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jseutter | 2 years ago
What works for monitoring in other basins is obviously insufficient for the oil sands, so it's good to see the federal government funding these sorts of studies. It will likely lead to better monitoring and reporting regulations, but the Alberta government will likely scream that a Trudeau is trying to f** us over once again. The last time in the 80s was plain protectionism, while this is protectionism for a much better reason.
I love my province, but man, are we stupid sometimes.
The oil produced mostly gets shipped to the US, where we sell it at a discount because it's crappy quality. This in turns helps the US pollute more but save dollars in the process. Oil sands oil makes up about 14% of US oil consumption.
If I was dictator of Alberta, I wouldn't do anything to stop production, I would just make a law that any production energy has to come from renewable, non-carbon sources. It would generate a frenzy of research and development that hasn't been seen since the industrial revolution as people pant and salivate at all that money sitting in the ground. :)
I eventually decided I wouldn't work for oil companies any longer. If they want to do it, they'll have to do it without me. It has led me down a fun career path of working for companies I only dreamed about working for when I was in school.
Energy statistics by a partisan group, so numbers might be biased: https://sustainablesociety.com/research-material/oil-sands/
Energy stats worldwide: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal...
fastneutron|2 years ago
I want to echo this point, because it gets talked about in the popular media like it's just another kind of garden variety crude oil, when it is anything but. For the curious, there are independent sellers (on ebay and elsewhere) who sell specimens of the stuff, along with samples of other kinds of raw fossil fuel and energy minerals. It's very helpful for demos and discussions like this one.
This stuff is almost literally road tar mixed with sand, almost like asphalt. It's difficult to break up by hand when cold, and when warm it has a tarry, putty-like texture. Contrast this with light-sweet crude, which is a pale yellow, gasoline-smelling liquid. Once you have a feel for these things, it doesn't take a leap of the imagination to grasp that the latter is going to take a lot less effort and energy to turn into useful products than the former!
Solvency|2 years ago
nytesky|2 years ago
It uses a ton of water. I think more than oil sands so, if the oil sands displace some fracking it is a global net positive to have that substation.
About a decade ago I realized we are going to extract all the oil, no matter what. All we can do is try to slow the rate to give nature time to heal and maybe develop counter measures to pollution.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2023/09/25/climate/frack...
JamesCoyne|2 years ago
Also: this page is really interesting generally https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakken_formation
pjc50|2 years ago
4C warming is going to be toasty. Mind you, timescales matter; we don't have to extract all the oil now, this century, despite what drillers demand.
danbolt|2 years ago
pfdietz|2 years ago
They don't actually use oil to produce the oil though, do they? If they need heat it would be cheaper to use (say) natural gas.
pstuart|2 years ago
I like your idea better, but perhaps a softer touch might get more traction?
jseutter|2 years ago
I agree, there's probably a good reason I'm not dictator of Alberta. Several reasons, actually. Something something dehumanizing people something..
hatenberg|2 years ago
kortilla|2 years ago
This is a dumb statistic and doesn’t help prove a point. It can “take 3 barrels” to produce 2 and it would still be worth it because it doesn’t actually take 3 barrels. It takes the energy equivalent and the value of oil is the energy density with its portability.
ben_w|2 years ago
Today, the statistic is still relevant because we've got other ways to make energy-dense portable fuels from renewables.
[0] unless you can substitute oil for another energy source, which was only sometimes part of those discussions, the rest of the time it was "prepare for collapse!" with images from the original Mad Max films.