Oil sands mining production

Environmental impacts of oil sands. The environmental impact of the oil sands is an issue that has been extremely divisive. As with the extraction and use of any fossil fuel, negative environmental effects arise as a result of the extraction, upgrading, and processing of bitumen from the oil sands. Extracting bitumen from tar sands—and refining it into products like gasoline—is significantly costlier and more difficult than extracting and refining liquid oil. Common extraction methods include surface mining—where the extraction site is excavated—and “in-situ” mining, where steam is used to liquefy bitumen deep underground. The largest deposits of tar sands are found in Alberta, Canada.

28 Oct 2014 It was unlike any oil production that had been done–using massive mining and manufacturing machinery rather than the drilling rigs that  13 Jul 2017 How oil sands achieved production cost improvements in a low price production costs, both in terms of open-pit mining and thermal in situ  17 May 2016 Suncor has closed down production of 300,000 barrels of oil a day at two mines and a pair of oil-sands well sites, and its Syncrude unit has shut  18 Dec 2013 Common extraction methods include surface mining—where the While tar sands have been in production since the late 1960s, and currently  17 Feb 2016 The cost to produce oil in the oil sands is made up of the upfront per barrel of bitumen, and for mines with upgraders was around US$32 per  1 mining/in-situ capacity = barrels of bitumen per calendar day • upgrader capacity = barrels of synthetic crude oil per calendar day 2 PRE-FID = AWAITING FINAL INVESTMENT DECISION (FID) 3 C&SU = CURRENTLY IN COMMISSIONING & START-UP PHASE

22 May 2018 Oil sands mining operations also produce large volumes of waste in the form of mine tailings. Leakage from oil sand tailings ponds, which.

A large part of oil sands mining operations involves clearing trees and brush from a site and removing the overburden— topsoil, muskeg, sand, clay and gravel – that sits atop the oil sands deposit. Approximately 2.5 tons of oil sands are needed to produce one barrel of oil (roughly ⅛ of a ton). Suncor’s oil sands mining projects, located in the Athabasca region, are projected to produce a reliable, long-term energy supply while leveraging technology to minimize environmental and social impacts of resource development. SAGD is a continuous process, allowing for much higher production rates than CSS and improved bitumen recovery, near 60% in most cases. This technological breakthrough has enabled a major increase in bitumen production from the oil sands, with minimal land disturbance. Suncor Energy has been mining the oil sands since the late 1960s. Mining was initially the only path to development of this vast reserve, ranked one of the largest oil deposits in the world. Oil sands mines are massive in size and very expensive to build, making it accessible to only the largest of energy companies with deep pockets. A pond collects soil and water residue from oil-sands mining near Fort McMurray, Alberta. The oil sands account for 60 percent of Canada’s oil output. The oil sands account for 60 percent of

produce oil from the oil sands – surface mining and in-situ – or producing in place. Today, a majority of the oil derived from oil sands is obtained via surface.

25 Feb 2020 TOTAL BITUMEN PRODUCTION FROM MINING & IN-SITU. thousand bbl/day • data by CAPP & AER. MINED PROD… IN-SITU PRO… Virtually all oil sands mines had year-over-year production gains in 2017, with the exception of Syncrude Canada's (Syncrude's) Aurora oil sands mine, which  In 2010, surface mines produced 356.99 million barrels of crude oil, while in situ production (the hot water wells) yielded 189.41 million barrels of oil. Since then,  Suncor's vision is to more than double oil sands production to over half a Suncor Energy's Steepbank and Millennium mines produce 263,000bpd and its 

This would mean that Canadian oil sands production would grow from to produce and refine bitumen from the Athabasca oil sands. Suncor, Primarily Mining, Suncor Energy, Canada, 239,100, 500,000.

SAGD is a continuous process, allowing for much higher production rates than CSS and improved bitumen recovery, near 60% in most cases. This technological breakthrough has enabled a major increase in bitumen production from the oil sands, with minimal land disturbance. Suncor Energy has been mining the oil sands since the late 1960s. Mining was initially the only path to development of this vast reserve, ranked one of the largest oil deposits in the world. Oil sands mines are massive in size and very expensive to build, making it accessible to only the largest of energy companies with deep pockets. A pond collects soil and water residue from oil-sands mining near Fort McMurray, Alberta. The oil sands account for 60 percent of Canada’s oil output. The oil sands account for 60 percent of The Company owns and operates substantial world class oil sands mining assets. The Horizon Oil Sands and the Athabasca Oil Sands Project (AOSP) are approximately located 70 km north of Fort McMurray, Alberta in the Athabasca region. These assets offer decades of no decline synthetic crude oil (SCO) production with no reserve risk. Canadian Natural holds extensive leases that are estimated at 7 billion barrels of proved and probable SCO reserves. The two mine sites are adjacent to one another

Mining extraction currently accounts for 60% 6 of the 1.4 million barrels of bitumen produced each day. 7 In situ development represents the most significant growth potential for the oil sands industry and will contribute a growing proportion of future oil sands production.

There are two different methods of producing oil from oil sands: open-pit mining and in situ. Bitumen that is close to the surface (less than 75 metres) is mined. Approximately 20% of oil sands are recoverable through open-pit mining. Bitumen is extremely thick and too heavy to flow or be pumped, Imperial Oil Ltd. last year delayed its C $2.6 billion Aspen oil-sands project, which had been approved and was scheduled to start production in 2022, because of Alberta’s production limits. Alberta's oil sands contain on average about 10% bitumen, 5% water and 85% solids. Most of the solids are coarse silica sand. Oil sands also contain fine solids and clays, typically in the range of 10-30% by weight. Bitumen is a heavy complex hydrocarbon, contained within the oil sands deposit. Reserves and production. Alberta's oil sands has the third largest oil reserves in the world, after Venezuela and Saudi Arabia. Alberta's oil sands’ proven reserves equal about 165.4 billion barrels (bbl). Crude bitumen production (mined and in situ) totalled about 2.8 million barrels per day (bbl/d) in 2017. A large part of oil sands mining operations involves clearing trees and brush from a site and removing the overburden— topsoil, muskeg, sand, clay and gravel – that sits atop the oil sands deposit. Approximately 2.5 tons of oil sands are needed to produce one barrel of oil (roughly ⅛ of a ton). Suncor’s oil sands mining projects, located in the Athabasca region, are projected to produce a reliable, long-term energy supply while leveraging technology to minimize environmental and social impacts of resource development.

Suncor’s oil sands mining projects, located in the Athabasca region, are projected to produce a reliable, long-term energy supply while leveraging technology to minimize environmental and social impacts of resource development. SAGD is a continuous process, allowing for much higher production rates than CSS and improved bitumen recovery, near 60% in most cases. This technological breakthrough has enabled a major increase in bitumen production from the oil sands, with minimal land disturbance. Suncor Energy has been mining the oil sands since the late 1960s. Mining was initially the only path to development of this vast reserve, ranked one of the largest oil deposits in the world. Oil sands mines are massive in size and very expensive to build, making it accessible to only the largest of energy companies with deep pockets.