Uncontrolled
CNRL Tar Sands Spill Ongoing, 1.4M Litres Recovered
7
September, 2013
New
figures
released yesterday from the Alberta Energy Regulator (AER) show a
concerted effort is still underway to clean up the growing amount of
bitumen emulsion – a mixture of tar sands oil and water – that is
pooling in a forested area surrounding Canada
Natural Resource Ltd.’s Cold Lake project.
The
cause of the seepage, which shows no sign of subsiding, has yet to be
determined.
AER’s
updated
volumes
show that the total amount of bitumen emulsion recovered on four
separate spill sites amounts to 1444.4 cubic metres, a volume
equivalent to 1.4 million litres of oil.
In
addition, cleanup crews have removed 494 cubic metres of oily
vegetation from the forested landscape and an additional 1049.62
metric tonnes – equivalent to 2.3 million pounds – of “impacted
soils.”
The
AER’s previous figures, released August 29th,
stated 1275.7 cubic metres of bitumen emulsion had been recovered to
date, the equivalent of 1.2
million litres.
Between
the dates of August 29th
and September 6th
roughly 168,800 litres of bitumen emulsion were recovered, equaling
around 1062 barrels of oil equivalent, or an average of 150 barrels
per day.
CNRL,
the company responsible for the in-situ
operations
that led to the seepage, put out a release
dated August 25-31 that claims the rate of bitumen emulsion release
amounts to less than 20 barrels of bitumen emulsion per day.
The
disparity between CNRL’s figures – a release of 20
barrels per day – and the AER recovery figures – of 150
barrels per day – is due to unrecovered bitumen emulsion on site,
according to CNRL public affairs advisor Zoe Addington. CNRL is
cleaning up more per day than is currently leaking, she said.
Original
CNRL
images released
to reporter Emma Pullman show oil pooled high in a forested
area, presenting both the company and provincial regulators with an
extraordinarily difficult cleanup.
The
CNRL statement also claims the company is “focusing on a reduced
impact area of 13.5 hectares, a 35% reduction” since original
reporting.
The
AER report states 20.7 hectares have been impacted from the ongoing
release.
CNRL
is still working to recover bitumen, remove soil, manage contaminated
water and expose fissures where bitumen emulsion is migrating to the
surface on three of the leakage sites, says the AER. The company is
also recovering bitumen, agitating and skimming oil from the surface
of a water body and removing vegetation from the fourth site.
The
AER also reports that to date 2 beavers, 43 birds, 104 amphibians and
40 small mammals are deceased as a result of the release.
CNRL’s
latest statement reads, “unfortunately some animal fatalities have
occurred and three beavers, seventeen birds and two small mammals are
being cared for at a Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre...”
As
part of an ongoing subsurface investigation CNRL is drilling
hydrogeological and delineation wells around the affected locations
and has cited “mechanical failures” as the presumed cause of the
continuous leaks, although the AER recently
told DeSmog Canada the cause remains unknown.
CNRL
was responsible for a
similar release in 2009
that was likely caused by underground fractures, according to a
report
by the Energy Resources Conservation Board, the former AER.
According
to Cara Tobin,
spokesperson for the AER, the current spill “is in the same
operational area” as the 2009 release. “These are releases coming
up from basically cracks in the ground, not from the well pad,” she
said. Although, she adds, it is too early to say what might be the
cause of this particular series of underground leaks.
“We
do not have the technical data or evidence to verify what that cause
might be...We will determine that through our investigation process,”
she said.
Last
week Environment Canada announced a
federal investigation
into the seepage is underway alongside two separate investigations at
the provincial level.
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