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First U.S. Tar Sands Mine Stirs Controversy In Utah

By CHI-CHI ZHANG   04/10/11 04:42 PM ET   AP

Us Tar Sands Oil Utah

SALT LAKE CITY -- Beneath the lush, green hills of eastern Utah's Uinta Basin, where elk, bear and bison outnumber people, the soil is saturated with a sticky tar that may soon provide a new domestic source of petroleum for the United States. It would be a first-of-its kind project in the country that some fear could be a slippery slope toward widespread wilderness destruction.

With crude prices surging beyond $100 a barrel, and politicians preaching the need to reduce America's reliance on foreign supplies, companies are now looking for more local sources. One Canadian firm says it's found it in the tar sands of Utah's Book Cliffs.

Alberta-based Earth Energy Resources Inc. aims to start with a roughly 62-acre mine here to produce bitumen, a tar-like form of petroleum, from oil-soaked sands. For decades, other Utah operators have used oil sands as a poor-man's asphalt, and Canada has been wringing oil from the ground for years, but nobody has yet tried to produce petroleum from U.S. soil on such a scale.

And it could be just the beginning. The company has over 7,800 acres of Utah state land under lease, with plans to acquire more, and estimates its current holdings contain more than 250 million barrels of recoverable oil.

"This is not just a 62-acre project that will last seven years. We are looking at a 30,000-acre project that will destroy the environment in this area over many years," said John Weisheit, a Colorado River guide and founder of the Moab, Utah-based environmental group Living Rivers.

Weisheit worries that shortsightedness and the rush to feed America's insatiable appetite for oil could trump reason at the expense of other precious natural resources.

The Bureau of Land Management says Utah has an estimated 12 to 19 billion barrels of oil buried in its tar sands, mostly in the eastern part of the state, though not all of that would be accessible.

Weisheit says if Earth Energy is allowed to mine the land, he fears others may not be far behind.

"We used hear that it's not lucrative to extract oil from tar sands unless oil prices were above $60 barrel," he said. "But now that prices have risen, we're definitely seeing companies take advantage of the situation."

Living Rivers is challenging this project's approval and contends it would dig up fragile topsoil, destroy limestone plateaus formed over thousands of years and pollute groundwater downstream that flows into the Colorado River. The group claims the Utah Division of Water Quality didn't accurately assess the potential for widespread environmental damage from the PR Springs mine. A hearing is set for May 25.

While tar sands projects are relatively new in the U.S., Canada has been a major producer for years, and in doing so, has become the No. 1 foreign supplier of oil to America. Alberta's sprawling oil sands deposits are the second largest oil reserves in the world outside of Saudi Arabia. The region produces about 1.2 million barrels of oil a day with an estimated 174 billion barrels in reserve.

But it comes at a cost. The oil sands operations, including extraction and processing, are responsible for up to 4 percent of Canada's greenhouse gas emissions, and that's expected to triple to 12 percent by 2020.

Unconventional oil – petroleum in any form other than fluid – has been eyed by the industry for years but largely considered not economically viable until recently. The major source of unconventional oil in the U.S. is shale, rock with all the necessary ingredients that wasn't buried under the right conditions to produce oil. But it's all getting a fresh look now as the untapped reserves are being seen as part of the future of domestic supplies.

And while companies are still determining whether shale production makes economic sense, Canada's booming oil sands industry has eyebrows raised and wallets open. Generally, oil from oil sand costs roughly $20 a barrel to produce, about a few dollars more than pumping liquid oil.

The initial Utah mine would be Earth Energy's first commercial effort at extracting oil from sands. It's unclear why the company chose Utah instead of staying closer to home where oil sands are bountiful. The company declined to say, but officials insist the project won't pollute anything and will leave Utah's oil sands as clean as beach sand after processing with a citrus-based solvent.

"We are insuring that we won't pollute by complying with the regulations and as indicated with the project being approved," said company CFO Glen Snarr.

Environmentalists aren't buying it and don't want any part of it in this country.

They've been fighting a 1,900-mile pipeline proposed by another Canadian company that would carry crude extracted from Alberta's tar sands to refineries in Texas. The Keystone XL pipeline would double the capacity of an existing pipeline from Canada, delivering more than 500,000 barrels a day. According to a report commissioned by the Obama administration, the pipeline, coupled with a reduction in overall U.S. oil demand, "could essentially eliminate Middle East crude imports longer term."

Susan Casey-Lefkowitz, director of the International Program at the Natural Resources Defense Council, says the rewards simply aren't worth the risks.

"Refining the oil (from tar sands) creates more greenhouse gases than traditional crude," said Casey-Lefkowitz. "With projects such as Keystone, we have concerns such as pipeline leaks due to the corrosive nature of the bitumen and the high temperatures in which it would be transported."

Oil sand is like black tar melded onto sand and clay. Reserves are found in Utah and a few other U.S. states, but America's neighbor to the north has by far the continent's largest deposits.

And while most oil sands are easy to get to by strip mining similar to digging out coal, separating the oil from the sand takes a lot of water and energy. In Canada, there's even been talk of building a nuclear power plant simply to supply the industry, a move conservationists there have been fighting.

