Tar Sands Report
Tar Sands Report
Tar Sands Report
Introduction
1967 was an important year for Canada. In addition to the Expo 67 World Fair in Montreal, it also marked
the beginning of the Tar Sands operations in Alberta. The Tar Sands operations have proven to be one of
Canada’s most controversial and heated subjects. Opponents of the Tar Sands argue it is destroying our
natural environment and that more jobs can be provided in the long run through investing in the low-
impact renewable energy sector.1 Those in favour of the Tar Sands argue it supports the economy and has
provided over 35,000 jobs cumulatively.2 However, should the short-term economic gains accrued from
the Alberta Tar Sands outweigh its detrimental impact on our natural environment? Through assessing the
Tar Sands from five measures of sustainability, it is evident that the damage to our environment far
outweighs the short-term economic benefits.
1
Sven Teske et al., “Energy [R]evolution: A Sustainable World Energy Outlook,” European Renewable Energy Council
(2010), http://www.energyblueprint.info/1302.0.html (accessed September 21, 2010)
2
“Oil Sands Jobs,” Oilfield Directory Publication (2009), http://www.oilfielddirectory.com/article/detail.php?id=205
(accessed September 22, 2010)
3
“World Footprint: Do we fit on the planet?” Global Footprint Network (2010),
http://www.footprintnetwork.org/en/index.php/GFN/page/world_footprint/ (accessed September 21, 2010)
Land Use
The Alberta government requires Tar Sands companies to restore the land to "equivalent land capability".4
This means that the ability of the land to support various land uses after reclamation must be similar to
what existed before the land was disturbed. However, the land’s state after reclamation does not
necessarily have to be identical to its state prior to excavation.
In March 2008, 30 years after opening its first mine in the Athabasca region, Syncrude Canada became the
first oil company to receive a reclamation certificate from the Alberta government for restoring 104
hectares of land. Syncrude claims to have restored 22 percent of their disturbed land to date 5; however
the Alberta government has not given Syncrude a reclamation certificate for this restored land (apart from
the 104 hectares). The Alberta government has been criticized by the Alberta Auditor General for its poor
record in tracking land reclamation of Tar Sands operators.6 According to the Government of Alberta, only
0.16 percent of the total land disturbed by Tar Sands extraction has been reclaimed. This 0.16 percent
represents the 104 hectares of land that was reclaimed by Syncrude in March 2008. 7 The 11 companies
operating in the oil sands claim to have collectively restored 11 percent of total disturbed land; however,
there is no government certification to support this claim.8
The aforementioned statistics suggests that Alberta’s land is being disturbed at a rate far greater than it is
being restored. This is highlighted very clearly in Figure 2 which shows the gap between the disturbance of
land and its reclamation rates. Further, it is important to note that the blue line represents the land that
has been reclaimed by industry, not the land that has been certified by the government.
4
“Upstream Oil and Gas Reclamation and Remediation Program,” Government of Alberta (2010),
http://environment.alberta.ca/01108.html (accessed September 23, 2010)
5
“Land Reclamation,” Syncrude Canada (2010), http://www.syncrude.ca/users/folder.asp?FolderID=5909 (accessed
September 23, 2010)
6
Nathan Lemphers et al., “Toxic Liability,” The Pembina Institute (2010),
http://pubs.pembina.org/reports/toxicliabilityfactsheetfinal.pdf (accessed September 25, 2010)
7
ibid
8
op. cit.
9
ibid
With oil sand deposits lying under 149,000 square kilometres of Boreal forest in Alberta, equivalent to the
size of Florida, the amount of boreal forest and muskeg will continue to decline exponentially as oil
extraction rises at unsustainable levels.10 Figure 3 displays the Alberta boreal region impacted by Tar
Sands development.
