Close Down the Tar Sands Operations

Close Down the Tar Sands Operations

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World's People
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Tar Sands Facts:

The technical term for the oil extracted from tar sands is crude bitumen, which is defined as a viscous (thick), heavy oil that will not flow to a well in its natural state.

Crude bitumen is extracted from the mined tar sands through a process that mixes the tar sands with hot water to separate the bitumen from the sand.

Preparing to Strip Mine the Tar Sands:
1. All wetlands need to be drained
2. All rivers in the mine site have to be diverted
3. All trees and vegetation stripped from the surface.
Currently over 2,800 square kilometers has been identified as surface mineable zone within the Athabasca deposit.

Removing the Tar Sands - Strip Mining Process

It takes approximately two tons of tar sands along with another two tones of overburden (containing soil, sand, clay and rock) to yield one barrel of oil.

Hydraulic shovels are used to tear into the earth and were exclusively manufactured for this purpose - they are the largest in the world. Every scoop of these shovels digs out over 40 cubic meters of material.

Within 48 hours of mining operations enough tar sands are removed to fill Toronto%u2019s Skydome or New York%u2019s Yankee Stadium.

Tar sands deposits are composed of sand, silt, clay, water and about 10%-12% bitumen.

Tar sands mining trucks used to move the material from the mine site to the preparation facilities are 15 meters long by 7 meters tall, have 4-metre tall tires and are 40% heavier than a Boeing 747 airplane.

Extracting a barrel of bitumen using surface mining requires:
%u2022 Two to five barrels of fresh water (a barrel can hold 159 liters, a little more than an average bathtub)
%u2022 250 cubic feet of natural gas,66 enough to heat a Canadian home for almost 1.5 days.
%u2022 The mining and extraction process recovers about 90% of the bitumen found in the deposit.

In-situ Extraction of Tar Sands

To remove the bitumen from a depth of more than 100 meters an injection of high pressure steam is pumped into the earth to allow the bitumen to reduce its thickness and pump it up in return pipelines. This process is referred to as Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage.

Well pads are constructed in an area up to 150 square-kilometer area and are connected with a series of above ground pipelines.

All vegetation has to be cleared to make way for multiple pairs (injector and producer) of horizontal wells.

A central water or steam producing facility is connected to these well pads with miles of above ground piping.

The water and bitumen are returned to the central facility by another above-ground pipeline, which separates the bitumen from the water and recycles the water to produce more steam.

Extracting a barrel of bitumen using SAGD technology requires

%u2022 2.5 to 4 cubic meters of steam to produce 1 cubic meter of bitumen
%u2022 1000 cubic feet of natural gas, enough to heat a Canadian home for about 5.5 days
The SAGD process recovers between 60%-80% of the bitumen found in the geological formation.

Two stages of upgrading are required to produce the final synthetic crude oil from bitumen.

The first stage reduces the large bitumen hydrocarbons into smaller molecules by coking (vaporizing) or hydrocraking (use of hydrogen and a catalyst of platinum) %u2014 sometimes both methods are required.

The second stage of upgrading is called hydrotreating whereby high pressure and temperatures (300-400°C) are used to remove nitrogen and sulphur.

About 65% of the bitumen is upgraded in Alberta to form light, sweet synthetic crude oil. The remainder is transported by pipeline to other regions of Canada and the United States for upgrading.

One barrel of synthetic crude oil produces enough gasoline to fill three-quarters of a Chevy Avalanche%u2019s gas tank, or enough to drive it about 490 kilometers.

The upgrading plants are massive complexes that take years to build and require more boreal forest be destroyed to make room for the huge footprint of the plant and miles of supply roads.

Only about 10% of the tar sands are actually oil. Therefore, vast quantities have to be mined to produce one barrel of oil.

TAR SANDS RECLAMATION

Tar sands mining represents the most intensive and environmentally damaging method of oil extraction in Alberta, involving the drastic alteration of surface and subsurface materials.

Very little area directly affected by mining operations has been restored to land with equivalent capability to the pre-mined land, and after 40 years of mining no operations have received a reclamation certificate.

Suncor states that it has reclaimed 858 hectares of land since it started operations in 1967, less than 9% of its total land disturbed to date.

Syncrude%u2019s operations have disturbed 18,653 hectares, with 4,055 hectares of land reclaimed.

In response to growing criticism, the industry has adopted what it refers to as %u201Cprogressive reclamation,%u201D which aims to reclaim land as quickly as is technically possible.

However, even with progressive reclamation, virtually no reclamation is undertaken for the first 20-30 years of a project.

