extracting the oil from bituminous sands has historically made production of the oil sands unprofitable the cost of selling the extracted crude would not cover the direct costs of recovery labour to mine the sands and fuel to extract the crude nbsp Oil prices 1996 2008 not adjusted for inflation In mid 2006 the National Energy Board of Canada estimated the operating cost of a new mining operation in the Athabasca oil sands to be CA 9 to CA 12 per barrel while the cost of an in situ SAGD operation using dual horizontal wells would be CA 10 to CA 14 per barrel 147 This compares to operating costs for conventional oil wells which can range from less than one dollar per barrel in Iraq and Saudi Arabia to over six in the United States and Canada s conventional oil reserves The capital cost of the equipment required to mine the sands and haul it to processing is a major consideration in starting production The NEB estimates that capital costs raise the total cost of production to CA 18 to CA 20 per barrel for a new mining operation and CA 18 to CA 22 per barrel for a SAGD operation This does not include the cost of upgrading the crude bitumen to synthetic crude oil which makes the final costs CA 36 to CA 40 per barrel for a new mining operation Therefore although high crude prices make the cost of production very attractive sudden drops in price leaves producers unable to recover their capital costs although the companies are well financed and can tolerate long periods of low prices since the capital has already been spent and they can typically cover incremental operating costs However the development of commercial production is made easier by the fact that exploration costs are very low Such costs are a major factor when assessing the economics of drilling in a traditional oil field The location of the oil deposits in the oil sands are well known and an estimate of recovery costs can usually be made easily There is not another region in the world with energy deposits of comparable magnitude where it would be less likely that the installations would be confiscated by a hostile national government or be endangered by a war or revolution citation needed As a result of the oil price increases since 2003 the economics of oil sands have improved dramatically At a world price of US 50 per barrel the NEB estimated an integrated mining operation would make a rate return of 16 to 23 while a SAGD operation would return 16 to 27 Prices since 2006 have risen exceeding US 145 in mid 2008 but falling back to less than 40 US as a result of the worldwide financial crisis the oil price recovered slowly and many of the planned projects expected to exceed CA 100 billion between 2006 and 2015 were stopped or scheduled In 2012 and 2013 the oil price was high again but the US production is increasing due to new technologies while the gasoline demand is falling so there is an overproduction of oil But recovering economy can change this in a few years At present the area around Fort McMurray has seen the most effect from the increased activity in the oil sands Although jobs are plentiful housing is in short supply and expensive People seeking work often arrive in the area without arranging accommodation driving up the price of temporary accommodation The area is isolated with only a two lane road Alberta Highway 63 connecting it to the rest of the province and there is pressure on the government of Alberta to improve road links as well as hospitals and other infrastructure 147 Despite the best efforts of companies to move as much of the construction work as possible out of the Fort McMurray area and even out of Alberta the shortage of skilled workers is spreading to the rest of the province 148 Even without the oil sands the Alberta economy would be very strong but development of the oil sands has resulted in the strongest period of economic growth ever recorded by a Canadian province 149 Geopolitical importance editThe Athabasca oil sands hold geopolitical significance 150 An agreement has been signed between PetroChina and Enbridge to build a 400 000 barrels per day 64 000 m3 d pipeline from Edmonton Alberta to the west coast port of Kitimat British Columbia If it is built the pipeline will help export synthetic crude oil from the oil sands to China and elsewhere in the Pacific 151 However in 2011 First Nations and environmental groups protested the proposed pipeline stating that its construction and operation would be destructive to the environment First Nations groups also claim that the development of the proposed pipeline is in violation of commitments that the Government of Canada has made through various Treaties and the UN Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples 152 A smaller pipeline will also be built alongside to import condensate to dilute the bitumen Sinopec the largest refining and chemical company in China and China National Petroleum Corporation have bought or are planning to buy shares in major oil sands development On August 20 2009 the U S State Department issued a presidential permit for an Alberta Clipper Pipeline that will run from Hardisty Alberta to Superior Wisconsin The pipeline will be capable of carrying up to 450 000 barrels 72 000 m3 of crude oil a day to refineries in the U S 153 154 Indigenous peoples of the area editIndigenous peoples of the area include the Fort McKay First Nation The oil sands themselves are located within the boundaries of Treaty 8 signed in 1899 which states It does not appear likely that the conditions of the country on either side of the Athabasca and Slave Rivers or about Athabasca Lake will be so changed as to affect hunting or trapping and it is safe to say that so long as the fur bearing animals remain the great bulk of the Indians will continue to hunt and to trap Treaty 8 We had to solemnly assure them that only such laws as to hunting and fishing as were in the interest of the Indians and were found necessary in order to protect the fish and fur bearing animals would be made and that they would be as free to hunt and fish after the treaty as they would be if they never entered into it It does not appear likely that the conditions of the country on either side of the Athabasca and Slave Rivers or about Athabasca Lake will be so changed as to affect hunting or trapping and it is safe to say that so long as the fur bearing animals remain the great bulk of the Indians will continue to hunt and to trap The Honourable Clifford Sifton Superintendent General of Indian Affairs Report of Commissioners for Treaty No 8 Winnipeg Manitoba September 22 1899 The Fort McKay First Nation has formed several companies to service the oil sands industry and will be developing a mine on their territory 155 Opposition remaining within the First Nation focuses on environmental stewardship land rights and health issues like elevated cancer rates in Fort Chipewyan 156 and deformed fish being found by commercial fishermen in Lake Athabasca 157 The Alberta Cancer Board published research of the cancer rates of those living in Fort Chipewyan Alberta in 2009 While many companies argue that there are not enough chemicals and toxic material in the water due to the development of the oil sands this report indicates that there is coincidentally a significantly higher rate of cancer within this community There have been many speculations as to why there is a higher rate of cancer in this community some of those speculations are contamination with the river and the oil sands as well as uranium mining that is currently in progress The world s largest production of uranium is produced in this area as well as along the Athabasca River allowing for easy contamination of the river 158 From 2010 to 2014 the Tar Sands Healing Walk founded by Indigenous women was held annually as a demonstration against oil extraction and the damage it caused to local communities and the environment Impact of oil sands and pipeline development on Indigenous groups editAccording to some environmental activists pipeline development poses risks to the cultural social and economic way of life of Canada s Indigenous populations Historically some Indigenous groups have opposed pipeline development for two primary reasons 1 the perception of inherent environmental risks associated with transporting harmful oil and gas products and 2 failure by the federal government to properly consider and mitigate Indigenous groups concerns regarding resource development on their lands For instance many