10
Dan Woynillowicz et al., “Oil Sands Fever: The Untold Story,” The Pembina Institute (2009),
http://pubs.pembina.org/reports/OSF_Fact72.pdf (accessed September 23, 2010)
11
Jeff Wells et al., “Impact on Birds of Tar Sands Oil Development in Canada's Boreal Forest,” National Resources
Defense Council (2008), http://www.nrdc.org/wildlife/borealbirds.pdf (accessed September 20, 2010)
Water
Tar Sands mining operators have been licensed to extract 359 million cubic meters of water from the
Athabasca River. This is double the amount of water consumed by the City of Calgary annually.12 What’s
more, 92 percent of this water ends up in contaminated tailing ponds and the Government of Alberta
does not have any reclamation standards for the 840 million cubic metres of tailing lakes.13 Tailings are a
by-product of the tar sands extraction process which involves separating oil from sand. This procedure
produces a combination of sand, silt, clay, water, hydrocarbons and toxic chemicals which are pumped
into containment sites called tailing lakes.14 Few technologies exist to remediate tailing lakes and those
that do exist, are extremely costly: it is estimated that the cost of remediating one tonne of tailings is
between $13.09 and $16.40. 15 This begs the question of whether these tailing ponds will ever be cleaned,
and whether the Athabasca River will be replenished to levels prior to Tar Sands extraction.
Water
Under Cradle to Cradle design, all the water used in operating a business should be endlessly recycled.
The Tar Sands are nowhere near recycling 359 million cubic metres of water. In fact, only eight percent of
water does not end up in tailing ponds.19
12
Mary Griffiths et al., “Troubled Waters, Troubling Trends,” The Pembina Institute (2006),
http://pubs.pembina.org/reports/TroubledW_Full.pdf (accessed September 23, 2010)
13
op. cit.
14
Ricardo Acuña., “Toxic Tailings from the Tar Sands,” Tar Sands Watch (2008), http://www.tarsandswatch.org/toxic-
tailings-tar-sands-alberta-environmental-resources-conservation-boards-new-directive-worse-use (accessed
September 21, 2010)
15
Nathan Lemphers et al., “Toxic Liability: How Albertans Could End Up Paying for Oil Sands Mine Reclamation,” The
Pembina Institute (2010), http://pubs.pembina.org/reports/toxic-liability-report.pdf (accessed September 23, 2010)
16
op. cit.
17
William McDonough and Michael Braungart, Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the way we make things (North Point
Press, 2002), http://www.mcdonough.com/cradle_to_cradle.htm (accessed September 23, 2010)
18
“Questions and Answers about the Alberta Tar Sands,” Greenpeace Canada (2007),
http://www.greenpeace.org/canada/en/recent/tarsandsfaq/#4 (accessed September 25, 2010)
19
op. cit.
Soil Organisms
Soil organisms are quintessential to biodiversity in Alberta. However, these rich soil organisms are being
removed to make way for Tar Sands mining. According to Nature Canada (2007) 20:
The complex relationships between soil organisms such as bacteria, fungus, plants, invertebrates
and larger fauna (including birds that are the hallmark of the boreal forest) are thousands of years
in the making, but take only a few moments to be destroyed.
Under the Cradle to Cradle philosophy, oil companies would have to find ways to extract oil in a way that
has minimal impact on the natural environment.
Sand Waste:
By 2010, the Tar Sands industry will have generated eight billion tons of sand waste which contains
naphthenic acid and paraffin: chemicals which can have adverse health effects on mammals leading to
liver problems and brain haemorrhaging.22
20
“How do the Tar Sands Affect Wildlife Habitat?”Nature Canada (2008),
http://www.naturecanada.ca/tarsands_habitat.asp (accessed September 24, 2010)
21
Jennifer Grant, “Carbon Neutral Oil Sands by 2010,” The Pembina Institute (2010),
http://pubs.pembina.org/reports/CarbonNeutral2020_FACT.pdf (accessed September 25, 2010)
22
Dru Oja Jay, “What the Tar Sands Need,” The Dominion 48 (2007), http://www.dominionpaper.ca/articles/1480
(accessed September 19, 2010)
23
ibid
Waste Water
As discussed in the Cradle to Cradle section and section on the Earth’s Carrying Capacity, the Tar Sands
produce an exorbitant amount of waste water called tailing ponds. These tailing ponds reduce earth’s
limited supply of fresh water.
