The Peterborough Examiner

Gov’t scientists find oilsands emissions higher than reported

- LAUREN KRUGEL THE CANADIAN PRESS

CALGARY — Federal government scientists say they have devised an accurate way to directly measure air pollutants from oilsands mines and suggest industry estimates for certain harmful emissions have been much too low.

The research, published Monday in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, focused on volatile organic compounds, or VOCs — carbon-based substances that can be damaging to the environmen­t and human health.

Oilsands companies have indirect ways of calculatin­g their mines’ estimated VOC emissions. Methods include extrapolat­ing from other substances they measure from smokestack­s or from emissions associated with a specific activity, said lead author ShaoMeng Li, a senior research scientist at Environmen­t and Climate Change Canada.

Li and his team set out to compare those figures against direct readings they took from the air above the mines.

Their experiment took measuremen­ts from a plane flown at various altitudes in a box-like pattern above oilsands mines in northeaste­rn Alberta.

That created a virtual wall of sorts around developmen­ts as big as 275 sq. km.

“Most of these instrument­s are very bulky, so they cannot be mounted on the outside,” said Li.

The interior of the aircraft looks like a cargo plane with a dozen or so seats for the scientists and racks of gadgets along the wall. Li said the air was brought into containers inside the cabin through special tubing and samples were taken back to the lab for analysis.

The amount of overall VOCs measured on the flights wound up being two to four-and-a-half times higher than figures companies reported to Environmen­t Canada’s National Pollutant Release Inventory.

“It’s quite a powerful mechanism to make those kind of measuremen­ts,” said Stewart Cober, coauthor of the paper and manager in Environmen­t Canada’s Air Quality Research Division.

“It’s a mechanism we wouldn’t have been able to do 15 years ago because the technology didn’t exist.”

The flights were made in the late summer of 2013. The team is planning another go-round in 2018 to see how the method works in different weather conditions.

Cober said the technique has the potential to be applied to other oil and gas projects, such as hydraulic fracturing sites and in situ oilsands developmen­ts, in which steam is used to extract bitumen from deep undergroun­d.

“What we’ve done is demonstrat­ed that there is a way to make more accurate measuremen­ts,” he said.

Cober hopes the research means emissions can be estimated more accurately in the future, perhaps with industry players doing their own airborne readings.

“It is a game changer,” he said. “Certainly we’re very excited about it.”

 ?? VINCENT MCDERMOTT/FORT McMURRAY TODAY FILES ?? Above: Workers are seen at an oilsands site in Alberta. Federal government scientists say they have found a new way to more accurately measure emissions from the oilsands, and that such emissions are four-and-a-half times higher than companies reported.
VINCENT MCDERMOTT/FORT McMURRAY TODAY FILES Above: Workers are seen at an oilsands site in Alberta. Federal government scientists say they have found a new way to more accurately measure emissions from the oilsands, and that such emissions are four-and-a-half times higher than companies reported.

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