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Oil Sands Environmental Management Bibliography

The Cumulative Environmental Management Association (CEMA)partnered with the Oil Sands Research and Information Network (OSRIN) to create the new Oil Sands Environmental Management Bibliography, which includes documents relevant to the environmental management of oil sands development in Alberta. The majority of the documents focus on the mineable oil sands in the Athabasca deposit, though some documents relate to in-situ developments. This bibliography was last updated in November 2014.

Energy and water exchange from a saline-sodic overburden restoration cover Fort McMurray, Alberta

Authors Carey, S. K.
Year of Publication: 2006

Abstract:
The Canadian oil sand mining industry takes responsibility for restoring mining areas to an equivalent level that existed before mining occurred. During this process, the surface-vegetation-atmosphere continuum is dramatically altered, creating few similarities to the boreal forest that existed prior to mining. Using the eddy covariance method, a study of the integrated salt and water balance of a saline-sodic overburden pile at Syncrude Canada Ltd.'s Mildred Lake mine north of Fort McMurray, Alberta was undertaken in order to measure the surface energy balance for three summers (2003 - 2005) with different climatic and phenological conditions. The objective of this study was to document how evapotranspiration and energy partitioning varied inter-annually during the growing season atop the restoration cover and to relate the portioning of energy at the surface to environmental and physiological variables. The paper described the site and measurement specifics and also presented the results and discussion. Results were organized under the following topics: climate; soil moisture and suction; leaf area index and vegetation; surface energy balance; evapotranspiration; and controls on evapotranspiration. It was concluded that results from this study have important implications for recovery strategies, as the availability water for plant growth, the movement and migration of salts and percolating water for deep drainage all depend on accurate quantification of evapotranspiration. 9 refs., 1 tab

Energy the exchange rate and the economy: Macroeconomic benefits of Canada's oil sands production

Year of Publication: 2006

Abstract:
This paper describes potential benefits from Canada’s expanding oil sands production, higher energy exports, and further improvements in the terms of trade. Contrary to the previous Canadian exchange rate literature, this paper finds that both energy and nonenergy commodity prices have an influence on the Canadian dollar, and some upward pressure on the exchange rate would therefore be expected. Model results suggest, however, that the impact on other tradable goods exports is limited.

Energy: Consider the global impacts of oil pipelines

Year of Publication: 2014

Abstract:
The debate over the development of oil sands in Alberta, Canada, is inflaming tensions in and between Canada and the United States. In April, US President Barack Obama deferred a decision on the fate of the proposed Keystone XL oil pipeline, despite escalating pressure to approve it from Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper. The contentious pipeline would transport 830,000 barrels per day of partially refined bitumen from Alberta’s oil sands, through the US Midwest, to Gulf Coast refineries. Harper is also facing a controversial domestic battle over his approval on 17 June of the Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline, to connect Alberta with a port on British Columbia’s remote Pacific coast. But drama over the pipelines obscures a larger problem — a broken policy process. Both Canada and the United States treat oil-sands production, transportation, climate and environmental policies as separate issues, assessing each new proposal in isolation. A more coherent approach, one that evaluates all oil-sands projects in the context of broader, integrated energy and climate strategies, is sorely needed. Although Keystone XL and Northern Gateway are among the first major North American projects to highlight flaws in oil-sands policies, more than a dozen other projects are on the drawing board. Meanwhile, the US government is considering its first oil-sands leases on federal lands, as bitumen mining expands on state land in Utah’s Uinta Basin. As scientists spanning diverse disciplines, we urge North American leaders to take a step back: no new oil-sands projects should move forward unless developments are consistent with national and international commitments to reducing carbon pollution. Anything less demonstrates flawed policies and failed leadership. With such high stakes, our nations and the world cannot afford a series of ad hoc, fragmented decisions.

