1 / 37

Oil Sands 101

Oil Sands 101. ERG Victoria Jan 09 Roger Bailey. Alberta Tar Sands. Big, Tough Expensive Job Not Economic Depends on government handouts Dirty Oil Pollutes the Environment Air: SOx, Nox, CO 2 , Climate Water: consumption, toxic sludge Land: Devastates Boreal forest Destroys society.

Télécharger la présentation

Oil Sands 101

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Oil Sands 101 ERG Victoria Jan 09 Roger Bailey

  2. Alberta Tar Sands • Big, Tough Expensive Job • Not Economic • Depends on government handouts • Dirty Oil • Pollutes the Environment • Air: SOx, Nox, CO2, Climate • Water: consumption, toxic sludge • Land: Devastates Boreal forest • Destroys society

  3. Alberta Oil Sands • World’s largest oil deposit 2,000,000,000,000 • Established Reserves: 173,000,000 barrels • Canada’s economic engine • $70 billion invested, $70 billion planned • Now 1.2 million BPD, 5 million BPD in 2030 • Creates Jobs and Wealth • Mining yesterday’s technology • In-Situ SAGD is the future

  4. What Changed? • Price of oil over $50 / bbl • “The end of cheap oil” • Government Policy. • Technology • Resources to Reserves

  5. What Recently Changed? • Price of oil under $40 / bbl • Not “the end of cheap oil” • Government Policy • Royalties up (Syncrude + $2 billion) • Taxation: No accelerated CCA • CO2 Penalties • Technology: CO2 focus • Resources to Reserves? Economics

  6. AOSTRA • Alberta Oil Sands Technology and Research Authority • Alberta invested $750 million in R&D • Industry matched funding and did the work • Enabling Technologies • Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) • Cold Water Extraction (OCWE) • Consolidated Tailings (CT)

  7. Alberta’s Oil Sands Areas

  8. Alberta Geology

  9. Alberta Oil Sands Production

  10. Alberta Oil Production Source: CERI Study CAPP Backgrounder 2008

  11. Alberta Oil Update Dec 2008 Source: CAPP Update Dec 2008

  12. Oil Sands Projects Athabasca Mining 1,115,000 –2,977,000 Athabasca In-Situ 324,000 – 1,543,000 Cold Lake In-Situ 219,000 – 280,000 Peace River In-Situ 12,000 – 100,000

  13. Mining Technology Change • Truck and Shovel Hydrotransport Cold Water Extraction Consolidated Tailings

  14. Athabasca – Mining Operator Project Initial Potential Albian/Shell Muskeg/Jackpine 150,000 560,000 Suncor Base Plant 280,000 550,000 Syncrude Base Plant 300,000 600,000 CNRL Horizon (2008) 135,000 577,000 Imperial Kearl (2010) 100,000 300,000 Petro-Canada Fort Hills (2011) 100,000 190,000 Total Joslyn Creek Mine(2013) 50,000 200,000

  15. Athabasca – In Situ - SAGDOperator Project Initial Potential • JACOS Hangingstone 1 0,000 30,000 • Suncor Firebag 68,000 375,000 • ConocoPhillips Surmont 25,000 110,000 • EnCana Christina/Foster 42,000 400,000 • Devon Jackfish 35,000 70,000 • Husky Sunrise (2012) 50,000 200,000 • OPTI/Nexen Long Lake 72,000 288,000 • Petro-Canada MacKay River 22,000 70,000

  16. Cold Lake – In Situ –SAGDOperator Project Initial Potential • Shell Hilda Lake (pilot) 600 20,000 • CNRL Primrose 50,000 110,000 • Imperial Cold Lake (CSS) 150,000 110,000 • Husky Tucker 18,000 40,000 • Peace River – In Situ • Shell Peace River 12,000 100,000

  17. Underground Test Facility (UTF) SAGD Well Pairs Horizontal Injector And Producer Shaft & Tunnel Access

  18. Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage • Steam injected in upper horizontal well melts the bitumen • Bitumen flows by gravity down to the lower producing well • Steam chamber grows as bitumen is produced • Recovery over 60%

  19. SAGD Applicability • Resources to Reserves • 352 Billion @ 6% • 239 Billion @ 10% • EUB Reserves in 2000 • 173 Billion based on SAGD • Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage

  20. Oil Sands Reserves

  21. Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage

  22. Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage • SADG needs steam. Steam Oil Ratio ~3 • Steam is water and energy • Both are limited and expensive • Little fresh water: saline and recycle • Expensive water treatment required • Energy? Gas, Co-generation? • Gasification? Pitch? Nuclear?

  23. SAGD CO2 Emissions • Natural gas for steam ~1 GJ/barrel • CO2 Emissions ~60 kg/bbl • Cogeneration: • Gas turbine produces electricity • Exhaust + re-firing produces steam • Cogen steam for SAGD with no CO2 • CO2 in Cogen charged to electricity • CO2 from Cogen less than coal

  24. Nuclear Energy for Oil Sands? Nuclear for steam, electricity and hydrogen is possible but….

  25. Oil Sands Projects Source: CERI Study CAPP Backgrounder 2008

  26. Bitumen Upgrading • Upgrading takes the black out of black oil, the tar (asphalt) • Synthetic crude approximates crude oil for refineries • SCO flows and distils to refinery fuel products • Bitumen needs carbon out or hydrogen in • Capital, energy and CO2 intensive • Refinery integration in US?

  27. Wall of Cash Flow “Wall of Cash Flow”

  28. 20 Year Horizon Source: CERI Study CAPP Backgrounder 2008

  29. 20 Year Horizon Source: CERI Study CAPP Backgrounder 2008

  30. Oil Sands Challenges • Environmental sustainability • CO2 costs • Natural gas limitations and costs • Fiscal changes, lower returns • Infrastructure limitations • Workforce • New Markets and Pipelines • Upgrading? Moving to US refineries

  31. Inflation: Capital Cost Source: CAPP Backgrounder 2008

  32. Dirty Oil? • Not the “End of Oil” nirvana • Other oil options will be produced • Oil Sands, Oil Shale, Carbonates • Life Cycle Analysis: • 85% of Emissions in use as fuel

  33. Life Cycle Analysis

More Related