Indigenous groups rely heavily on local wildlife and vegetation for their survival Increased oil production in Canada requires greater oil transport through their traditional lands which to some poses the perception of threats to the survival and traditional way of life of Indigenous groups as well as the safety and preservation of the surrounding ecosystems First Nations in Alberta have called particular attention to adverse health impacts related to oil sands emissions asserting that the water quality testing for specific chemicals heavy metals has been insufficient 159 Aside from environmental concerns many Indigenous groups have pushed back against pipeline development due to inadequate consultation processes by the federal government As per Section 35 of the Canadian Constitution Act 160 Indigenous peoples in Canada are guaranteed the right to be meaningfully consulted with and accommodated when the Crown is contemplating resource development on their lands see Duty to Consult Through a series of Supreme Court of Canada rulings and political protests from Indigenous peoples see Haida Nation v British Columbia Minister of Forests Taku River Tlingit First Nation v British Columbia and Tsilhqot in Nation v British Columbia among others the courts have attempted to further define the Crown s consultation responsibilities and give legal recognition to Indigenous traditional territory and rights regarding resource development Contrarily oil sands development also presents many positive impacts and opportunities for Indigenous groups particularly in Western Canada In fact over the past two decades First Nations participation in the energy sector has increased dramatically from employment and business opportunities to project approval processes and environmental evaluation Increased Indigenous participation has been encouraged by numerous collaboration agreements with industry typically in the form of impact benefit agreements IBAs which provide not only employment and business ventures but also job training and community benefits 161 Enhanced participation in the energy sector has empowered many Indigenous groups to push for wider involvement by negotiating ownership stakes in proposed pipelines and bitumen storage projects Perhaps the best example of such partnering in Alberta is the agreement between Suncor and Fort McKay and Mikisew Cree First Nations The two First Nations acquired a 49 ownership in Suncor s East Tank Farm Development with shares valued at about 500 million making it the largest business investment to date by a First Nation entity in Canada 162 Support for resource development and desire for direct involvement is further illustrated by the First Nations led 17 billion Eagle Spirit Energy Holding Ltd pipeline and energy corridor between Alberta and the northern B C coast with a back up plan to site its terminal in Alaska to get around the tanker ban in B C The project has secured support from 35 First Nations along the proposed route the bands are entitled to at least 35 ownership in exchange for the land use 163 Oil sand companies editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Planned mining operation oil production by various companies Data from table below There are currently three large oil sands mining operations in the area run by Syncrude Canada Limited Suncor Energy and Albian Sands owned by Shell Canada Chevron and Marathon Oil Corp Major producing or planned developments in the Athabasca Oil Sands include the following projects 164 Suncor Energy s Steepbank and Millennium mines currently produce 263 000 barrels per day 41 800 m3 d and its Firebag in situ project produces 35 000 bbl d 5 600 m3 d Syncrude s Mildred Lake and Aurora mines currently can produce 360 000 bbl d 57 000 m3 d Shell Canada currently operates its Muskeg River Mine producing 155 000 bbl d 24 600 m3 d and the Scotford Upgrader at Fort Saskatchewan Alberta Nexen s in situ Long Lake SAGD project is now producing 70 000 bbl d 11 000 m3 d Total S A s subsidiary Deer Creek Energy was operating a SAGD project on its Joslyn lease producing 10 000 bbl d 1 600 m3 d It intended on constructing its mine by 2010 to expand its production by 100 000 bbl d 16 000 m3 d however this had not occurred by