Transcript Document
Sustainable Energy Solutions
The Energy and Global Warming
Implications of Canadian Tar Sands
Development
Dan Woynillowicz
Director, Strategy & External Relations
August 26-27, 2008
© 2006 Pembina Institute
www.pembina.org
About the Pembina Institute
One of Canada’s largest environmental
NGOs
Sole focus: sustainable energy
Research, education, consulting, advocacy
Canada’s leading NGO on oil sands and
climate policy:
www.oilsandswatch.org
climate.pembina.org
Overview
Tar Sands: A new fossil fuel frontier.
Canada’s climate change contradiction.
Trends & policy.
Statoil’s proposed tar sands investment.
Project & lifecycle GHG emissions.
A New Fossil Fuel Frontier
Tar sands represent a radically different form of
fossil fuel production
Bitumen extracted from tar sands & upgraded to
produce “synthetic” crude oil (SCO)
Significant energy requirements:
In situ extraction + upgarding requires ~ 1500 cf of
natural gas per barrel of SCO
Tar sands production is 3-5 times more GHG
intensive than conventional oil
On a full cycle basis the tar sands are 10-30% more
GHG intensive than conventional oil
GHGs from Tar to Tank
12%
4%
3%
0%
11%
0%
Bitumen E xtrac tion
Bitumen U pgrading
T rans portation to U .S . Refineries
Storage
Fuel P roduc tion/Refining
Fuel T &D
Fuel S torage
T ank to Wheel E mis s ions
0%
70%
Source: NRDC, 2008
Tar Sands & Global Warming:
The Big Picture
Proven reserves:
174 billion barrels
2006 direct GHG emissions from oil sands
(1.1 million bpd):
29 Mt
Direct emissions are only ~15 % of full cycle
emissions
Norway’s 2007 GHG emissions:
55 Mt
Tar Sands & Global Warming:
The Canadian Context
Kyoto commitment is 6%
below 1990 by 2012.
Tar sands production is
predicted to triple to 3.8
million bpd by 2020.
Tar sands emissions
represent up to half
Canada’s BAU emissions
growth to 2020.
4%
Megatonnes CO2 equivalent / year
Canada’s climate
contradiction:
1000
900
800
700
600
Canada's emissions
500
400
300
200
100
12%
4%
0
2006
oil sands
2020
Canadian Climate Policy
Abandoned Kyoto commitment to 6% below 1990
by 2012.
Government of Canada’s new target is 2% above
1990 by 2020 (8% above 2012 Kyoto
commitment).
Government of Canada’s current plan for industrial
emissions:
Uses 2006 as a baseline (rather than 1990).
Sets intensity-based target (not absolute reductions).
Does not take effect until 2010.
Fraught with loopholes.
Climate Policy & Tar Sands
The federal government’s plan will allow
GHG emissions from tar sands to increase
from 29 Mt (2006) to 80 Mt (2017) before
dropping to 49 Mt (2020).
Facilities starting in 2012 or later will face
emission intensity targets based on CCS:
But not starting until 2018.
CCS target has not been set.
No details on compliance options.
A Climate Change Laggard
Canada has backed away from any leadership on climate
change:
Have adopted a very weak target.
Blocking progress at international climate change negotiations.
Government policy is too weak to meet this weak target
Too complex, too far from cap-and-trade or carbon tax.
The bulk of reductions are delayed for a decade.
Carbon price likely too low to incent CCS, even in 2018.
Statoil’s Tar Sands Investment
1. Kai Kos Dehseh in situ extraction project
220,000 barrels bitumen per day
218 wellpads, 1,050 well pairs
~ 40 year operation
2. Upgrader project
Input: 243,000 barrels bitumen per day
Output: 222,800 barrels synthetic crude oil per
day
Kai Kos Dehseh in situ Project
Technology: Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage
(SAGD)
Production: 220,000 barrels per day (bpd) bitumen
Steam to Oil Ratio (SOR) = 3:1
Bitumen recovery: 46%
Average GHG Emission Intensity:
60 kg CO2e/barrel
Best in Class GHG Emission Intensity:
34 kg CO2e/barrel
In situ GHG Emissions Intensity
0 .2 0 0 0
0 .1 8 0 0
0 .1 6 0 0
0 .1 2 0 0
0 .1 0 0 0
0 .0 8 0 0
0 .0 6 0 0
0 .0 4 0 0
0 .0 2 0 0
0 .0 0 0 0
20
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20
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24
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26
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28
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30
20
32
20
34
20
36
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40
20
42
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44
20
46
20
48
20
50
CO2e/barrel
0 .1 4 0 0
StatO il C O 2 e t/barrel bitumen
" Bes t in C las s " C O 2 e t/barrel bitumen
Year
Upgrader Project
In: 243,000 bpd bitumen
Out: 222,800 bpd synthetic crude oil
Average GHG emission intensity:
99.8 kg CO2e/barrel (33.4 with CCS)
“Best in Class” GHG emission intensity (without
CCS):
14 kg CO2e/barrel
Competitors achieving similar GHG intensity
without CCS.
