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ALBERTA OIL SANDS
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ALBERTA OIL SANDS. What is oil? Mostly dead plant material buried and squished underground for many years Why do we need it? To run cars, planes and some.

Dec 27, 2015

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Page 1: ALBERTA OIL SANDS. What is oil? Mostly dead plant material buried and squished underground for many years Why do we need it? To run cars, planes and some.

ALBERTA OIL SANDS

Page 2: ALBERTA OIL SANDS. What is oil? Mostly dead plant material buried and squished underground for many years Why do we need it? To run cars, planes and some.

What is oil?

Mostly dead plant material buried and squished

underground for many yearsWhy do we need

it?

To run cars, planes and some electricity generating

plants

What happens when it runs out?

Oil is a non renewable (will run out) energy source

So is natural gas which heats our homes

Page 3: ALBERTA OIL SANDS. What is oil? Mostly dead plant material buried and squished underground for many years Why do we need it? To run cars, planes and some.

OIL SANDS VS DIRECT OIL DRILLING

• The oil is in the form of bitumen and is mixed with clay, sand and water

A pump jack lifts liquid oil deposits from underground

There is oil in this sand; how can we get it out?

Page 4: ALBERTA OIL SANDS. What is oil? Mostly dead plant material buried and squished underground for many years Why do we need it? To run cars, planes and some.

BEFORE GASOLINE

• They used the mixture to coat their dwellings and seal canoes

• Native Canadians discovered the oil sands

Page 5: ALBERTA OIL SANDS. What is oil? Mostly dead plant material buried and squished underground for many years Why do we need it? To run cars, planes and some.

HOW IS THE OIL SEPARATED FROM THE

SANDS?• Bitumen is the oil component of the sand,

is very thick (viscous) and is removed from the sands in several different ways

Page 6: ALBERTA OIL SANDS. What is oil? Mostly dead plant material buried and squished underground for many years Why do we need it? To run cars, planes and some.

IN SITU REMOVAL OF BITUMEN

Because the bitumen is very thick, it cannot be pumped up by regular processes

Steam can be pumped down to decrease the thickness of the bitumen so that it can be removed

Natural gas is used to heat the steam – Where does natural gas come from?Can you spot a problem?

Page 7: ALBERTA OIL SANDS. What is oil? Mostly dead plant material buried and squished underground for many years Why do we need it? To run cars, planes and some.

Using steam to get oil out of the sands

Page 8: ALBERTA OIL SANDS. What is oil? Mostly dead plant material buried and squished underground for many years Why do we need it? To run cars, planes and some.

STRIP MININGSurface is removed to expose the sands

Can you spot an environmental problem with strip mining?

Page 9: ALBERTA OIL SANDS. What is oil? Mostly dead plant material buried and squished underground for many years Why do we need it? To run cars, planes and some.

Transported via a pipeline as a slurry which is a mixture of oil sands and water

The slurry takes the sand to an

extraction plant

which separates the bitumen from the sand

Page 10: ALBERTA OIL SANDS. What is oil? Mostly dead plant material buried and squished underground for many years Why do we need it? To run cars, planes and some.

AT THE EXTRACTION PLANT

• Hot water is added and the slurry is agitated

• Small air bubbles attach to bitumen droplets forming a froth which floats to the top of the separation vessels

• The bitumen is skimmed off the top

Page 11: ALBERTA OIL SANDS. What is oil? Mostly dead plant material buried and squished underground for many years Why do we need it? To run cars, planes and some.

TAILINGS PONDS

Are areas where wastes from

bitumen extraction are stored

They contain all kinds of toxic chemicals,

including bits of oil

Page 12: ALBERTA OIL SANDS. What is oil? Mostly dead plant material buried and squished underground for many years Why do we need it? To run cars, planes and some.

NEW TECHNOLOGY• Very promising, because it is cheaper

and less harmful on the environment (no natural gas burned, no strip mining of the landscape)

• Solvent extraction – a material is added to the oil sands which dissolves the oil to isolate it making it easy to recover

• The solvent is not wasted, it is recycled

Some solvents are toxic chemicals – Can you spot the potential environmental problem?

Page 13: ALBERTA OIL SANDS. What is oil? Mostly dead plant material buried and squished underground for many years Why do we need it? To run cars, planes and some.

FOR YOUR INFORMATION

• Alberta’s oil sands contain 85% of world’s total bitumen reserves

• These reserves rival the traditional oil reserves in Saudi Arabia

• Canadians are one of the largest consumers of oil in the world

• Another environmental problem - For every barrel of oil produced, 80kg of greenhouse gases are produced, examples - from using heavy equipment and natural gas to get the oil out

Page 14: ALBERTA OIL SANDS. What is oil? Mostly dead plant material buried and squished underground for many years Why do we need it? To run cars, planes and some.

FAQS ABOUT GREENHOUSE GASES

The Cost of Getting Oil

What are they? - carbon dioxide is an example of one

Where do they come from? – produced when anything is burned, eg natural gas to heat your homes, gasoline in your car

Why are they a problem? – build up in the atmosphere and trap heat energy from the sun contributing to global warming

What is global warming? – the rise in global air temperature NOT ONLY

CAUSED by an increase in greenhouse gases

Page 15: ALBERTA OIL SANDS. What is oil? Mostly dead plant material buried and squished underground for many years Why do we need it? To run cars, planes and some.

How does this cartoon link to global warming?