THREATS TO WOODLAND CARIBOU

Woodland caribou have been designated as %u201Cthreatened%u201D under Alberta%u2019s Wildlife Act and the federal Species at Risk Act (SARA).

They are extremely sensitive to disturbance and stay well back from clearings such as roads, seismic lines and well sites.

The combination of forestry, oil and gas, and tar sands development is continually shrinking the areas of effective habitat that can support viable populations.

Cleared paths such as seismic lines have made it far easier for hunters as well as wolves and other predators to access areas where the caribou are located.

Environment Canada has noted that clearing in the boreal forest for seismic exploration by the oil and gas industry, including the tar sands industry, equals or exceeds the amount removed by the forest industry each year.

THE TAR SANDS IN PERSPECTIVE

Existing, approved and currently planned tar sands mines and in situ projects in the region will directly impact more than 2000 square kilometers of boreal forest. This is:
%u2022 Approximately 28,465 NFL football fields.
%u2022 Approximately 2.5 times larger than Calgary and 3 times larger than Edmonton
%u2022 More than 5 times the size of Denver.
%u2022 Almost the size of Tokyo %u2013 home to 12 million people.

Tar Sands Facts:

The technical term for the oil extracted from tar sands is crude bitumen, which is defined as a viscous (thick), heavy oil that will not flow to a well in its natural state.

Crude bitumen is extracted from the mined tar sands through a process that mixes the tar sands with hot water to separate the bitumen from the sand.

Preparing to Strip Mine the Tar Sands:
1. All wetlands need to be drained
2. All rivers in the mine site have to be diverted
3. All trees and vegetation stripped from the surface.
Currently over 2,800 square kilometers has been identified as surface mineable zone within the Athabasca deposit.

Removing the Tar Sands - Strip Mining Process

It takes approximately two tons of tar sands along with another two tones of overburden (containing soil, sand, clay and rock) to yield one barrel of oil.

Hydraulic shovels are used to tear into the earth and were exclusively manufactured for this purpose - they are the largest in the world. Every scoop of these shovels digs out over 40 cubic meters of material.

Within 48 hours of mining operations enough tar sands are removed to fill Toronto%u2019s Skydome or New York%u2019s Yankee Stadium.

Tar sands deposits are composed of sand, silt, clay, water and about 10%-12% bitumen.

Tar sands mining trucks used to move the material from the mine site to the preparation facilities are 15 meters long by 7 meters tall, have 4-metre tall tires and are 40% heavier than a Boeing 747 airplane.

Extracting a barrel of bitumen using surface mining requires:
%u2022 Two to five barrels of fresh water (a barrel can hold 159 liters, a little more than an average bathtub)
%u2022 250 cubic feet of natural gas,66 enough to heat a Canadian home for almost 1.5 days.
%u2022 The mining and extraction process recovers about 90% of the bitumen found in the deposit.

In-situ Extraction of Tar Sands

To remove the bitumen from a depth of more than 100 meters an injection of high pressure steam is pumped into the earth to allow the bitumen to reduce its thickness and pump it up in return pipelines. This process is referred to as Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage.

Well pads are constructed in an area up to 150 square-kilometer area and are connected with a series of above ground pipelines.

All vegetation has to be cleared to make way for multiple pairs (injector and producer) of horizontal wells.

A central water or steam producing facility is connected to these well pads with miles of above ground piping.

The water and bitumen are returned to the central facility by another above-ground pipeline, which separates the bitumen from the water and recycles the water to produce more steam.

Extracting a barrel of bitumen using SAGD technology requires

%u2022 2.5 to 4 cubic meters of steam to produce 1 cubic meter of bitumen
%u2022 1000 cubic feet of natural gas, enough to heat a Canadian home for about 5.5 days
The SAGD process recovers between 60%-80% of the bitumen found in the geological formation.

Two stages of upgrading are required to produce the final synthetic crude oil from bitumen.

The first stage reduces the large bitumen hydrocarbons into smaller molecules by coking (vaporizing) or hydrocraking (use of hydrogen and a catalyst of platinum) %u2014 sometimes both methods are required.

The second stage of upgrading is called hydrotreating whereby high pressure and temperatures (300-400°C) are used to remove nitrogen and sulphur.

About 65% of the bitumen is upgraded in Alberta to form light, sweet synthetic crude oil. The remainder is transported by pipeline to other regions of Canada and the United States for upgrading.

One barrel of synthetic crude oil produces enough gasoline to fill three-quarters of a Chevy Avalanche%u2019s gas tank, or enough to drive it about 490 kilometers.