Environmentalists in the U.S. say they don't want to see a Canadian-style oil sands industry crop up here, and are concerned that water pollution generated in the process could poison underground aquifers and wildlife in the region.

In 2008, more than 1,600 ducks died after landing on a northern Alberta toxic waste pond that contained pollution generated in the oil sands separation process. Dozens of such toxic pools have been building up over 40 years in the region.

Earth Energy says it will deploy a "revolutionary" new extraction process in Utah using a citrus-based solvent that "leaves behind no toxic chemicals" or the need for retention ponds, ensuring it doesn't harm wildlife or other natural resources.

Still, environmentalists fighting the project believe the strip mining could cause just as much harm.

Rob Dubuc, a lawyer working with Living Rivers, said the group is concerned about groundwater and downstream pollution.

"Rain will ... wash pollution from the sands into the ground further tainting the porous soil and groundwater," Weisheit said.

The state Division of Water Quality hasn't yet responded to the group's appeal. But Rob Herbert, a manager in the agency's Ground Water Protection unit, said the project qualified for a permit, in large part, because of the citrus-based solvent the company says it will use. He said the area also lacks substantial groundwater, meaning there would be little risk of aquifer pollution.

"They are still obligated to protect groundwater and it does not absolve Earth Energy Resources from that responsibility," Herbert said.

In the end, despite all the debate, experts say projects like the proposed Utah mine are an afterthought when it comes to satisfying the U.S. demand for oil.

"If this project only produces 2,000 barrels of oil a day, it's irrelevant in terms of the 19 million barrels the U.S. consumes a day. It's not contributing anything to national security," said Richard Fineberg, a pipeline analyst with Ester, Alaska-based Research Associates. "With the cost, energy and amount of water that is used, it does not seem economically feasible, whereas investment into conservation and alternative energy is renewable each year."

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SALT LAKE CITY -- Beneath the lush, green hills of eastern Utah's Uinta Basin, where elk, bear and bison outnumber people, the soil is saturated with a sticky tar that may soon provide a new domestic ...
SALT LAKE CITY -- Beneath the lush, green hills of eastern Utah's Uinta Basin, where elk, bear and bison outnumber people, the soil is saturated with a sticky tar that may soon provide a new domestic ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PAGasDriller
04:46 PM on 04/22/2011
Things like this are going to be the alternative to gas well drilling if we legislate that into extinction.
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rodjard
I Update my brain frequently
11:07 PM on 04/21/2011
Looks like this stuff could be used directly to build blacktop roads without
much else except for adding gravel to it. I don't see it being worth damaging
the environment over. That is ultimately one of the things coal tar and oil
might be needed for.
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RealConservativeAmerican
Conservation is Key
11:34 AM on 04/20/2011
Can such an industry can survive without any subsidies?
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RealConservativeAmerican
Conservation is Key
11:33 AM on 04/20/2011
I would like to know what the TRUE costs of oil extraction is in Canada when you factor in how the industry is subsidized. Tax breaks and subsidies are nothing but accounting tricks to hide the true costs. Show us the true costs.
11:47 AM on 04/15/2011
Tar sands contain PAHs among other things. ( http://diseaseclimate.blogspot.com/2011/04/pahs-environment-you-and-your-family.html )
11:51 AM on 04/15/2011
Its unbelievable this could go forward in the US.

Ducks struggled in oilsands goo after landing on Syncrude waste pond: court

At the time the ducks landed on the 12.2-square-kilometre toxic pond, Syncrude blamed a snowstorm for delaying use of the noise-making cannons and issued a public apology.

Tailings ponds from oilsands operations contain billions of litres of tainted water used to separate thick, black bitumen that still needs refining from sand. ( http://www.680news.com/news/national/article/31564--ducks-struggled-in-oilsands-goo-after-landing-on-syncrude-waste-pond-court )
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
olitenup
04:10 PM on 04/14/2011
Can't believe there are on 328 comments on this.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
HLL
Women, their rights & nothing less ~ SusanBAnthony
04:43 PM on 04/14/2011
I think that's because the destruction of the beautiful Earth is an agonizing subject and we feel helpless to be able to stop it in light of the power the corporations wield in our government. That's how I feel, anyway. I feel overwhelmed by the desecration of the planet by people who just don't see or don't care that they are destr0ying this blue jewel of a Paradise.

How can I stop it? That's what I ask myself daily as I sign petitions, donate what money I can to environmental protection, vote for the people who say they want to protect the Earth, leave as light a carbon footprint as possible, etc. This is the #1 priority in my mind, and yet, our government shoves it on the back burner and meanwhile oil, coal and nuclear destr0y our home at a h0rrifying rate ☮
08:59 PM on 04/15/2011
Taking the bait! And The LIES are swallowed, hook, line and sinker ;-(

Someone had written: "When I talk about people buying or being sold 'absolutejunk' I'm not only talking about the material but also about the ideological. We are 'sold' on consumerism, the wars (IraqAfghan), elections (thepresidency), all manner of things. Unfortunately, so few people see that just because these ideas are on sale, that they don't actually have to buy them!"