May 2014 when the company shelved the project while it reviewed the economic viability of the project 165 166 Mining Projects 2021 Operator Project Phase Capacity Start up Regulatory StatusAlbian Sands Jackpine 1A 100 000 bbl d 16 000 m3 d 2010 Operating 1B 100 000 bbl d 16 000 m3 d TBD Approved 2 100 000 bbl d 16 000 m3 d TBD ApprovedMuskeg River Existing 175 000 bbl d 27 800 m3 d 2002 Operating Expansion 115 000 bbl d 18 300 m3 d TBD ApprovedCanadian Natural Resources Horizon 1 135 000 bbl d 21 500 m3 d 2009 Operating 2A 12 000 bbl d 1 900 m3 d 2014 Operating 2B 45 000 bbl d 7 200 m3 d 2016 Operating 3 80 000 bbl d 13 000 m3 d 2017 OperatingHorizon South 167 Expansion 95 000 bbl d 15 100 m3 d 2022 ApprovedNorth Pit 2031 AnnouncedPierre River 168 1 100 000 bbl d 16 000 m3 d TBD Approved 2 100 000 bbl d 16 000 m3 d TBD ApprovedImperial Oil Kearl 1 120 000 bbl d 19 000 m3 d 2013 Operating 2 120 000 bbl d 19 000 m3 d 2015 Operating 3 80 000 bbl d 13 000 m3 d TBD Approved Debottleneck 45 000 bbl d 7 200 m3 d TBD ApprovedSuncor Energy Base Plant 130 000 bbl d 21 000 m3 d 1967 Depleted Debottleneck 4 000 bbl d 640 m3 d 2007 Operating Expansion 150 000 bbl d 24 000 m3 d 2011 OperatingMillenium 294 000 bbl d 46 700 m3 d 2001 Operating Debottleneck 23 000 bbl d 3 700 m3 d 2008 Operating Expansion 225 000 bbl d 35 800 m3 d 2030 AnnouncedFort Hills 1 165 000 bbl d 26 200 m3 d 2018 Operating Debottleneck 20 000 bbl d 3 200 m3 d TBD ApprovedVoyageur South 1 250 000 bbl d 40 000 m3 d TBD ApprovedSyncrude Mildred Lake 150 000 bbl d 24 000 m3 d 1978 OperatingAurora North 1 225 000 bbl d 35 800 m3 d 2001 Operating 2 116 300 bbl d 18 490 m3 d 2006 Operating 3 184 000 bbl d 29 300 m3 d 2023 ApprovedAurora South 1 100 000 bbl d 16 000 m3 d TBD Announced 2 10 000 bbl d 1 600 m3 d TBD AnnouncedSynenco Energy Northern Lights 1 160 000 bbl d 25 000 m3 d Cancelled 169 Total S A Joslyn North 1 100 000 bbl d 16 000 m3 d Cancelled 170 UTS Teck Cominco Equinox Lease 14 50 000 bbl d 7 900 m3 d TBD AnnouncedFrontier 1 100 000 bbl d 16 000 m3 d Cancelled 171 Court ordered sanctions editFor improper diversion of water in 2008 2009 Statoil Canada Ltd was ordered in 2012 to pay a fine of 5000 and to allocate 185 000 for a training project The verdict was handed down by the Provincial Court of Alberta Criminal Division 172 173 See also editEnvironmental impact of mining Canadian Centre for Energy Information History of the petroleum industry in Canada oil sands and heavy oil Mackenzie Valley Pipeline Utah Oil Sands Joint Venture Melville Island oil sands Project Oilsand Project Cauldron List of articles about Canadian oil sandsNotes editReferences edit IHS CERA May 18 2009 Oil Sands Move from the Fringe to Center of Energy Supply RigZone Archived from the original on 21 May 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 19 a b Andy Burrowes Rick Marsh Nehru Ramdin Curtis Evans 2007 Alberta s Energy Reserves 2006 and Supply Demand Outlook 2007 2016 PDF Report ST98 Alberta Energy and Utilities Board Archived from the original PDF on 2012 09 25 Retrieved 2008 04 12 other versions Archived 2013 05 28 at the Wayback Machine Turgeon Andrew Morse Elizabeth 19 October 2023 Petroleum National Geographic Education National Geographic Society Retrieved 6 February 2024 a b c d e f Bakx Kyle 12 October 2023 Canada could lead the world in oil production growth in 2024 CBC News Retrieved 6 February 2024 Trans Mountain mulling how to remove obstruction causing newest construction delay Canadian Press 1 February 2024 Retrieved 6 February 2024 via CBC News a b Ecocide must be listed alongside genocide as an international crime The Guardian 2021 06 22 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2023 06 21 a b Tar sands tearing the flesh from the Earth theecologist org 18 August 2009 Retrieved 2023 06 21 a b Indigenous groups say Big Oil s pollution threatens their existence in Canadian forest NBC News 2021 11 22 Retrieved 2023 06 21 a b Trudeau Is Betting 9 Billion on a Plan to Clean Up the World s Dirtiest Oil Bloomberg com 2023 06 05 Retrieved 2023 06 21 a b Weisbrod Katelyn 2021 11 21 Canada s Tar Sands Destruction So Vast and Deep It Challenges the Existence of Land and People Inside Climate News Retrieved 2023 06 21 a b