In total, tailing ponds in Alberta leak over four billion litres of contaminated water into the environment
per year. According to Price (2008), the ramifications of this leakage are staggering:
Experiments with this water on fish have shown serious reproductive impacts. Studies on birds
have found increased mortality rates, and experiments on plants have shown delayed germination
and lower seedling weights. The tailings include naphthenic acids, which are acutely toxic and
known to persist for many years, making tailings leakage a long-term contamination problem for
the Athabasca watershed, the Mackenzie drainage it runs into, and the Boreal forest. 27
24
Andrew Nikiforuk, “Who Killed the Tar Sands Water Report?” Polaris Institute (2010),
http://www.polarisinstitute.org/who_killed_the_tar_sands_water_report (accessed September 20, 2010)
25
Matt Price, “11 Million Litres a Day,” Environmental Defence (2010),
http://www.environmentaldefence.ca/reports/pdf/TailingsReport_FinalDec8.pdf (accessed September 22, 2010)
26
op. cit.
27
op. cit
4. Do the Tar Sands calculate complete economic costing?
Despite being the most profitable industry in Canada with over $31.1 billion in profit generated in 2006
alone, it is interesting to note the lack of complete costing in the price of a barrel of oil28. The lack of
complete economic costing also results in a negative impact on the renewable energy sector. This sector
has not been able to compete with oil extracted from the Tar Sands in terms of pricing, because Tar Sands
oil is underpriced as it does not include: the cost for Tar Sands companies to offset their greenhouse gas
emissions; the savings accrued from provincial and federal subsidies; and the inaccurate security deposits
for land reclamation. Further, the profitability of the Tar Sands industry comes at the expense of
aboriginal groups who live downstream from the Tar Sands and bear the costs of pollution.
Carbon Offsetting
As discussed in the Cradle to Cradle section on greenhouse gases, none of the companies extracting oil
from Alberta are required to offset their carbon emissions. From an economic standpoint, this means the
price of oil is underpriced as it does not reflect the cost of environmental degradation. The cost of carbon
capture is estimated to be between $2.82 and $8.55 assuming each barrel of oil produces 188lbs of C02.29
Federal Subsidies
Under the Accelerated Capital Cost Allowance (ACCA) program, the Tar Sands are allowed to defer 100
percent of provincial and federal income tax until all capital costs are absorbed. This is a more attractive
subsidy than typically received by other Canadian corporations who are able to deduct only 25 percent of
their costs until capital costs are paid off. In addition, Tar Sands companies are also able to: fully deduct
exploration expenditures compared to 25 percent deductions for other Canadian companies; and deduct
development expenses at 30 percent per year compared to 25 percent for other companies.30
Provincial Subsidies
The Alberta government charges a royalty of just one percent on gross revenue from Tar Sands projects
until they recover all capital costs. Once Tar Sands companies recoup their capital cost, they are required
to pay only a 25 percent royalty on their net earnings. Apart from taxation, this royalty is the main
payment made by the Tar Sands companies to cover the destruction of the boreal forest, obliteration of
rich soil organisms and wildlife, and the extraction of 359 million cubic metres of water from the
Athabasca River.31 Canada’s royalty fee on oil is far below that of other nations. In Russia, once the price
of oil exceeds $25 U.S. per barrel, the Russian government charges a 90 percent royalty and similarly,
28
op. cit.
29
Frederic Beauregard-Tellier, “The Economics of Carbon Capture and Storage”, Parliamentary Information and
Research Service Library of Parliament (2006),
http://www2.parl.gc.ca/Content/LOP/ResearchPublications/prb05103-e.pdf (accessed September 24, 2010)
30
John Dillon et al., “Pumped Up: How Canada subsidizes fossil fuels at the expense of green alternatives,” Kairos
http://www.tarsandswatch.org/files/PumpedUpInsides3.pdf (accessed September 25, 2010)
31
op. cit.
Ecuador recently introduced a 99 percent royalty. Further, Canadian royalties are significantly lower than
other jurisdictions such as Norway and Bolivia.
As mentioned earlier, Tar Sands companies are required to reclaim land disturbed during the mining
process. To ensure companies adhere to this requirement, the Government of Alberta requires Tar Sands
companies to post a security deposit to fund land reclamation in the event the operator cannot pay in the
future or refuses to pay. Though great in theory, this deposit is nowhere near the actual costs of land
reclamation. The Environmental Protection Security Fund established in 2009 was only $820 million for
68,574 hectares. The Pembina Institute conservatively estimates that the cost of reclaiming 68,574
hectares of disturbed land is between $10 billion to $15 billion which is 12 to 18 times higher than the
$820 million collected in the security deposit. The Alberta auditor general has raised concerns of the
inadequate security deposit four times in the last 11 years, most recently in 2009. 32
In addition, security deposits are paid on individual mining projects. This means the security deposit can
only be used to reclaim the mine it was initially intended for.
