SPE Economics & Management
Volume 5,
Number 1,
January 2013,
pp. 17-27
Summary
Canada's oil-sands industry is often perceived as having poor environmental
performance. One focus area is the use of water for oil-sands production.
Bitumen from oil sands is produced by surface mining or by in-situ thermal
extraction. Both technologies are water-based. The oil-sands deposits are
situated in northern Alberta, where the river basins have 87% of the provincial
average annual water supply but only have 13% of the demand. Oil-sands
operators have made significant progress in improving freshwater use
productivity (intensity), and water use represents a small percentage of
natural supply. For in-situ production, the 2010 freshwater use productivity
for the industry was 0.43 units of freshwater per unit of bitumen produced. As
an example of continuous improvement, the Imperial Oil Cold Lake in-situ
oil-sands operation has improved freshwater use productivity by 90% since 1985
through produced-water recycling and the use of deep saline groundwater. The
in-situ oil-sands industry will remain a relatively small water user into the
future (2030) using an estimated 0.04 to 0.09% of available supply from the
three river basins where it is situated. For oil-sands mining, most of the
source water comes from the Athabasca River. The average water-use productivity
for oil-sands production between 2006 and 2011 was 2.5 units of Athabasca River
water per unit of bitumen and synthetic crude oil produced (3.6 for all
freshwater sources). In 2011, the oil-sands mining industry used 0.54% of the
annual Athabasca River flow and 3% of the lowest 2011-2012 winter weekly flow.
For growth forecasts to 2030, it is estimated that the oil-sands mining
industry will require 1.4% of the average annual flow of the Athabasca River.
Overall, by 2030, it is projected that the entire oil-sands industry will use
less than 0.4% of Alberta's average annual water supply to produce 80% of
Canada's total oil production.
© 2013. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
24 August 2012
- Meeting paper published:
11 September 2012
- Revised manuscript received:
3 December 2012
- Manuscript approved:
28 December 2012
- Published online:
22 January 2013
- Version of record:
1 February 2013