The terrible toll of tar sands mining on Canada s Native people Mother Jones Retrieved 2023 06 21 Alberta s Oil Sands 2006 PDF Government of Alberta 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 2008 02 27 Retrieved 2008 02 17 Mackenzie Sir Alexander 1970 The Journals and Letters of Alexander Mackenzie Edited by W Kaye Lamb Cambridge Hakluyt Society p 129 ISBN 0 521 01034 9 Poveda Cesar A Lipsett Michael G 2014 01 02 An integrated approach for sustainability assessment the Wa Pa Su project sustainability rating system International Journal of Sustainable Development amp World Ecology 21 1 85 98 doi 10 1080 13504509 2013 876677 ISSN 1350 4509 Retrieved 2024 02 06 a b Hein Francis J 2000 Historical Overview of the Fort McMurray Area and Oil Sands Industry in Northeast Alberta PDF Earth Sciences Report 2000 05 Alberta Geological Survey Archived from the original PDF on 27 February 2008 Retrieved 2008 02 17 Oil Sands History Unlocking the Potential of the Oil Sands Syncrude 2006 Archived from the original on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2008 02 17 Cameron 1909 p 71 Gismondi amp Davidson 2012 p 71 Petroleum History Society Archives Newsletter June 2005 retrieved 2012 10 28 October Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists October 1976 p 23 US 3409082 B G Bray C F Knutson H F Coffer Process for Stimulating Petroliferous Subterranean Formations with Contained Nuclear Explosions published 5 November 1968 Process for stimulating petroliferous subterranean formations with contained nuclear explosions PDF Les Adler 29 October 2013 America s Tar Baby Petroleum History Society Archives Newsletter June 2005 PDF Retrieved 2016 07 21 Pratt Michael October 3 2015 Alberta s oilsands almost saw nuclear detonation to free up trapped bitumen as part of Operation Cauldron in the 1950s Calgary Sun Archived from the original on 2016 01 27 Retrieved 2016 07 24 McKenzie Brown Peter 22 January 2013 Six visionaries who built the modern oil sands The Petroleum History Society Canadian Association of Lifelong Learners and Calgary Alberta archived from the original on 2 May 2013 retrieved 29 January 2015 Fleeson Lucinda 27 April 1992 How A Foundation Reinvented Itself Philly com retrieved 29 January 2015 Pitts Gordon 25 August 2012 The man who saw gold in Alberta s oil sands The Globe and Mail Toronto Retrieved 27 August 2012 Sixty one years ago a lowly Calgary employee of U S multinational Sun Oil Co wrote a subversive letter to the company brass in Philadelphia The message spit in the eye of his local managers in Alberta I have long felt that our company should take a permit to explore for oil from the Tar Sands of Alberta 30 year old Ned Gilbert wrote in September 1951 in defiance of his immediate superiors who opposed the idea of going any further than their first tentative steps in the area Suncor has emerged as the elite player among Canadian controlled oil companies valued at almost 50 billion Sun Oil divested its stake in the company in the early 1990s Suncor s pre eminence stems directly from Great Canadian Oil Sands the first commercial oil sands project which was launched by Sun Oil in 1967 Suncor Petro Canada announce merger CBC News 2009 03 23 Retrieved 2009 12 08 Suncor Petro Canada complete merger bizjournals 2009 08 06 Retrieved 2009 08 11 Petro Canada Legal amp Privacy Petro Canada Retrieved 2016 07 22 Dusseault M B June 2001 Comparing Venezuelan and Canadian Heavy Oil and Tar Sands PDF Alberta Energy Canadian Institute of Mining Metallurgy amp Petroleum Archived from the original PDF on 2013 06 18 Retrieved 2014 04 21 Oil Sands Alberta Energy Alberta Government 2008 Archived from the original on 21 February 2008 Retrieved 2008 01 30 Continuing 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06 02 Financial Post Article Aboriginal implication in the project Fort Chip cancer rates higher than expected report CBC CBC Radio Canada 2009 02 06 Landry Frank 2010 09 19 More deformed fish being pulled from Lake Athabasca claims group Edmonton Sun Archived from the original on 2010 09 19 Chen Yiqun Cancer incidence in Fort Chipewyan Alberta 1995 2006 PDF Edmonton AB Alberta Cancer Board Division of Population Health and Information Surveillance permanent dead