Innovation
Spells Boom for Canada
Drew Wilson
Edmonton,
Alberta--The attitude in Alberta Canada is
reminiscent of the turn of the century gold rush in
Alaska. An
oil boom has caused the commotion and the only
problem seems to be that it takes more than a
pickaxe and shovel to seek ones fortune. It is estimated that the province has five
times more oil than Saudi Arabia. Until recently it has been too expensive to harvest much of
this oil because of the difficulty of extraction. The oil deposits lie in the Athabasca Oil
Sands and traditional drilling techniques don’t
work. The
oil has to be mined and processed to remove sand
from a molasses like substance called bitumen.

Syncrude Sweet Blend is the name tagged to this oil
and the boom is a result of new mining technology
and help from the government. About 25 years ago the first oil sands plant
was built in Fort McMurray, Alberta. Suncor built the mining facility too extract
the oil from the sand and refine it into fuel. Early technology employed the use of large
draglines and conveyer belts to transport the oily
sand to the plant. Cost per barrel in those days was
approximately $24 (Canadian).
Syncrude a second and larger operation came on the
scene shortly after Suncor. This was a consortium of multi-national oil companies and it
employed similar extraction and transportation
techniques as Suncor. The processing of the oil was considered to
expensive until new technology and the lowering of
tax rates by the government made the mining more
profitable. And
profitable it is. Latest numbers show that in the year 2000, an
average of 203,000 barrels a day were harvested and
during the first quarter of 2001 the average had
increased to 223,000 barrels each day.
The owners of Syncrude just approved a $4
billion expansion that will increase production by
over 100,000 barrels a day and is the third in a
four-stage expansion that will total $8 billion. The future expansion at Syncrude will allow
production of 360,000 barrels of oil per day within
the next two years.
Part of the mining technology that has made these
plants more profitable is the use of mobile bucket
hoes and trucks with load capacities of up to 360
tons. Extraction
has become much more affordable. Today a barrel of oil costs approximately $11 (Canadian) to
produce. The
hopes are that as even better techniques and
efficiencies are employed, this will be reduced to
$9 (Canadian) per barrel
.
Several
years ago the Provincial Government and the oil
companies operating the Oil Sands Plants started an
initiative. A
promise of lower royalties paid to the Provincial
and Federal Governments brought a guarantee from the
companies to invest huge sums of money to expand the
mining and refining of other locations. Other oil companies also began to build
plants, some still in the process, and some planned
for the future. Some of the technologies for extraction have
moved from a mining operation to extraction by steam
injection.
By
the time these plants are all completed we can
expect production to be in the order of 2 million
barrels per day. The total availability of oil could supply
the world for 100 years at the current rate of
consumption.
“It's an enormous economic and
employment boost for the entire country," said
Eric Newell, Syncrude Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer. "With more than 360,000 barrels per
day of production by 2005, we will be supplying over
20 per cent of Canada's crude oil needs. The
expansion will generate public sector revenues into
the billions of dollars over its lifespan, and this
will help fund healthcare, education and other
social needs of Canadians. The new technology being
incorporated in the project will also deliver a
large improvement in environmental performance; in
2005, Syncrude Sweet Blend will be a higher quality
crude oil with cleaner burning properties that will
be used to make more environmentally friendly
fuels.”
All
of this production is good for the economy of
Alberta and almost everyone is benefiting. Even at the laborer level, oil production pay
rates of $30 (Canadian) an hour have spurred
spending and reports in the media of the exchange
rate gap with the U.S. growing smaller has caused an
excitement throughout the Province.
“This
has been a tremendous opportunity for us,” said
Ian Powell, part owner and operator of A.H. McElroy
in Edmonton, a distributorship that sells McElroy
fusion equipment. Like many of the smaller construction
companies and equipment suppliers in the region,
Powell’s business has prospered from the explosion
of construction in the area. “We have been able to offer Syncrude the
collective benefits of having the best fusion
equipment available, training and qualifying their
people in the use of McElroy fusion equipment, and
performing quality control tests of the fusion
joints. It
shows the owners that polyethylene works very well
and that their employees are making leak free fusion
joints.”
One
project that Powell has been a part of is the
training of fusion operators for the installation of
the expansive polyethylene fire protection system
for the recent Syncrude expansion.
Another
technology used in this cutting edge mining
operation is a slurry reclaiming operation. Tailings ponds are being mined to extract oil
from the sludge that rests on the bottom of the
lakes. Barges
suck the sludge off the bottom and send it back
through the refinery. A polyethylene pipe is connected to the barge
and is the only material available that has the
flexibility to travel with the barge as it moves
around the lake. The pipe is used to transport the silt back
to the plant where it is reprocessed and the oil is
extracted. This
also helps in Syncrude’s land reclamation process.
Another
vital function of PE is in the dewatering role of
the mining operation. Water that lies underground has to be
siphoned out before the sand deposits can be removed
and refined. PE
has the flexibility to snake its way through to the
bottom of these caverns to reach the pockets of
water.
Polyethylene
pipe continues to play a vital role in technologies
that are environmentally safe and more efficient. Canada has tremendous untapped reserves of
not only oil, but also natural gas. The boom in Alberta may be the spark that
inspires even brighter technologies and larger
investing that could make North America energy
self-sufficient.
Contact Information:
McElroy PR and Marketing Department
Tyler Henning, public relations specialist
Phone: (918) 831-9286
E-mail: thenning@mcelroy.com
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