EGU2020-19004
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-19004
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

First Comprehensive Measurements of Emission Rates of Greenhouse Gases, Volatile Organic Compounds and Reduced Sulfur Compounds from a Tailings Pond in the Alberta Oil Sands

Ralf Staebler1, Samar Moussa1, Yuan You2, Hayley Hung1, Maryam Moradi3, Amy Leithead1, Peter Brickell1, Katherine Hayden1, Richard Mittermeier1, and James Beck4
Ralf Staebler et al.
  • 1Environment Canada, Air Quality Research Branch, Toronto, Canada (ralf.staebler@canada.ca)
  • 2University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
  • 3Ryerson University, Toronto, Canada
  • 4Suncor, Calgary, Canada

Canada’s Oil Sands Region in northern Alberta contains the world’s largest deposits of commercially exploited bitumen. Extraction of synthetic crude oil from these deposits is a water intensive process, requiring large ponds for water recycling and/or final storage of tailings, already covering a total of over 100 km2 of liquid surface area in the Athabasca Oil sands. The primary extraction tailings ponds primarily contain sand, silt, clay and unrecovered bitumen, while a few secondary extraction ponds also receive solvents and inorganic and organic by-products of the extraction process. Fugitive emissions of pollutants from these ponds to the atmosphere may therefore be a concern, but until recently, data on emission rates for many pollutants, other than a few reported under regulatory compliance monitoring, were sparse. We present here the results from a comprehensive field campaign to quantify the emissions from a secondary extraction pond to the atmosphere of 68 volatile organic compounds (VOCs), 22 polycyclic aromatic compounds (PACs), 8 reduced sulfur compounds as well as methane, carbon dioxide and ammonia. Three micrometeorological flux methods (eddy covariance, vertical gradients and inverse dispersion modeling) were evaluated for methane fluxes to ensure their mutual comparability. Methane and carbon dioxide fluxes were similar to previous results based on flux chamber measurements. Emission rates for 12 PACs, alkanes and aromatic VOCs, several sulfur species, and ammonia were found to be significant. PACs were dominated by methyl naphthalenes and phenanthrenes, while diethylsulfide and  and n-heptane were the dominant reduced sulfur and VOC species, respectively. The role of these previously unavailable emission rates in regional pollutant budgets will be discussed.

How to cite: Staebler, R., Moussa, S., You, Y., Hung, H., Moradi, M., Leithead, A., Brickell, P., Hayden, K., Mittermeier, R., and Beck, J.: First Comprehensive Measurements of Emission Rates of Greenhouse Gases, Volatile Organic Compounds and Reduced Sulfur Compounds from a Tailings Pond in the Alberta Oil Sands, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-19004, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-19004, 2020

This abstract will not be presented.