Air
Fact: The Wood Buffalo regional air-shed is closely monitored and is consistently found to be of high quality.
- The Wood Buffalo Environmental Association (WBEA) monitors about 70,000 square kilometres around the oil sands region. Its monitoring network includes more than three dozen stations.
- WBEA conducts a Terrestrial Environmental Effects Monitoring Program to monitor the impact of oil sands emissions on terrestrial ecosystems.
- Air quality data for the oil sands region is available in real time from the WBEA web site http://www.wbea.org/content/view/56/111/ along with historic air quality information and the results of the Terrestrial Environmental Effects Monitoring Program.
- The Wood Buffalo Environmental Association (WBEA) operates 15 active, continuous air monitoring stations in the oil sands region and 27 passive, interval air monitoring stations. There are about 10 times more air monitoring stations in the Wood Buffalo region as there are for the United States on a per capita basis.
- Air quality around oil sands operations is better than all North American cities benchmarked by the Alberta Clean Air Strategic Alliance (http://www.casahome.org/).
- The Alberta Clean Air Strategic Alliance studies indicate air quality has consistently improved and continues to improve in the Fort McMurray Wood Buffalo region.
Fact: The industry is working to further improve the already high air quality in the region.
- The oil sands industry has continually reduced nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and sulphur dioxide (SO2) emissions on a per barrel basis since production first began.
- New guidelines will reduce nitrogen oxides (NOX) emissions from future stacks, boilers and heaters by as much as 50 per cent.
- Producers in the oil sands are investing, and have invested, billions of dollars to reduce SO2 emissions even further.
Fact: The air quality in the region compares favorably to other metropolitan centres in Alberta and even North America.
- In comparison to other Canadian communities, Fort McMurray ranked better than centres such as Toronto, Winnipeg, Edmonton, Calgary and Fort Saskatchewan in annual average concentrations of NO2 and SO2.
- New York City has about 12 times the annual average concentrations of SO2 in the air as Fort McMurray, and Dallas has more than twice the amount of NO2.
Facts sourced by Oil Sands Developers Group (Summer 2010).
Sources for all facts available upon request.



