Sadly, the multitudes have bought The LIES ;-(

The multitudes have taken the bait which is "easeoflife", socalled, and The LIES were swallowed(believed),

hook(money),
line(politics/religion/education),
and sinker(science/technology/progress) ;-(

This place they call the u.s.of a. is the "bait"master and they catch their "fish" in every nation of this world ;-( Yet in england, france, germany, japan, etc, in all nations of this wicked world there are those who have become disciples of the "bait"master and they also have found other "waters" in which to catch their "fish" ;-(

And so it is that today there are multitudes in every nation under the sun that have taken the bait(easeoflife), and swallowed(believedin) the hook(money), the line(politics/religion/education) and the sinker(science/technology/progress) ;-(

Tempted, hooked, reeled in, and held captive as they but serve "time" in the prison that is this world ;-(

Simply, they could not withstand the media blitz(krieg), or their own desires, and their "imag"ination got the best of them ;-(

continued@asimpleandspirituallife.org
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fireofenergy
Promote freedom AND science
10:54 AM on 04/14/2011
All that for just 3 days worth of global oil consumption. What a greeeeeedy waste!
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fireofenergy
Promote freedom AND science
11:10 AM on 04/14/2011
Somebody wanted numbers... Even messy oil is "easier" than solar, but definitely is not better. Consider that it takes about 3 years for photovoltaics to return on their energy investment (proven fact) and it is clear that if just 1/10th of all this dirty FF was used for PV production, the world would be saved. If we did wind, then just 1/60th (plus the carbon footprint of maintenance). The balance of system is on the order of the wind turbine, like just 6 months.
It is not wise to cling on to (and try to just conserve within) the fossil fueled scenarios of the not so creative past when we can and should promote any clean tech and ways of living and efficiency for the much more creative future.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DMDAY44
09:40 PM on 04/15/2011
I'm sorry, but the payback on photovoltaics is more like 12 years when all costs (manufacture, installation, wiring and ancillary equipment such as voltage regulators, inverters, etc.) are included.
hagenjr
Shovel ready freeborn son of the Republic
05:31 AM on 04/16/2011
And wind is even worse. cost per kwh is 100x nuclear.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Overtone
See bio on the Aesop Institute website
01:53 AM on 04/14/2011
Cheap Green technologies are being born and will cost-competitively end this crazy process.

See Moving Beyond Oil at www.aesopinstitute.org for a few examples.

Green Light on the same site may also be of interest.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
HLL
Women, their rights & nothing less ~ SusanBAnthony
09:04 PM on 04/15/2011
Thanks for the link and the optimism. Greatly appreciated, Overtone.
Fav'd from a fan ☮
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kori77
09:11 PM on 04/13/2011
What is the energy source they are going to run the extraction/cleaning on? In Fort Mac, it's natural gas, this means it actually works out to be a very poor energy return on energy invested ratio. Time to conserve and stop sleepwalking into the future.
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blurredmolly
Was you ever bit by a dead bee?
03:08 PM on 04/13/2011
What in the hell is a company from Canada doing befouling our country? I love the Canadians like brothers, but, get that company the flock out of my country.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mumi009
A nation or civilization that continues to produce
02:50 AM on 04/14/2011
Why are Exxon and other American companies exploring for and extracting oil and gas and destroying the environment along the way in foreign countries? Now you know how it feels to the inhabitants of those countries to be used and abused.
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blurredmolly
Was you ever bit by a dead bee?
08:19 AM on 04/14/2011
Yes I do. They gotta go. Or pay us (the American tax payer) a premium to extract this stuff. They do not own our land.
10:27 AM on 04/13/2011
Destruction of our natural environment, peak oil and declining resources. What next? http://greatwavesofchange.org/
AgingLady
laughter is best medicine
04:44 PM on 04/12/2011
Destroy everything and anything for petroleum -- never question the value of what is being destroyed -- go only for the petroleum. When or when will we stop using petroleum and move on.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RudyHaugeneder
02:04 PM on 04/12/2011
Utah oil sands exploitation will result in a huge number of very well-paid jobs, just like in Alberta -- and its very right-wing government and population -- which puts jobs and oil royalties ahead of the environment no matter how severe the damage to distant rural areas very few people ever visit as tourists.
A big paycheck trumps everything.
There's no way of stopping the Utah tar sands project or any other eco-dangerous projects across America to extract oil and gas from the earth, including Gulf offshore deep drilling.
Jobs, jobs, jobs and big profits and tax royalties to governments keep those cars running and plastic goods, including computers, tablets, bags, even homes , mean America(ns) will never treat the environment like the living organism that keeps us alive.
Nothing will stop such exploitation until nature itself, otherwise known as Gaia, decides enough is enough and . . . . . .
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somsoc
All humans are atheists at birth.
01:43 PM on 04/12/2011
Having been born in the theocratic state of Utah, I am surprised that the cu!t that runs everything there did not obtain substantial stock or other interests in Earth Energy Resources Inc., but then again, the behind the scenes activities of da' prez and his 12 co-conspirators is not open to public scrutiny. If you want a clear shot at destroying the environment in Utah, ya' gots to get the cultz approval first.