link Droitsch Danielle Simieritsch Terra 2010 Canadian Aboriginal Concerns with Oil Sands PDF Pembina Institute The Constitution Act 1982 Schedule B to the Canada Act 1982 UK 1982 c 11 Coates K 2016 First Nations Engagement in the Energy Sector in Western Canada Prepared for the Indian Resource Council Archived copy Archived 2016 10 25 at the Wayback Machine Suncor 2017 November 22 Fort McKay and Mikisew Cree First Nations complete purchase of 49 per cent interest in Suncor s East Tank Farm Development Suncor News Releases Nickel Rod Williams Nia 2018 03 02 Canada s First Nations seek bigger stakes profits from oil sector BNN Bloomberg BNN Retrieved 2022 12 31 Oil Sands Projects Oilsands Discovery Archived 2006 03 28 at the Wayback Machine Cost escalation leads Total to put Joslyn oil sands project on hold Edmonton Journal Archived from the original on 5 June 2014 Retrieved 14 June 2014 Wojciech Moskwa 2007 04 27 Statoil to buy North American Oil Sands for 2 bln Financial Post Archived from the original on 2008 06 02 Retrieved 2007 12 09 Canadian Natural Resources Oil Sands Mining amp Upgrading www cnrl com Retrieved 2021 03 24 Jaremko Deborah 2017 11 07 Canadian Natural sees significant value breathing new life into deferred Shell oilsands mine JWN French energy giant Total shelves the Joslyn oil sands mine indefinitely Oil Sands Magazine 2014 03 29 Retrieved 2021 03 24 CNRL files application to integrate Joslyn North into Horizon mine plan Oil Sands Magazine 2019 11 20 Retrieved 2021 03 24 Orland Kevin Tuttle Robert 2020 02 25 The era of the mega oilsands mine may be over after nail in the coffin from Teck cancellation Financial Post Retrieved 2021 03 24 Statoil slapp billig unna i oljesand saken i Canada Dagbladet in Norwegian 31 October 2011 Retrieved 31 December 2022 Final clarification in water issue for Statoil Canada Ltd Retrieved 1 November 2011 Sources edit Cameron Agnes Deans 1909 The New North Being Some Account of a Woman s Journey through Canada to the Arctic New York Appleton Gismondi Mike Davidson Debra J September 2012 Imagining the Tar Sands 1880 1967 and Beyond PDF Imaginations Edmonton Alberta Campus Saint Jean University of Alberta pp 68 102 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 10 02 Further reading editKunzig Robert March 2009 The Canadian Oil Boom Scraping Bottom National Geographic 215 3 38 59 Archived from the original on February 19 2009 Retrieved 29 May 2009 Black Bonanza by Alastair Sweeny Wiley Canada 2010 ISBN 0 470 16138 8Video material editDirty Oil Documentary by Leslie Iwerks 2009 H2Oil Documentary by Shannon Walsh 2009 Petropolis Aerial Perspectives on the Alberta Tar Sands Documentary by Peter Mettler 2009 Tar Sands Canada for Sale Documentary by Tom Radford 2008 People amp Power Alberta s Oil Sands Al Jazeera English 2008 Riz Khan Canada s dirty oil Al Jazeera English 2009 60 Minutes The Alberta Oil Sands CBS 22 January 2006 To the Last Drop Documentary by Tom Radford about the impact on local communities broadcast on Al Jazeera English s program Witness 2011 The Alberta Oil Sands Govt of Alberta Documentary Film 2009External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Athabasca oil sands Pembina Institute Oil Sands Analysis Alberta s Oil Sands Key Issues and Impacts Mud Sweat and Tears Guardian Newspaper 2007 Hugh McCullum Fuelling Fortress America A Report on the Athabasca Tar Sands and U S Demands for Canada s Energy The Parkland Institute Oil Sands History Syncrude Canada Oil Sands Discovery Centre Fort McMurray Tourism Alberta s Oil Sands Alberta Department of Energy What are oil sands and heavy oil Canadian Centre for Energy Information in French Du sable dans l engrenage TV document by Guy Gendron and Jean Luc Paquette describing the Athabasca oil sands issues Athabasca Oil Sands at NASA Earth Observatory Includes a series of satellite photos from 1984 to 2011 showing how the project has developed Alberta Government Oil Sands Information Portal Interactive Map and Data Library Report one Athabasca Oil Sands at Dartmouth College Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Athabasca oil sands amp oldid 1204349077, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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