The upgrading plants are massive complexes that take years to build and require more boreal forest be destroyed to make room for the huge footprint of the plant and miles of supply roads.

Only about 10% of the tar sands are actually oil. Therefore, vast quantities have to be mined to produce one barrel of oil.

TAR SANDS RECLAMATION

Tar sands mining represents the most intensive and environmentally damaging method of oil extraction in Alberta, involving the drastic alteration of surface and subsurface materials.

Very little area directly affected by mining operations has been restored to land with equivalent capability to the pre-mined land, and after 40 years of mining no operations have received a reclamation certificate.

Suncor states that it has reclaimed 858 hectares of land since it started operations in 1967, less than 9% of its total land disturbed to date.

Syncrude%u2019s operations have disturbed 18,653 hectares, with 4,055 hectares of land reclaimed.

In response to growing criticism, the industry has adopted what it refers to as %u201Cprogressive reclamation,%u201D which aims to reclaim land as quickly as is technically possible.

However, even with progressive reclamation, virtually no reclamation is undertaken for the first 20-30 years of a project.

THREATS TO WOODLAND CARIBOU

Woodland caribou have been designated as %u201Cthreatened%u201D under Alberta%u2019s Wildlife Act and the federal Species at Risk Act (SARA).

They are extremely sensitive to disturbance and stay well back from clearings such as roads, seismic lines and well sites.

The combination of forestry, oil and gas, and tar sands development is continually shrinking the areas of effective habitat that can support viable populations.

Cleared paths such as seismic lines have made it far easier for hunters as well as wolves and other predators to access areas where the caribou are located.

Environment Canada has noted that clearing in the boreal forest for seismic exploration by the oil and gas industry, including the tar sands industry, equals or exceeds the amount removed by the forest industry each year.

THE TAR SANDS IN PERSPECTIVE

Existing, approved and currently planned tar sands mines and in situ projects in the region will directly impact more than 2000 square kilometers of boreal forest. This is:
%u2022 Approximately 28,465 NFL football fields.
%u2022 Approximately 2.5 times larger than Calgary and 3 times larger than Edmonton
%u2022 More than 5 times the size of Denver.
%u2022 Almost the size of Tokyo %u2013 home to 12 million people.

