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P. Kim Sturgess, P.Eng. FCAE
Canadian Water SummitCanadian Water Summit
June 14, 2011June 14, 2011
Water – Energy Nexus:The Evolving Story
Think Globally .. Plan Regionally .. Act Locally
Whiskey is for Drinking… Water is for Fighting Over.
Steven E. Koonin, Under Secretary for Science, U.S. Department of Energy
Total = 12,500 km3
Steven E. Koonin, Under Secretary for Science, U.S. Department of Energy
Steven E. Koonin, Under Secretary for Science, U.S. Department of Energy
66
Estimated annual world water use by sector 1900 to 2000 – another 40% increase by 2020*
Courtesy: Dr. A. Zehnder AWRI*Source: United Nations Environment Programme
Do we have enough WATER
to grow the food???
Steven E. Koonin, Under Secretary for Science, U.S. Department of Energy
Steven E. Koonin, Under Secretary for Science, U.S. Department of Energy
99
Environmental and apportionment requirements are not considered by this measure.
Source: Population Action International, 1997 (Courtesy of Wendy Brown, TEPCA)
0
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40,000
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Global Comparison - Annual Natural Water Supply Per Person(1995)
Water Resources in Canada and Alberta
Canadians do not show up well on OECD Environmental Water Indicators
Trend
Since 1980, overall water use in Canada has increased by 25.7%. This is five times higher than the overall OECD increase of 4.5%.
In contrast, nine OECD nations were able to decrease their overall water use since 1980 (Sweden, the Netherlands, the United States, the United Kingdom, the Czech Republic, Luxembourg, Poland, Finland and Denmark).
Perception that we squander water exacerbates issue of water use in resource extraction
“Wild unregulated pillaging of the environment at the expense of the First Nations … that is what the Europeans think of us.”
Minister Rob Renner (Chamber of Commerce May 25, 2010)
“More and more our investment partners are trying to steer us away from investments in oil sands and coal technologies.”
Scott MacDonald, Partner Emerald Ventures (June 12, 2010)
Protestors demonstrate outside the U.K. headquarters of BP in London on Sept. 1, 2009. Protestors earlier targeted the head office of a leading bank, demonstrating against the bank's investments in fossil-fuel projects, especially funding for the coal industry and tar-sands extraction in Canada.
Food Energy Water Tradeoff
Food
Water
Energy
This is the challenge of Public Policy in Alberta
Adaptation strategies are very differentNorth and South
Estimated Annual Water Use was 3.2 billion cubic metres in 2005
69%
6%
5%
6%14%
Oil and Gas Industry most likely to adapt
Challenges:
South Saskatchewan: Scarcity. This industry usually last priority for
water
Lower Athabasca: Social license to
operate
Alberta Water Allocations and Estimated Use
Source: Alberta Environment
Water use in Agriculture and Energy
Annual water consumption forecastfor power generation in Alberta*
*by type of power generation Note that water consumption scale begins at 100,000,000 m3
Upstream Petroleum IndustryFresh Water Demand Forecast
-
50,000
100,000
150,000
200,000
250,000
300,000
350,000
400,000
450,000
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
Year
1,00
0 m
3/ye
ar
Conventional EOR Well Development Oil Sands In-Situ
Oil Sands Mining Integrated - Cooling Oil Sands Mining Integrated - Process & Other Oil Sands Mining Integrated - Tailings
Oil Sands Mining Extraction Only - Tailings Oil Sands Mining Extraction Only - Process & Other
Extraction Only OS- Tailings
Integrated OS - Tailings
Extraction Only OS – Proc.& Other
Integrated OS - Cooling
Note: Fresh Water Demand for the Oil Sands operations is the water withdrawn from the River; does not include fresh water collected on site
South Saskatchewan RegionEstimated Water Use by Sector
7%
85%
4%
2%
2%0.1%
Agricultural Other Municipal Industrial Commercial Petroleum
Estimated Water Use 2.4 billion m3 per year
The Surface Water Supply in the North is large
Source: Alberta Environment
Athabasca has a large Environmental Base Flow
Source: Alberta Environment
Lower Athabasca Region Estimated Water Use by Sector
6%
88%0.1%1%2%3%
Petroleum Other Municipal Agricultural Industrial Commercial
Estimated Water Use 0.124 billion m3 per year*
* 5% of water use in South Saskatchewan region
Challenge of Tailings Ponds remains
The Oil Sands Leadership Initiative
25
Alberta Environment, Alberta Energy and SRD participate as
observers
Five founding companies:
www.OSLI.ca
Major investments in Technology in Oil Sands
Advanced boiler technology that could take untreated (or lesser-treated) water directly
Ceramic membranes for more efficient SAGD de-oiling & filtering
Tailings recovery technology allows for faster reclamation of tailings areas and higher water recycle rates
Challenge: Currently operators in the oil sands
region are working independently to solve their individual water sourcing and disposal needs.
Project Objective: Lower the regional environmental
impact (water, land, wastes, GHGs)
Project Description Examine the potential to reduce
environmental impact through regional collaboration.
Potential Benefits Lower regional Environmental Net
Effect Reduce tailings liability Establish reliable SAGD water sources Accelerate tailings reclamation
Regional Water Solutions Project*
27
Regional Alternative
Sub-Regional Alternative
*Diagram for illustration purposes only - may not show all current, planned, or proposed projects
Water: The Key to Our Sustainable Future
For more information:For more information:www.waterportal.cawww.waterportal.cawww.albertawatersmart.cominfo@albertawatersmart.cominfo@albertawatersmart.com
Kim.Sturgess@albertawatersmart.com
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