US
'Dirty Oil' Imports Set to
Triple
Insatiable
resource addiction leading US towards 'race to the
bottom'
30
April, 2012
InsideClimate
News compiled a map and list showing industry's planned expansion,
discovering that there are more than 10,000 miles of pipelines
planned to send an additional 3.1 million barrels a day of Alberta's
oil to export markets, at a cost to build of almost $40 billion.
Earlier:
Various
plans and schemes are planned or under review for the United States
to triple import of Canadian 'bitumen' -- aka tar sands oil, which
scientists and environmentalists call the 'world's dirtiest oil' --
over the next eight years from roughly a half million barrels a day
to over 1.5 million barrels.
Those
numbers are estimates generated by the Sierra Club and other
environmental groups in a recent report, but were confirmed by CNN,
who compared them with the Canadian oil production numbers generated
by the US Energy Information Administration.
Environmental
groups have launched a spirited, and in many ways effective, campaign
against Canadian tar sands, but the Canadians have so much of it that
the push for its continued development will not die easily. "We've
got all this unconventional crude, and we're completely unprepared
for it," said Michael Marx, a senior campaign director at the
Sierra Club. "It's definitely more dangerous" than regular
oil, he told CNN.
*
* *
U.S.
imports of what environmentalists are calling "dirty oil"
are set to triple over the next decade, raising concerns over the
environmental impact of extracting it and whether pipelines can
safely transport this Canadian oil.
"We
just don't have the technical sophistication to vacuum oil off the
bottom of a river." --Michael Marx, Sierra Club
The
United States currently imports over half a million barrels a day of
bitumen from Canada's oil sands region, according to the Sierra Club.
That number, Sierra Club says is set to grow to over 1.5 million
barrels by 2020. That represents nearly 10% of the country's current
consumption.
The
U.S. Energy Information Administration's overall Canadian oil
production numbers are in-line with the Sierra Club's projected pace.
Bitumen
is a heavy, tar-like oil. It needs to be heavily processed in order
to be turned into more viscous, easier to refine, crude oil. Because
it's so thick, to make it more viscous and move it by pipeline, it
gets diluted with natural gas liquids.
Besides
the sheer amount of energy and water needed to process and extract
bitumen, environmentalists say it's more dangerous to move because
it's more corrosive to pipelines than regular crude.
"We've
got all this unconventional crude, and we're completely unprepared
for it," said Michael Marx, a senior campaign director at the
Sierra Club. "It's definitely more dangerous" than regular
oil.
Marx
says bitumen is not only more abrasive than traditional crude, it's
15 to 20 times more acidic.
The
Sierra Club, along with other environmental groups, recently put out
a report showing that pipelines in Alberta, where bitumen is commonly
transported, had 16 times the number of leaks than pipelines in the
United States, which generally don't carry it.
Plus,
when bitumen does leak, environmentalists say it's harder to clean
up. Unlike regular oil, they say it's heavier than water, meaning it
will sink to the bottom of lakes, rivers or bays.
"We
just don't have the technical sophistication to vacuum oil off the
bottom of a river," he said.
Bitumen
currently comes into this country via a pipeline running from Alberta
to Wisconsin and in the original Keystone pipeline that terminates in
Illinois.
But
Canada is planning on vastly increasing the amount of oil -- and
bitumen -- that it gets out of its oil sands region. To get that oil
out, more infrastructure needs to be built.
Along
with the proposed Keystone expansion, other ideas call for pipelines
to Canada's West Coast, to the Atlantic Coast through New England,
and an expansion of rail lines. All of these routes would pass
through sensitive ecological areas.
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