Thursday, August 01, 2013

That Cold Lake Bitumen Spill - It Just Keeps Rollin' Along


The 10-week old Cold Lake bitumen spill is expected to stop - basically whenever it stops itself.   The company, Canadian Natural Resources Ltd., says there's nothing it can do to staunch the leak other than collect whatever bitumen it can from the surface and haul out the dead animals.

On Wednesday morning, the company said in a conference call that it had identified a few older, inactive wells—one of which dates back to 1997—as probable culprits. At least one of the suspect wells were drilled by a prior operator, the company said. When a well casing failed, according to the company, oil started seeping out through the surrounding ground, eventually impacting a 50-acre swath.

...the company said that bitumen—the heavy tar that bitumen - the heavy tar that can be processed into oil - migrated up from an old, compromised wellbore, eventually bubbling up at four different sites.  According to the company, it's similar to a 2009 incident at the same site, when the casing of a well failed and bitumen started seeping to the surface. 

A well-casing failed?  What a fluke.  Not.  Well casings can deteriorate long after they're capped.  Most times they're out of sight and out of mind.  That goes for fracked gas wells - in spades.  As mentioned yesterday, between 5 to 7% of new oil and gas wells leak, a number that grows to 30 to 50% as those wells age.  Oh dear.

2 comments:

  1. Mound , this time you cut short your expedition of "Gone Fishin'". I hope it was a good one.

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  2. I have to cut it short, LD. This place is overrun with tourists until Labour Day so a day trip is pretty much it until mid-September. Still I made a good day of it island-hopping.

    I got the early ferry from the big island to Denman and then another ferry over to Hornby Island. The annual fishing trip to stock up with salmon, cod and halibut for the winter, will probably wait until September.

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