National Post

Oilsands tailings ponds spur environmen­tal fears

ENERGY Battle escalates over how and when to clean up

- Kevin Orland Bloomberg

Amid the bogs and forests of northern Alberta, the heart of the Canadian oilpatch, lie some of the largest waste dumps of the global energy business.

In the shadow of the pipes and smokestack­s that turn oilsands into flowing crude, earthen dams as long as 18 kilometres encircle lakes of toxic sludge, the byproduct of decades of extraction.

These waste pools, known as tailings ponds, represent perhaps the most serious environmen­tal challenge facing the oilsands industry. Now, the battle over how quickly to clean them up — and fears about who will pay — are escalating anew.

To howls from environmen­talists, the provincial energy regulator granted approval for plans that could push a full cleanup decades into the future to industry giants Suncor Energy and Canadian Natural Resources. Critics say the industry could end up sticking taxpayers with the estimated $27 billion bill.

At issue is how, and by extension when, the ponds must be returned to a natural state. The industry is seeking more time to find cheaper ways to do the job. Environmen­talists argue the problem has festered for half a century — and the waste keeps piling up.

“Rather than waiting for that silver bullet and continuing to test things out in the lab, we think that the technologi­es that exist today should be implemente­d in full force,” said Jodi McNeill, a policy analyst at the Pembina Institute, an energy researcher in Calgary.

Oil sands companies dispute the notion they’re dragging their feet. Suncor is approachin­g the cleanup with urgency, investing “significan­t resources and capital,” spokeswoma­n Sneh Seetal said. With the help of improved technologi­es, the company now can treat three times the tailings it produces in a year, helping shrink the backlog that’s built up over decades, she added.

Canadian Natural works to minimize environmen­tal impacts and plans its land use with the end of the mines’ life in mind, spokeswoma­n Julie Woo said. The company already has reclaimed 934 acres ( 378 hectares) and planted more than 630,000 trees at its Horizon mine site since 2009, she noted.

For decades, tailings — a goopy mix of sand and chemicals — have been pumped into ponds so the solids could settle. But settling has taken longer than engineers expected. Now Alberta’s tailings ponds cover about 155 square kilometres and hold 340 billion gallons ( almost 1.3 trillion litres) of waste, enough to fill more than a half million Olympic- size swimming pools.

The reservoirs attracted global attention i n 2008 when about 1,600 ducks died in a Syncrude Canada pond. Similar, though smaller, incidents have been reported occasional­ly since then, including the September deaths of more than 100 birds near a Suncor tailings pond.

Tailings are treated using a variety of methods in combinatio­n, such as chemicals and centrifuge­s to speed the settling process. The final step, known as water capping, entails pumping the tailings into pits and covering the sludge with water.

Suncor has successful­ly transforme­d a tailings pond into a 220- hectare watershed capable of supporting plants and wildlife.

“That land is now a thriving ecosystem,” Seetal said, noting that bears and other animals have been spotted there. The company also has capped another pond with a layer of petroleum coke so vehicles can travel over it.

Still, provincial regulators estimate that cleaning up oilsands facilities represents a $ 27 billion liability, of which the companies have posted only about $ 1 billion in security. Environmen­tal groups say the cost could be much higher. The province also holds oilsands assets against the liability. But McNeill says they are one of the highest- cost methods of producing crude, making them vulnerable to falling oil prices caused by a continued boom in American shale or the rapid adoption of electric cars.

Suncor heard s i milar concerns amid the oil- price downturn that started in 2014, and the company has shown it can prosper even with lower crude prices, Seetal said.

“We’re in this business for the long haul, and we have a history of being a responsibl­e developer,” she said.

So far, the industry has spent about $ 12 billion on treating tailings and $ 50 million on research, according to Dan Wicklum, chief executive of Canada’s Oil Sands Innovation Alliance. In addition to new filtration methods, the industry also is testing injecting carbon dioxide into tailings and running electrical currents through them to help the solids settle out more quickly, he said.

Vancouver- based MGX Minerals Inc. and PurLucid Treatment Solutions Inc. have teamed up to create a technology that filters tailings to produce lithium that could be sold for use in batteries. The Canadian government provided $ 8 million to scale up a pilot. One challenge is scaling such technology to handle the massive flow of tailings, Wicklum said.

 ?? RYAN JACKSON / EDMONTON JOURNAL FILES ?? Environmen­talists argue the tailings ponds problem has festered for decades — and the waste keeps piling up.
RYAN JACKSON / EDMONTON JOURNAL FILES Environmen­talists argue the tailings ponds problem has festered for decades — and the waste keeps piling up.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada