Canadian Tar Sands (Athabasca Oil Sands) and the Keystone XL Pipeline
The Keystone XL Pipeline is a major construction project under negotiation right now between some major oil companies and the US and Canadian governments. In Alberta, there is an area known as the Canadian Tar Sands (aka Athabasca Oil Sands). The region is virtually covered in bitumen (tar) which can be "upgraded" into synthetic crude oil. The total deposit is estimated to contain 1.7 trillion barrels of this substance, of which industry leaders think 173 billion barrels of synthetic crude can be produced. Of course, this has oil companies in a state of excitement, as synthetic crude yields a much higher profit than conventional crude oil.
Advisory: Objects in this photo are larger than they appear. The dump trucks pictured above have a 400 ton capacity. The actual dimensions of each truck are 45ft long x 35ft wide x 25ft high. |
As Royal Dutch Shell reported in 2006, conventional crude yielded a profit of $12.41 USD per barrel, while synthetic crude provided $21.75 USD per barrel. There is a massive incentive to continue ad infinitum with this project, since the potential for long-term profits are enormous -about $3.4 trillion USD for extracting just 10% of what bitumen may be in the sand. With the worldwide recession weighing heavily on the US economy, many have been swayed toward supporting this project.
Proponents of the Keystone XL Pipeline project within the United States tout some specific benefits from the pipeline's construction:
- Jobs creation for construction and maintenance of the pipeline will stimulate the economy while combating unemployment.
- Canada's oil is "ethical oil" (meaning that theirs is a government that is seen as just and fair) and their oil proceeds do not support governments which are seen as dangerous to American interests.
- Refining the oil in facilities located on the US coast of the Gulf of Mexico is preferable, environmentally, to wherever these products may end up otherwise.
However, there are a few problems with the above arguments, which I will address in brief:
- Even if the project were approved today, it is unlikely that construction will begin before 2015. Appropriating the land on the pipeline's path may cause further delay, as it involves securing "eminent domain" over private property. The outlook for completion of the pipeline is murky, at best. My guess is maybe 2021, at the earliest. It is unlikely to cure our current unemployment/economic problems- it's actually more likely that the economy will begin to do better on its own before then.
- Canada has issued permits for the extraction of product from the tar sands. Once the bitumen has been extracted, it belongs to the oil companies, not the Canadian government. Oil companies will continue to extract "unethical oil" from countries around the globe. While it's likely that Canada will receive some payment for the bitumen, global demand will keep stuffing the pockets of the "less ethical" oil suppliers.
- The United States has the largest refining capacity of any country on Earth. Much of the world's oil comes here to be refined to begin with, and then is shipped by tanker to foreign markets.
Royal Dutch Shell claims they are very concerned about protecting the environment, and do their best to keep wildlife away from tailing ponds where they store waste water:
Most strikingly, oil and gas companies are using the cleanest fossil fuel source, natural gas, in their process to extract a form of oil that is dirtier than conventional crude. But a very important aspect that has not been getting much attention is the actual overall energy and resource cost of the project.
Net Gains vs. Political Consequences
If oil companies can get 173 billion barrels of oil out of the tar sands, it is a mere 12% increase in the world's total oil reserves-- on top of that, the act of extracting it would reduce the world's natural gas reserve supply by 3.8%, while making Canada and the US more dependent on natural gas imports from countries which have large natural gas reserves: Russia, Iran, Qatar, Saudi Arabia or Venezuela.
Tar sands before extraction. |
The most energy-efficient method for extraction is called Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD), which uses about 1.54 giga-Joules (GJ) per barrel of synthetic crude produced, which means that they must use 41.62 cubic meters of natural gas to extract and refine each barrel into synthetic crude (oil contains about 5.4-6.1 GJ per barrel) -- in terms of energy input versus returns, this is barely acceptable at 4:1 [UPDATE: the actual average EROI for SAGD is closer to 3:1, on average], and we haven't even looked at "cracking," transport and refining yet. Worse, when you note that for this to work running on natural gas as they have been, it would require 4.3 times Canada's entire natural gas supply (or 7,200 billion cubic meters of natural gas) to extract 173 billion barrels of synthetic oil from the tar sands.
Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) |
Canada is the main supplier of natural gas imported to the US, so this is likely to drive up prices of natural gas here at home. While Canada possesses only 0.9% of the world's natural gas reserves, it would require 3.8% of the entire world's supply just to extract the estimate of recoverable oil-- 173 billion barrels-- which is about 5 years' worth of oil use at the world's current consumption rate, or 4 years, if you figure in 1.21% growth of consumption (which is an average of the growth of oil consumption over the last 30 years).
So counting on oil and gas companies to extract even 10% of what may be in the Canadian Tar Sands would actually result in both the US and Canada depending much more heavily on nations such as Russia, Iran, Qatar, Saudi Arabia or Venezuela for natural gas, and none of these nations are likely to become major suppliers to the United States- at least not willingly.
Iran, aside from having the world's 3rd largest oil reserves, also possesses the 2nd largest natural gas reserves in the world- 15.8%. Their oil and gas resources, like their banks, are nationalized and strictly controlled by the government. Justifying an invasion on the basis of "preventing a nuclear Iran" could just as likely be an attempt to "privatize" the Iranian natural resources. That prospect would seem highly unlikely if only it weren't for the US's long track-record of political and economic manipulation in Iran.