Engineering and economics of enhanced oil recovery in the Canadian oil sands

Year of Publication: 2014

Abstract:
Canada and Venezuela contain massive unconventional oil deposits accounting for over two thirds of newly discovered proven oil reserves since 2002. Canada, primarily in northern Alberta province, has between 1.75 and 1.84 trillion barrels of hydrocarbon resources that as of 2013 are obtained approximately equally through surface extraction or enhanced oil recovery (EOR) (World Energy Council, 2010). Due to their depth and viscosity, thermal based EOR will increasingly be responsible for producing the vast quantities of bitumen residing in Canada’s Athabasca, Cold Lake, and Peace River formations. Although the internationally accepted 174-180 billion barrels recoverable ranks Canada third globally in oil reserves, it represents only a 9-10% average recovery factor of its very high viscosity deposits (World Energy Council, 2010). As thermal techniques are refined and improved, in conjunction with methods under development and integrating elements of existing but currently separate processes, engineers and geoscientists aim to improve recovery rates and add tens of billions of barrels of oil to Canada’s reserves (Cenovus Energy, 2013). The Government of Canada estimates 315 billion barrels recoverable with the right combination of technological improvements and sustained high oil prices (Government of Canada, 2013). Much uncertainty and skepticism surrounds how this 75% increase is to be accomplished. This document entails a thorough analysis of standard and advanced EOR techniques and their potential incremental impact in Canada’s bitumen deposits. Due to the extraordinary volume of hydrocarbon resources in Canada, a small percentage growth in ultimate recovery satisfies years of increased petroleum demand from the developing world, affects the geopolitics within North America and between it and the rest of the world, and provides material benefits to project economics. This paper details the enhanced oil recovery methods used in the oil sands deposits while exploring new developments and their potential technical and economic effect. CMG Stars reservoir simulation is leveraged to test both the feasible recoveries of and validate the physics behind select advanced techniques. These technological and operational improvements are aggregated and an assessment produced on Canada’s total recoverable petroleum reserves. Canada has, by far, the largest bitumen recovery operation in the world (World Energy Council, 2010). Due to its resource base and political environment, the nation is likely to continue as the focus point for new developments in thermal EOR. Reservoir characteristics and project analysis are thus framed using Canada and its reserves.

Engineering challenges in the design of Alberta's oil sands projects

Authors Bedair, O.
Year of Publication: 2013

Abstract:
Oil sand is found at locations around the globe, including Canada, the United States, Venezuela, and Russia. The Athabasca deposit in the Canadian province of Alberta is by far the largest and most developed site. Oil sand recovery procedures use advanced technologies developed over the past 40 years. The continuous improvements in oil sand recovery procedures have generated engineering and environmental challenges that are rarely encountered in other conventional oil and gas or petrochemical projects. The current economic climate and oil prices have boosted oil sand technology. As a result, several large-scale projects were launched within the last few years, to increase oil sand production in Alberta. The paper provides an overview of some of the engineering challenges encountered in such projects. A brief introduction is presented for the common procedures used to recover oil sand in Alberta. The author would like to share with the readers the difficulties and solutions used to resolve these challenges that are not addressed by North American codes or European codes of practice.

Enhanced biodegradation of a model naphthenic acid compound

Year of Publication: 2007

Abstract:
Naphthenic acids are a complex mixture of organic acid compounds which naturally occur in crude oil. The naphthenic acids are corrosive to equipment during the extraction process from oil sands. They become concentrated in tailings pond water that is retained at the oil sands mining sites in northeastern Alberta. Environmental regulations require tailings water to be retained in large ponds to prevent release into the environment due to concerns about toxicity. A major source of toxicity in tailings pond water has been linked to naphthenic acids. While research to date indicates that natural biodegradations processes do decrease the acute toxicity of naphthenic acid compounds, the kinetics of the degradation and their rates are not clearly understood. Also, as a result of increases in capacity of the oil sand processing plants, improved and more timely alternatives for bioremediation of naphthenic acids are required. In this study, a model naphthenic acid compound (trans isomer of 4-methyl-1-cyclohexane carboxylic acid) and a microbial culture, developed in our laboratory, have been used to evaluate the kinetics of biodegradation in batch and continuous bioreactors. The effects of naphthenic acid concentration on the kinetics of microbial growth are presented. A comparison of the effects of two bioreactor configurations is demonstrated.

Enhanced oil recovery program (EORP) guidelines

Authors
Year of Publication: 2014

Abstract:
These guidelines are issued to explain the administration of the Enhanced Oil Recovery Program under the Enhanced Oil Recovery Royalty Regulation (AR156/2014) ("the Regulation") and to assist operators in completing the application process. This document reflects policies and procedures effective January 1, 2014, unless otherwise noted.