Int ensit y
(kgCO2e/barrel
of bitumen)
St
at
O
il
U
pg
St
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-U
pg
w
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Ph
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2/
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3
la
nd
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pg
N
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th
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W
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Upgrading Emissions Intensity
1 2 0 .0 0
1 0 0 .0 0
4 0 .0 0
2 0 .0 0
9 9 .5 8
9 2 .8 0
8 0 .0 0
6 0 .9 0
3 3 .4 0
6 2 .6 0
6 0 .0 0
4 0 .6 0
3 2 .9 0
3 3 .6 0
1 4 .0 0
0 .0 0
Carbon Capture & Storage
(CCS)
Statoil not considering CCS for Kai Kos Dehseh in
situ project.
Statoil considering CCS for upgrader but:
“..dependent on a suitable outlet for the CO2, the existence of an
appropriate fiscal and regulatory regime, and availability of adequate
infrastructure to transport and store the CO2.”
Alberta does not currently have:
GHG reduction targets that would compel CCS.
A sufficiently high price on carbon to compel CCS
($15/tonne penalty).
Any carbon transport or injection infrastructure.
Statoil’s Tar Sands GHG Emissions
450
400
350
I n s itu C O 2 e E mis s ions (M t)
I n s itu + upgrading with C C S C O 2 e
emis s ions (M t)
I n s itu + upgrading without C C S
C O 2 e emis s ions (M t)
300
250
Cumulat ive GHG
Emissions (MT)
200
150
100
50
20
06
20
09
20
12
20
15
20
18
20
21
20
24
20
27
20
30
20
33
20
36
20
39
20
42
20
45
20
48
0
Year
Statoil’s Tar Sands Projects &
Global Warming
Statoil’s estimated tar sands reserves:
2.37 billion barrels
Estimated life cycle GHG emissions per barrel:
~1.03 t/barrel without CCS
Life cycle GHG emissions from Statoil’s tar sands
projects:
2,448 Mt
Greenwashing the Tar Sands?
The UK Advertising Standards Authority found that
Shell’s description of the oil sands as “sustainable”
breached standards for:
Substantiation, truthfulness, environmental claims
How is Statoil describing its oil sands
development?
“I am confident that we will surpass our goals of sustainable
development in the oil sands.” - Geir JØsang, President and
CEO
“About Statoil…Goal is to create value for our owners through
profitable and safe operations and sustainable business
development without causing harm to people or the
environment.”
(emphasis added) Source: Environment Report – 2007 Annual Report,
North American Oil Sands Corporation/Statoil
Norway’s Climate Change
Commitments
10% below 1990 by 2012
30% below 1990 by 2020
Carbon neutral by 2050
Annual GHG emissions
~55 MT in 2007
Statoil’s peak annual emissions from tar
sands (2021 = 13 Mt) are equivalent to 24%
of Norway’s 2007 national emissions
Markets Shifting to Lower Carbon
Fuels
Growing U.S. concern about climate change
Next administration likely to impose cap & trade
California’s “Low Carbon Fuel Standard” being
adopted throughout U.S./Canada - possibility of
federal LCFS
Section 526 of the federal Energy
Independence & Security Act (2007)
U.S. Conference of Mayor’s resolution
Questions
Visit www.oilsandswatch.org
Dan Woynillowicz
[email protected]
1-403-538-7782
Simon Dyer
[email protected]
1-403-721-3937
Norway, Statoil & the Tar Sands
Norway’s leadership on climate creates high expectations
for StatoilHydro
Does Norway’s carbon neutral target cover all state-owned
operations?
Does government ownership create extra capacity and flexibility for
leadership?
Shell is currently the leader:
Initial operation: absolute GHG target 50% below BAU
“Shell Canada remains committed to setting an emissions reduction
target or goal for new facilities (on a full cycle basis) that is better
than the "most likely commercial supply alternative at start-up". For
the MRM Expansion 1 Project, we plan to set out a GHG
commitment and management plan in 2007, which will achieve a
meaningful reduction of GHG’s below business as usual.”