Shale Gas and Hydraulic Fracturing (or "Fracking") for Undiscovered Reserves
A commonly suggested (non-military) solution to this problem is to begin "fracking" for natural gas, absolutely everywhere. A number of environmental questions have been posed as to the safety of these operations, which have been suspected of poisoning aquifers used for drinking water and causing small earthquakes. Passed during the George W. Bush administration, the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (Sec. 322) allows a hydraulic fracturing technique invented in the 1970s by Halliburton exemption from the Safe Drinking Water Act (42 U.S.C. 300h(d)). It is colloquially known as the "Halliburton Loophole". However, a bill passed in 2011 requires companies to disclose the chemistry involved in such operations, but does not require that information to be disclosed to the public. UPDATE: A new regulation was announced recently, requiring chemicals to be disclosed to the public, but only after the drilling has begun.
Hydraulic fracturing of shale rock (aka "fracking") |
Conventional mining of the shale rock is out of the question. Shale rock is often very deep below the surface and horizontally distributed, making conventional extraction nearly impossible. Pound-for-pound, the rock in which the natural gas is trapped contains less energy than a box of breakfast cereal, so physically digging for the rock is not feasible under any situation.
However, using horizontal drilling and pressurized chemicals, fracking operations can break up the porous shale and force the natural gas out. While the price of natural gas is currently too low for this method to be feasible, the hypothetical prospect of finding large deposits is almost too good for oil & gas companies to pass up.
For example, the Canadian province of Saskatchewan announced that there may be 2.9 trillion cubic meters in undiscovered natural gas in its shale. Undiscovered literally means nobody knows if it's there or not in commercially extractable quantities- all they know is that certain rock formations exist and are likely to contain an unknown quantity of natural gas (sometimes testing has been done and deposits are confirmed, but not yet "explored"). The purported supply in Saskatchewan is actually only a 15.6 year supply for Canada's annual consumption, based on 2010 usage & exports to the US (-not accounting for growth in consumption-).
That's still nowhere near the required 7,200 billion cubic meters needed for extraction of the aforementioned tar sands but if the price of natural gas were to increase, even a little bit, fracking shale rock would generate massive profits.
The United States possesses the 5th largest proven reserve of natural gas- around 7,700 billion cubic meters (based on estimates from a 2011 report by BP), but we use more than our domestic annual production, which is why we import from Canada, although some contend that we may no longer be required to do so; the United States may be home to an extremely large (but undiscovered) deposit of natural gas locked up in shale rock.
"Of the current total natural gas proved reserves of 244.7 tcf [6.929 trillion cubic meters] , EIA includes 32.8 tcf [928 billion cubic meters] of proved reserves as shale gas.
No systematic assessment of undiscovered technically recoverable shale gas resources has been conducted for the United States, though industry and academic experts estimate that the technically recoverable volumes of natural gas from these shale deposits are very large."
-U.S. Fossil Fuel Resources: Terminology, Reporting, and Summary (Congressional Research Service, November 30, 2010)
Instead of mining for natural resources that could be there, maybe we should start using the ones we know we have more wisely. Since the natural gas which may be trapped in the shale isn't going anywhere until we decide to start fracking it out, a reasonable course of action might be to explore renewable energies and technologies for energy production. It will create jobs now, not at some murky point down the road. We will still have all of our "untapped" resources in place, and we will be all the richer for doing it.
However, this prospect is tricky because "we" in the United States don't actually own our country's natural resources. Property owners do. And although Canada has a nationalized oil & gas concern called Petro-Canada, a deal has been struck with the landholders (oil & gas companies) in the western provinces wherein they pay a royalty to the government for extracting the resources. Afterward, they're free to do whatever they wish with the product- including shipping it off overseas to the highest bidder. It's all in the name of profit.
Policy Decisions
We have to start taking this seriously. The United States consumes an obscene amount of energy (about 20% of the world's energy demand each year)- over 80% of which comes from fossil fuels that take millions of years to form and are increasingly more difficult and energy-intensive to extract. What's more, these fuels are being consumed at an alarming rate which is not driven by anyone's best interests. The answer really should be in developing more efficient energy use, reducing overall energy use, and the deployment of renewable energy resources.
The Obama administration's budget request for Dept of Energy's Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy (EERE) division is only $2.3 billion. While that's a sizable increase over the previous US President's endowment, it's not enough.
I think we can all agree that since energy is so central to our way of life we must spend more money on developing clean and renewable energies. It is actually a matter of national security. If the US government allocated even 1% of the Dept. of Defense's budget to cover research and development on these issues each year, it would more than triple the current budgetary investment.
Approaching this dire issue as a national security issue, we could employ the Army Corps of Engineers to develop or build any structures or machinery required for renewable energy services-- especially any of those which are not specifically profitable-- instead of subsidizing private companies who are primarily seeking high profits.
I think the solutions to our energy problems are within our grasp, but we need to think differently- and be willing to approach these problems without a profit motive. What we come up with could improve the lives of people all over the world and clean up the environment at the same time.
Perspective
In the best-case scenario the Canadian Tar Sands project, together with the Keystone XL Pipeline, will net some pretty insignificant temporary advantages while making the US and Canada more heavily dependent on foreign suppliers of natural gas.
The subsequent acceleration of conventional natural gas consumption will certainly drive up prices- which will make fracking explorations more appealing. Right now it's not being done on a large scale because the price of natural gas isn't high enough. However, once we allow oil & gas companies to begin wasting 7.2 trillion cubic meters of the world's current supply on extracting a four-year supply of oil, there will be little choice.
Without development of clean & renewable energy sources, the world will be stuck on a downward spiral of resource depletion until it cripples us. Right now, the people of Canada and the United States have an opportunity to make a choice about the future of energy. Committing to the Keystone XL Pipeline project is choosing the wrong path. It's not a good idea economically, environmentally, or politically for anyone except the oil & gas industry, who stand to make trillions of dollars while encouraging energy consumers to squander the world's fuel resources.