The Tar Sands produce numerous negative externalities that will have irreparable consequences.
32
op. cit.
33
op. cit.
34
op. cit.
Toxic Waste
Tar Sand operations produce large amounts of toxic waste called “tailings”. Tailings are a combination of
water, clay, sand, silt, contaminants and hydrocarbons. Tailings contain contaminants including
naphthenic acids, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, phenolic compounds, ammonia, mercury and other
trace metals. 35 The combination of water and tailings is extremely dangerous to mammals and aquatic species as evidenced by the deaths of 1,600
migrating ducks in March 2008 who were killed when they landed in a syncrude tailing pond. Further,
tailing ponds are increasing at a rate equivalent to 80 Olympic sized swimming pools each day!
These tailing ponds are an additional threat because they leak into groundwater; this is evidenced by
research indicating that as much as four billion litres of tailings leak into the groundwater supply annually.
In addition to the detrimental effects of tailings, Aboriginal communities in Fort Chipewyan have reported
growth in cancer rates as oil production increased upstream from their community. This claim is backed
by the International Agency for Research on Cancer, the National Toxicology Program, and the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency. These institutions have conducted research demonstrating that certain
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons found in tailings can have definite, probable or possible cancer-causing
agents in humans.36
The Aboriginal communities in Fort Chipewyan also reported significant deterioration in water quality and
an increase in the number of mutated and inedible fish.37 A study led by Dr. Erin Kelly and Dr. David
Schindler at the University of Alberta (2010) found that “levels of cadmium, copper, lead, mercury, nickel,
silver and zinc in water and snow downstream from oilsands development exceeded federal and
provincial guidelines for the protection of aquatic life”.38 Dr. Kelly and Schindler collected water samples
from over 35 sites along the Athabasca River, its tributaries, and Lake Athabasca.
35
Kenny Bruno et al,. “Tar Sands Invasion: How dirty and expensive oil from Canada threatens America's new energy
economy,” National Resources Defense Council (2010), http://www.nrdc.org/energy/files/TarSandsInvasion-full.pdf
(accessed September 26, 2010)
36
op. cit.
37
“Aboriginal Rights,” Tar Sands Watch (2010), http://www.tarsandswatch.org/aboriginal-rights (accessed
September 20, 2010)
38
Jeffrey Jones, “Oil Sands polluting Canadian river: study,” Reuters Canada (2010),
systemhttp://ca.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idCATRE67T3H920100830?pageNumber=1&virtualBrandChanne
l=0 (accessed September 22, 2010)
39
op. cit.
Figure 5: Global Water Supply40
Conclusion
Canadian athletes made history this year at the Winter Olympics, when they set the record for winning
the most gold medals. It is time for the Government of Alberta to follow the audacity of Canadian athletes
and set strict environmental legislation that will ensure the price of oil is reflective of the negative
externalities it produces. Further, the Alberta government must impose deadlines for land and tailing
ponds to be reclaimed by, and eliminate all government subsidies to Tar Sands companies. These
strategies will increase the price of Tar Sands oil causing companies to invest in more efficient
technologies, or leave the market due to reduced profitability.
40
James E. McWhinney, “Water: The Ultimate Commodity”, Investopedia (2006),
http://www.investopedia.com/articles/06/Water.asp (accessed September 27, 2010)
41
“Greenhouse Gases, Climate Change and Energy,” U.S. Energy Information Administration Independent Statistics
and Analysis (2008), http://www.eia.doe.gov/bookshelf/brochures/greenhouse/Chapter1.htm (accessed September
21, 2010)
42
“Denmark in Brief,” Denmark: The Official Website of Denmark (2010), http://www.denmark.dk/en/menu/About-
Denmark/Denmark-In-Brief/ (accessed September 21, 2010)
43
op. cit.