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Oil sands sector banking on COSIA research to reduce steam

Don Horne   

Process West News pw news

Reducing the steam required to work the oil sands patch is crucial to meeting greenhouse gas emissions standards – and that research has now entered its sixth year.

Dan Wicklum, CEO of Canada’s Oil Sands Innovation Alliance (COSIA), says generating steam to separate heavy sticky bitumen from the northern Alberta sands in which it’s trapped is responsible for about 56 million tonnes per year of the total of 71 million tonnes of GHGs emitted from the oil sands – which is about 80 per cent of GHG emissions.

According to Canadian Press, Wicklum says COSIA members hope to cut GHG intensity by 10 to 30 per cent over the next five years, while also sharing technologies to lessen the industry’s impacts on land and water and deal with tailings ponds.

Canada generates about 1.8 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions and the oil sands contribute about 9.3 per cent of that total — the Alberta government has set a hard cap of 100 million tonnes per year, which could limit growth in the oil sands unless GHG emissions can be reduced.

Stephen Kaufman, general manager for external innovation and regional development for Suncor Energy Inc., told Canadian Press that some “game-changing” innovations like the less-GHG-intensive extraction technology in use at its newly opened Fort Hills oil sands mine are only practical to use in a new project.

But the company is actively pursuing new technologies including radiofrequency electromagnetic heating and the use of solvents with steam that offer “incremental” environmental benefits as it pursues a goal of reducing GHG emissions per barrel by 30 per cent by 2030.

“Steam for us is a huge operating cost,” he told Canadian Press. “It’s often said that an in situ (oil sands) project is really a water treatment and steam generation plant more than an oil-producing plant, in terms of the size of the kit that you need and the ongoing cost to buy natural gas.”

(Canadian Press)


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