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We signed the "Close Down the Tar Sands Operations" petition!
# 53:
9:44 pm PDT, Jul 6, Name not displayed, Illinois
# 52:
2:32 am PDT, Jun 29, Ann Garrison, California
OIl infrastructure is the infrasructure of environmental destruction and perpetual war, and tar sands oil extraction is oil infrastructure at its most extreme.
# 51:
7:53 am PDT, Jun 13, An Custers, Belgium
# 50:
1:56 pm PDT, Jun 10, Carl Rosenstock, Wisconsin
Please and thanks!!!!
# 49:
4:46 am PDT, Jun 5, Bertil Saukkoriipi, Sweden
# 48:
7:49 am PDT, May 1, Jessica Klein, Canada
Given the vast environmental impact of the Tar Sands, it is simply unacceptable to allow the operations to continue. We must stop putting profits above the value of our intact forest, our country's greatest renewable resource.
# 47:
9:09 am PDT, Apr 20, Name not displayed, France
# 46:
2:22 pm PDT, Apr 12, Mervi Rantala, Finland
# 45:
6:40 am PDT, Apr 6, David N Moore, Connecticut
# 44:
10:36 pm PDT, Apr 4, Linda Kennelly, Canada
the more we do to better our environment, the longer we will have it!
# 43:
1:42 pm PDT, Mar 31, Andy Macomber, Connecticut
# 42:
8:10 pm PDT, Mar 30, Ari R. Kolman, Canada
What’s wrong with the Government allowing this to happen here, this is Another Disgusting Example of Undemocratic Government & Big Business Corruption, wasteful spending, discrimination and Crimes against Humanity!!”. AS WELL AS GOVERNMENTS TAKING FROM THE POOR AND GIVING TO THE RICH AND THEMSELVES. Ridiculous Unconstitutional Pork barrel Policy Twisting Environmental Hazard Oil Fanatics!! We Will All Distribute your idiotic to Big Media and Start Letting those “Useless Talking Heads on TV News” know what’s really worth reporting to the world… And they will Report it as we will also through our blogs.. … … I’m sickened and disgusted. I’m sickened and disgusted. I’m sickened and disgusted. I’m sickened and disgusted. I’m sickened and disgusted. I’m sickened and disgusted. I’m sickened and disgusted. I’m sickened and disgusted. I’m sickened and disgusted. . I Beg all Intelligent and Responsible People to Please Stop Letting This Happen STILL.. The Governments will continue to allow the destruction of planet, the killing of animals, and the poison of people.. Radio Active Foods, Water, Diseases, Products, and particles in the air to ingest when we breath. The perfect receipt for Government Profit… Another Disgusting Example of Undemocratic Big Business Corruption, wasteful spending, discrimination and Crimes against Humanity & Animal!!”. STOP THE TAR SANDS OPERATIONS NOW YOU BIG BUNCH OF @#$%^&*()_#$%^&*()_WHOLES...
# 41:
11:48 pm PDT, Mar 19, Amanda Taylor, Florida
# 40:
10:00 am PDT, Mar 10, Jamie Scott, Texas
# 39:
5:09 pm PST, Mar 4, Jacki Hi, California
# 38:
9:46 am PST, Mar 1, Christina Reinhardt, Germany
# 37:
2:24 pm PST, Feb 27, Julia Tawyea', Pennsylvania
# 36:
6:03 pm PST, Feb 24, Jennifer Gardner, Florida
# 35:
12:42 pm PST, Feb 24, Name not displayed, Michigan
# 34:
7:49 am PST, Feb 24, John Homeless, Minnesota
# 32:
6:31 am PST, Feb 24, Fancy Macdonald, Pennsylvania
# 31:
6:02 am PST, Feb 24, Amy Schumacher, Ohio
# 30:
4:38 am PST, Feb 24, Filomena Pereira, United Kingdom
# 29:
8:42 pm PST, Feb 23, Pam Boland, Georgia
# 28:
6:19 pm PST, Feb 23, Chadwick Wright, Ohio
# 27:
5:38 pm PST, Feb 23, Becky Visco, Texas
# 26:
2:19 pm PST, Feb 23, Rebecca Fulco, New Jersey
# 25:
1:10 pm PST, Feb 23, Lucy Probyn, Canada
# 24:
10:11 am PST, Feb 23, Jill Vickerman, South Africa
I would like to draw your attention to the Muskwa-Kechika Management area. This represents the largest intact wildlife habitat in the entire Rocky Mountain Chain. It contains 50 undeveloped water sheds and the greatest combined abundance and diversity of large wild mammals in North America. Now, not THAT far away is the Alberta Oil Sands...Tar sands mining represents the most intensive and environmentally damaging method of oil extraction in Alberta. This is very very worrying, the fact that very little of the area directly affected by mining operations has been restored to land with equivalent capability to the pre-mined land,should set those alarm bells ringing to anyone who has any interest in Nature and Wildlife.
# 23:
9:14 am PST, Feb 23, Ginger Geronimo, Alabama
# 22:
7:24 am PST, Feb 23, Karen Fagan, Canada
# 21:
4:58 am PST, Feb 23, Marcin Sztwiertnia, Poland
# 20:
4:54 am PST, Feb 23, Lynda Harding, United Kingdom
# 19:
2:45 am PST, Feb 23, Bill C, Germany
# 18:
2:24 am PST, Feb 23, Ruth Rogers, Colorado
# 17:
1:05 am PST, Feb 23, Toni Sokoloski, Massachusetts
# 16:
11:36 pm PST, Feb 22, Razvan V., Romania
# 15:
9:34 pm PST, Feb 22, Izabela Kaszuba, Poland
# 14:
9:31 pm PST, Feb 22, Slawomir Renda, Poland
# 13:
9:26 pm PST, Feb 22, Joanna Renda, Poland
# 12:
9:23 pm PST, Feb 22, Radoslaw Renda, Poland
# 11:
6:49 pm PST, Feb 22, Anthony Montapert, California
# 10:
4:41 pm PST, Feb 22, Steve Dale, Australia
# 9:
4:05 pm PST, Feb 22, Name not displayed, New York
# 8:
4:04 pm PST, Feb 22, Chum R, Canada
# 7:
1:03 pm PST, Feb 22, Kristina Salgado, Arkansas
# 6:
12:57 pm PST, Feb 22, Mike Downs, Missouri
# 5:
12:13 pm PST, Feb 22, Chris MacKrell, California
# 4:
11:35 am PST, Feb 22, Kristine Webb, Indiana
# 3:
9:22 am PST, Feb 22, Octavian Paul Draja, Romania
# 2:
9:18 am PST, Feb 22, Gisele Grignet, Canada
# 1:
9:11 am PST, Feb 22, Scott Barta, Iowa
Shut 'em down NOW!
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