Oil Sand Kicks into High Gear

1998 ◽  
Vol 120 (12) ◽  
pp. 58-63 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Valenti

This article discusses the cutting-edge technologies and the rising value of light crude oils that have ushered in an era of new investment in Alberta’s oil sand extraction, with the major players embarking on ambitious programs that will more than double production in the next century. More recently, new extraction techniques and a rise in the price of light crude oils have made it more economical to extract the bitumen from sand and upgrade it into a light crude oil. Syncrude has undertaken a $6 billion (Canadian) project, Syncrude 21, to improve environmental performance and energy efficiency, while increasing product yield and quality. Syncrude expects to double its annual production to 155 million barrels by 2007, in part by opening its third mine at Mildred Lake. Suncor Energy also intends to increase its future production in its Project Millennium. The $2.2 billion (Canadian) endeavor is expected to boost oil sand production to 210,000 barrels per day by 2002, increasing current production by nearly two and a half times.

2020 ◽  
Vol 192 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dale H. Vitt ◽  
Melissa House ◽  
Samantha Kitchen ◽  
R. Kelman Wieder

AbstractBogs are nutrient poor, acidic ecosystems that receive their water and nutrients entirely from precipitation (= ombrogenous) and as a result are sensitive to nutrient loading from atmospheric sources. Bogs occur frequently on the northern Alberta landscape, estimated to cover 6% of the Athabasca Oil Sands Area. As a result of oil sand extraction and processing, emissions of nitrogen (N) and sulfur (S) to the atmosphere have led to increasing N and S deposition that have the potential to alter the structure and function of these traditionally nutrient-poor ecosystems. At present, no detailed protocol is available for monitoring potential change of these sensitive ecosystems. We propose a user-friendly protocol that will monitor potential plant and lichen responses to future environmental inputs of nutrients and provide a structured means for collecting annual data. The protocol centers on measurement of five key plant/lichen attributes, including changes in (1) plant abundances, (2) dominant shrub annual growth and primary production, (3) lichen health estimated through chlorophyll/phaeophytin concentrations, (4) Sphagnum annual growth and production, and (5) annual growth of the dominant tree species (Picea mariana). We placed five permanent plots in each of six bogs located at different distances from the center of oil sand extraction and sampled these for 2 years (2018 and 2019). We compared line intercept with point intercept plant assessments using NMDS ordination, concluding that both methods provide comparable data. These data indicated that each of our six bog sites differ in key species abundances. Structural differences were apparent for the six sites between years. These differences were mostly driven by changes in Vaccinium oxycoccos, not the dominant shrubs. We developed allometric growth equations for the dominant two shrubs (Rhododendron groenlandicum and Chamaedaphne calyculata). Equations developed for each of the six sites produced growth values that were not different from one another nor from one developed using data from all sites. Annual growth of R. groenlandicum differed between sites, but not years, whereas growth of C. calyculata differed between the 2 years with more growth in 2018 compared with 2019. In comparison, Sphagnum plant density and stem bulk density both had strong site differences, with stem mass density higher in 2019. When combined, annual production of S. fuscum was greater in 2019 at three sites and not different at three of the sites. Chlorophyll and phaeophytin concentrations from the epiphytic lichen Evernia mesomorpha also differed between sites and years. This protocol for field assessments of five key plant/lichen response variables indicated that both site and year are factors that must be accounted for in future assessments. A portion of the site variation was related to patterns of N and S deposition.


2015 ◽  
Vol 737 ◽  
pp. 128-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
De Min He ◽  
Fan Nie ◽  
Jun Guan ◽  
Hao Quan Hu ◽  
Qiu Min Zhang

Tars generated by oil sand pyrolysis at different temperature in a fixed bed reactor were studied through TLC-FID and GC-MS. Compared to the raw oil sand extracts, pyrolysis could reduce the asphaltenes of oil which is benefit for storage, transport and further utilization. The temperature of pyrolysis affects not only product yield but also its composition. Analyzed together by TLC-FID and GC-MS, groups of tars at different temperature were identified. It was found higher temperature would strengthen the condensation reactions revealing increasing of cycloalkanes, indenes and PAHs increased with raising temperature. There was also a great amount of benzothiophenes which may generated by the decomposition of oil sand bitumen or aromatization of ring sulfides. That mainly contributed to the high content of resin in the tars.


2019 ◽  
Vol 141 ◽  
pp. 104618 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.K. Singh ◽  
S. Mondal ◽  
Biswajit Ruj ◽  
A.K. Sadhukhan ◽  
P. Gupta

Geophysics ◽  
1944 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 287-298 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. D. Wyckoff

We speak of the war emergency and what it has done to our domestic oil reserves. I would not attempt to minimize the effects of the war demand upon our current production facilities nor imply that the extra demand, the purely military consumption, is a minor quantity. But considered in the light of the total quantity of oil that has been taken from the ground in the past and that which is to be added to the grand total by future production, it does not loom out of all proportion as some current discussion would imply. Rather it appears as the warning that has jarred us out of our normal complacency and into an admission that, after all, our domestic oil is limited, that it is being depleted at an alarming pace, and that new reserves are not forthcoming in the accustomed manner at a rate sufficient to replenish the reservoir.


2002 ◽  
Vol 39 (5) ◽  
pp. 1088-1102 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans H Vaziri ◽  
Elise M Lemoine ◽  
Y Xiao

Centrifuge physical model tests were performed to study the mode of failure during sand production and its concomitant impact on the productivity index. The tests simulated seepage-induced failure around a multiperforated vertical well. Results indicate that in the presence of a competent cap rock (1) sand production results in the formation of a truncated cone-shaped enlarged cavity; (2) surface subsidence of the reservoir due to loss of sand mass may result in the opening of flow channels under the cap rock; (3) for a given applied head difference, sand production ceases once the enlarged cavity reduces the pressure gradient to subcritical levels; (4) the flow becomes diverted towards the upper perforations where the cavity radius is largest; and (5) the flow rate increase varies between 5 and 10 times depending on whether the mode and volume of sanding is sufficient to result in the formation of flow channels. The study performed shows that (1) the location of perforations affects the mode and magnitude of sand production; and (2) long-term productivity can be improved through managed sand production. The presence of a competent cap rock is the key to achieving substantial increases (an order of magnitude) in productivity via sanding.Key words: centrifuge test, sand production, well-bore completion, subsidence, oil sand, flow improvement.


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