The surface mining extent is startling enough in scope, but surface mining is just the proverbial tip of the iceberg: the vast majority of oil sands wealth - 80% to be exact - lies farther below the surface. These deeper reserves will most likely be extracted through in-situ or "on site" methods, like Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD), where steam is injected into the ground to liquefy the bitumen for easier retrieval.
(maps and images after the jump)
Although not as much of an eyesore as open-pit surface mining operations which draw the majority of attention, in-situ methods are no less invasive or environmentally risky.
Taking in-situ extraction into account, the true extent of the oil sands development area absolutely dwarfs the already huge surface mining footprint:
![]() |
| Extent of existing surface mining operations, and lands approved for future surface mining, as of 2009. Washington, DC for scale. |
So what does in-situ development look like? Google Earth has detailed imagery showing some of the active in-situ operations; they look a lot like natural-gas drilling, with drilling sites spaced very closely together, processing facilities, and a network of access roads, pipelines and utility corridors. In many places, as in the example below, there is also a dense grid of seismic survey lines. All in all, this is a highly fragmented landscape - and there's a lot more going on beneath the ground that we can't see:
![]() |
Image of Christina Lake In-Situ Extraction Operations run by Cenovus Energy. They have recently won approval to more than double current capacity to a total of 250,000 barrels per day. |



0 comments:
Post a Comment