Edmonton Journal

In situ oilsands plants release contaminan­ts

Study suggests government should increase monitoring, author says

- BOB WEBER

The first study of pollution from unconventi­onal oilsands mines has concluded that so-called in-situ techniques also introduce contaminan­ts into the environmen­t.

The results, which are from a University of Ottawa lab and are to be published Monday, suggest government should increase monitoring of oilsands plants that rely on steam injection instead of open-pit mining, said lead author Jennifer Korosi.

“It’s our hope that this study stimulates that kind of work.”

In-situ mining involves injecting high-pressure, high-temperatur­e steam undergroun­d to soften bitumen enough that it can be pumped up.

Most bitumen in Alberta is extracted using in-situ methods and they will be used in the majority of the industry’s future growth.

In-situ mines don’t need large tailings ponds and don’t create vast landscape disturbanc­es as do open-pit mines, so they are often described as more environmen­tally friendly. The assumption had to be tested, said Korosi.

That became even more evident in 2013 when a Canadian Natural Resources site was over-pressurize­d and oozed bitumen to the surface, she said.

“There’s a pressing need to understand how in situ releases contaminan­ts to the environmen­t, because it’s going to be very different than surface mining. At the moment, it’s mostly unknown.”

Korosi and her colleagues took sediment cores from a small lake adjacent to the CNRL site near Cold Lake.

The area has seen in-situ oilsands activity since the mid-1980s.

Their analysis found little trace of heavy metals normally associated with bitumen. But the sediment cores revealed the presence of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbo­ns — a class of chemicals considered carcinogen­ic — beginning in 1985, about the same time as oilsands developmen­t in the area began.

As well, the specific types of the hydrocarbo­ns they found are closely associated with petrochemi­cals and not other possible sources such as forest fires.

“There are certain PAH compounds that we know are released by forest fires, from traffic emissions, and we don’t see those compounds increasing,” said Korosi. “We have a number of different ways we can fingerprin­t hydrocarbo­ns to know where they’re coming from and consistent­ly, the different metrics were suggesting a petroleum-based source.”

The lake sediments showed hydrocarbo­n levels grew steadily as developmen­t increased. They are now 137 per cent higher than in 1985, said Korosi.

The levels are still too low to have environmen­tal impacts. But they are real — and growing — and raise questions about how they’re getting into sediments.

“We have sources of contaminat­ion around in-situ drilling wells that are unaccounte­d for,” Korosi said. “There’s a pressing need to understand where they’re coming from.”

She said they could be from pipeline leaks, leaky well bores, process water, groundwate­r or undergroun­d fault lines.

“It’s why we really need to understand what’s going on below the surface.”

The research, which is being published in the journal Environmen­tal Pollution, was partly funded by the Alberta government’s environmen­tal monitoring agency.

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