Enhanced revegetation and reclamation of oil sand disturbed land using mycorrhizae

Year of Publication: 2012

Abstract:
This study examined the potential of using conifer seedlings Picea glauca and Pinus banksiana inoculated with ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi to improve revegetation success and plant establishment in reclaimed oil sands mining sites. Mycorrhizal inoculum potential of the reclamation soils was low with the maximum inoculum potential of 23% and 29%for ECM and arbuscular mycorrhizae, respectively. The response of seedlings in the field to ECM inoculation varied between plant species and measured parameters. A significant effect of ECM inoculation on height was observed in P. banksiana but not in P. glauca. The average survival rate for P. glauca seedlings inoculated with different species of ECM varied between 36% and 56%, whereas the control (uninoculated) seedlings had minimum and maximum survival rates of 22 and 41% respectively. Generally, it was construed that the re-introduction of mycorrhizal fungi during reclamation process is an important approach that should be further exploited.

Enthalpy of adsorption and isotherms for adsorption of naphthenic acid onto clays

Year of Publication: 1997

Abstract:
The enthalpies of adsorption and the isotherms for adsorption of naphthenic acid onto Na-montmorillonite, Na-kaolinite, and Na-illite were studied by means of calorimetry and the static method at 298.15 K. The results show that the enthalpies of adsorption and saturated adsorption amounts of naphthenic acid on different clays change in the order Na-montmorillonite > Na-illite > Na-kaolinite. The interaction between naphthenic acid and clays is discussed.

Environment: Northern Region - RSDS for the Athabasca Oil Sands Area - Progress Report

Authors
Year of Publication: 2001

Abstract:
Developed in partnership with regional stakeholders, the strategy provides a framework and process for addressing the area's growing number of environmental issues, and for ensuring development is environmentally sustainable.

Environmental Assessment - Athabasca Oil Corporation Hangingstone Expansion Project

Year of Publication: 2002

Abstract:
Environmental assessment registry documents pertaining to the propoasl for the Athabasca Oil Corporation Hangingstone Expansion Project. The proposal is to expand Hangingstone to increase the SAGD production capacity to 13,038 m3/d (82,000 bpd). The location of the project is approximately 20 km southeast of Fort McMurray within the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo. The EIA was deemed complete in 2011. For more information on the environmental assessment process visit ea.alberta.ca.

Environmental Assessment - Birch Mountain Resources Ltd. Hammerstone Project - EIA Report and application for approval

Year of Publication: 2006

Abstract:
Environmental assessment registry documents pertaining to the proposed Syncrude Canada Ltd. South West Sand Storage Conversion Project. The proposal involves the modification of the approved design of the existing facility to permit interim storage of mature fine tailings. The location is approximately 40 km north of Fort McMurray in the Municipality of Wood Buffalo. The EIA was deemed complete in 2009. For more information on the environmental assessment process visit ea.alberta.ca.

Environmental Assessment - BlackPearl Resources Inc. Blackrod Commercial SAGD Project

Authors
Year of Publication: 2011

Abstract:
Environmental assessment registry documents pertaining to the proposed BlackPearl Resources Inc. Blackrod Commercial SAGD Project. The proposal is for production of 80,000 barrels per day (bbls/d) of crude bitumen using steam assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) technology. The location is within Lac La Biche County, approximately 50 kilometers northwest of the Hamlet of Wandering River. The EIA was deemed complete in 2014. For more information on the environmental assessment process visit ea.alberta.ca.

Environmental Assessment - BlackPearl Resources Inc. Blackrod Commercial SAGD Project - EIA Report and application for approval

Authors Inc., B. P. R.
Year of Publication: 2012

Abstract:
Environmental Impact Assessment and associated applications pertaining to the proposed BlackPearl Resources Inc. Blackrod Commercial SAGD Project. The proposal is for production of 80,000 barrels per day (bbls/d) of crude bitumen using steam assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) technology. The location is within Lac La Biche County, approximately 50 kilometers northwest of the Hamlet of Wandering River. The EIA was deemed complete in 2014. For more information on the environmental assessment process visit ea.alberta.ca.

Environmental assessment - Canadian Natural Resources Limited Grouse In Situ Oil Sands Project

Authors
Year of Publication: 2011

Abstract:
Environmental assessment registry documents pertaining to the proposed Canadian Natural Resources Limited Grouse In Situ Oil Sands Project. The proposal includes the use of steam assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) technology for extraction of bitumen, a bitumen processing facility with a capacity of 50,000 barrels per day (7,949 m3/d) and a production life of approximately 20 years. The location is approximately 75 kilometres northeast of Lac La Biche, Alberta in Lac La Biche County. The EIA was deemed complete in 2015. For more information on the environmental assessment process visit ea.alberta.ca.

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