BBC News, Mark
Kinver, Environment reporter, 8 January 2013
Related
Stories
![]() |
Studies have shown that oil sands operations lead to pollutants being released into water systems |
A study of
sediment in nearby lakes showed the level of pollutants, known as PAHs, had
risen since the 1960s when oil sands development began.
However,
the researchers added that PAH concentrations were still lower than those found
in urban lakes.
The
findings appear in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
PAH refers
to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons - a group of chemicals that have been shown
to affect aquatic organisms and birds. PAHs have also been described as being
responsible for damaging food crops.
The
chemicals occur naturally in coal, crude oil, and petroleum; they are also
present in products made from fossil fuels, such as creosote and asphalt.
PAHs also
can be released into the air during the burning of fossil fuels and organic
matter - the less efficient the burning process, the more PAHs are given off.
Forest fires and volcanoes produce PAHs naturally.
Digging the
dirt
Using
sediment cores from five lakes within a 35km (22-mile) radius of major oil
sands facilities and one remote lake (90km/56 miles from the facilities), the
researchers assessed the ecological impact of oil sands developments on
freshwater ecosystems.
![]() |
Core samples showed a rise in PAH concentrations since the development of oil sands mining |
In their
paper, the team wrote: "PAH ratios indicate temporal shifts from primarily
wood combustion to [decomposed organic material] sources that coincide with
greater oil sands development.
"Canadian
interim sediment quality guidelines have been exceeded since the mid-1980s at
the most impacted sites."
Oil sands,
also known as tar sands, have only recently considered to be a viable component
of the world's oil reserves as a result of rising energy prices and the
development of technology that has made its processing profitable.
These
factors has resulted in a marked increase in the extraction and processing of
oil sands in northern Alberta and Saskatchewan, which account for 97% of the
nation's proven reserves and is the world's third largest reserve.
The
researchers say that in 1980, daily production was 100,000 but has grown to
about 1.5 million barrels a day, It is projected to reach 3.7 million barrels
by 2025, they added.
Sticky
situation
The
development of the oil sands sector has been controversial, prompting an
at-times polemic debate between those in favour of utilising the resource to
cushion the Canadian economy from shocks in global energy prices and those who
say the environmental costs are too high.
In 2010,
The Star newspaper reported that concerned residents on the shores of Lake Athabasca (downstream from one of the region's major oil sands facilities) had
called for the federal government to commission an independent study to assess
the impact on the area's water bodies.
The call
came after local people said a growing number of landed fish where showing
signs of deformities.
They voiced
concern that there was not an effective system of environmental monitoring was
in place.
At the
time, the federal environment minister said he was listening to calls for a
monitoring programme.
The
researchers behind the PNAS study said that there was conflicting findings
among the few long-term PAH datasets that existed, with some suggesting
increases in limited areas, while other recording no increase between the 1950s
and 1998.
"Establishment
of background PAH concentrations and historic loadings is essential and would
allow the impacts of development, including industrial PAH contributions, to be
compared with the natural range... in lake sediment from the region," they
wrote.
"As
noted repeatedly in previous assessments of the impacts of the Alberta oil
sands operations, insufficient monitoring data and a poor understanding of
pre-development conditions have attempts to determine the scope of pollution
from oil sands development."
Muddy waters
The team
concluded that the findings from their study had to be considered in a wider
environmental context.
"As a
consequence of climate warming, the physical processes that lakes experience
can be altered," they said.
"Longer
ice-free season and enhanced thermal stability, coupled with higher
surface-water temperatures and the redistribution of nutrients within the water
column, contribute to greater algal production within many lake
ecosystems."
They
concluded: "Analyses of sediment cores from five lakes near major oil
sands operations and remote Namur Lake demonstrate that modern PAH
concentrations and fluxes, including DBTs, are well above 'natural'
pre-development levels."
But, they
added: "The ultimate ecological consequences of decades-long increases in
aquatic primary production, coupled with greater PAH loadings to lakes in the
oil sands region, are unknown and require further assessment."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.