10. Mature Fine Tailings Management in Oil Sands Mining

Author(s):  
Christina Lynch

Oil sands mining operations produce mature fine tailings (MFT), composed mainly of clay particles suspended in water, that requires decades to consolidate, currently taking up a great deal of storage space in tailings containment facilities. This in turn decreases recycling of process affected water and creates the need to use more land for tailings storage. As mandated by the Alberta Energy Regulator’s Directive 074, oil sands producers must provide tailing management plans to remove and consolidate 50% of the MFT produced into trafficable deposits annually as of 2013. Oil sands producers have failed to meet the Directive 074 goal, as current technology does not provide economical and time efficient methods of consolidating MFT. Current technologies including consolidated tailings, centrifugation, freeze/thaw and thickened tailings were reviewed and compared to recently proposed technologies not currently used in the oil sands. The most effective technology or combination thereof for the treatment and consolidation of MFT is determined with the main focus being cost effectiveness and time efficiency.

2010 ◽  
Vol 24 (16) ◽  
pp. 2400-2406 ◽  
Author(s):  
John V. Headley ◽  
Sarah A. Armstrong ◽  
Kerry M. Peru ◽  
Randy J. Mikula ◽  
James J. Germida ◽  
...  

2001 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 197-208 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert E. A. Madill ◽  
Monika T. Orzechowski ◽  
Guosheng Chen ◽  
Brian G. Brownlee ◽  
Nigel J. Bunce

2017 ◽  
Vol 111 ◽  
pp. 90-99 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dominic K. Thompson ◽  
Fernanda L. Motta ◽  
João B.P. Soares

2010 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. 18507-18560 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. J. Simpson ◽  
N. J. Blake ◽  
B. Barletta ◽  
G. S. Diskin ◽  
H. E. Fuelberg ◽  
...  

Abstract. Oil sands comprise 30% of the world's oil reserves and the crude oil reserves in Canada's oil sands deposits are second only to Saudi Arabia. The extraction and processing of oil sands is much more challenging than for light sweet crude oils because of the high viscosity of the bitumen contained within the oil sands and because the bitumen is mixed with sand and contains chemical impurities such as sulphur. Despite these challenges, the importance of oil sands is increasing in the energy market. To our best knowledge this is the first peer-reviewed study to characterize volatile organic compounds (VOCs) emitted from Alberta's oil sands mining sites. We present high-precision gas chromatography measurements of 76 speciated C2–C10 VOCs (alkanes, alkenes, alkynes, cycloalkanes, aromatics, monoterpenes, oxygenates, halocarbons, and sulphur compounds) in 17 boundary layer air samples collected over surface mining operations in northeast Alberta on 10 July 2008, using the NASA DC-8 airborne laboratory as a research platform. In addition to the VOCs, we present simultaneous measurements of CO2, CH4, CO, NO, NO2, NOy, O3 and SO2, which were measured in situ aboard the DC-8. Methane, CO, CO2, NO, NO2, NOy, SO2 and 53 VOCs (e.g., halocarbons, sulphur species, NMHCs) showed clear statistical enhancements (up to 1.1–397×) over the oil sands compared to local background values and, with the exception of CO, were higher over the oil sands than at any other time during the flight. Twenty halocarbons (e.g., CFCs, HFCs, halons, brominated species) either were not enhanced or were minimally enhanced (< 10%) over the oil sands. Ozone levels remained low because of titration by NO, and three VOCs (propyne, furan, MTBE) remained below their 3 pptv detection limit throughout the flight. Based on their mutual correlations, the compounds emitted by the oil sands industry fell into two groups: (1) evaporative emissions from the oil sands and its products and/or from the diluent used to lower the viscosity of the extracted bitumen (i.e., C4–C9 alkanes, C5–C6 cycloalkanes, C6–C8 aromatics), together with CO; and (2) emissions associated with the mining effort (i.e., CO2, CO, CH4, NO, NO2, NOy, SO2, C2–C4 alkanes, C2–C4 alkenes, C9 aromatics, short-lived solvents such as C2Cl4 and C2HCl3, and longer-lived species such as HCFC-22 and HCFC-142b). Prominent in the second group, SO2 and NO were remarkably enhanced over the oil sands, with maximum enhancements of 38.7 and 5.0 ppbv, or 383 and 319× the local background, respectively. The SO2 enhancements are comparable to maximum values measured in heavily polluted megacities such as Mexico City and are attributed to coke combustion. By contrast, relatively poor correlations between CH4 ethane and propane suggest low natural gas leakage despite its heavy use at the surface mining sites. In addition to the emission of many trace gases, the natural drawdown of OCS by vegetation was absent above the surface mining operations, presumably because of the widespread land disturbance. Unexpectedly, the mixing ratios of α- and β-pinene were much higher over the oil sands (up to 217 and 610 pptv, respectively) than over vegetation in the background boundary layer (20±7 and 84±24 pptv, respectively), and the pinenes correlated well with several industrial tracers that were elevated in the oil sands plumes. Because so few independent measurements from the oil sands mining industry exist, this study provides an important initial characterization of trace gas emissions from oil sands surface mining operations.


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