The Cooperative Group and WWF - Carbon Capture and Storage in the Alberta Oil Sands - A Dangerous Myth
By CostBenefit on Oct 31, 2009 | In Energy, Climate Change GHG Carbon CO2, Companies,CSR,Business,Finance, Canada, Regulatory Analysis, Research Institute NGO NonProfit, Costs and Benefits, Opinion (Not Likely Ours EV&CBN), Free Report at Time of Entry | Send feedback »
Link: http://www.co-operative.coop/Corporate/PDFs/Tar%20Sands%20CCS.pdf
Executive Summary
The application of Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) has been widely cited by supporters of the oil sands as justification for ongoing expansion activities. This study exposes the myth of CCS in the oil sands, finding it to have no serious ability to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions anytime this side of 2050. In its application to oil sands developments, CCS has limited potential to reduce upstream emissions to levels comparable with the average for conventional oil. Crucially, CCS will not enable oil sands products to meet emerging international low carbon fuel standards or enable Canada to meet its international climate change commitments.
Alberta’s proven economically recoverable oil sands reserves amount to 173 billion barrels of oil equivalent, with estimates for bitumen in place between 1.7 and 2.5 trillion barrels, making it second only to Saudi Arabia in proven reserves. Production reached 1.3 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2008 and current projections place production between 2.5 and 4.5 million bpd by 2020, with production capacity possibly as high as 6.2 million bpd.
The extraction of oil from the oil sands is incredibly energy intensive. Studies have estimated that well-to-refinery emissions are on average three times more carbon intensive than for conventional oil and that Well-to-Wheel emissions are between 14 and 40% higher than the current average for conventional crude sources.
These figures do not include emissions resulting from the destruction of boreal ecosystems.
In 2007, Canada’s total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions were 26% higher than 1990 levels and 34% higher than its then agreed Kyoto target. Furthermore, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), industrialised nations should seek to reduce emissions by between 25 and 40 per cent below 1990 levels by 2020, and 80 to 90 per cent by 2050 (IPCC 2007). It would appear that Canada’s current model of economic development is totally ill suited to its international environmental obligations.
Carbon capture and storage (CCS) has been cited by supporters of the oil sands as the solution. It has been claimed that separation of CO2 from combustion streams and from industrial processes is common in a number of industries and underground gas storage has substantial history as a result of acid gas storage and enhanced oil recovery (EOR) projects. However, even the most optimistic estimates from industry experts claim reductions from oil sands upstream operations will be 10-30% in the medium term (and only for the more favourable sites) and 30-50% in the long term. Reductions of around 85% are required to make oil sands emissions comparable with the average for conventional oil production.
The maximum reductions achievable using CCS would therefore be insufficient to meet emerging low carbon fuel standards, such as those in the European Union and California, even by 2050.
Furthermore, CCS cannot address the even larger downstream emissions associated with burning the resulting fuel in vehicles, so that on a full lifecycle basis, emission reduction potential is likely in the 7 to 11 per cent range.
Significant barriers exist to CCS achieving its maximum potential in connection with the oil sands. Not least its expense, with estimates of between $60 to $290 per tonne of CO2 captured ($200 to $290 for in situ production); which compares poorly with emissions capture from larger, highly concentrated sources, such as coal fired power stations. It has been estimated that subsidies of $1 to $3 billion per year would be required from the governments of Alberta and Canada to successfully promote CCS projects in Alberta. If these funds are invested in oil sands operations, then it is a major public investment in a technology that cannot deliver reductions of the magnitude that are required if we are to avoid dangerous levels of climate change.
Under a constrained growth forecast and assuming a highly aggressive deployment of CCS i.e. 10-30% industry-wide reductions in 2020 and 30-50% in 2050 - from a Well-to-Tank perspective, the emissions from the Alberta oil sands alone would exceed Canada’s entire carbon budget for 2050, were it to meet what many consider to be a fair and appropriate GHG reduction target of 80% compared to 1990 levels by 2050. This does not consider additional energy used for CCS, the destruction of boreal ecosystems, tailings ponds and other emissions, or choice of energy supplies with a higher carbon content.
The Cooperative Group www.co-operative.coop and WWF
October 26, 2009
No feedback yet
Leave a comment
| « Conferees Vote to Increase Agency Funding by 36% | Strategic Analysis of the Global Status of Carbon Capture and Storage » |
