Climate Change
Fact: Oil sands operations create greenhouse gases (GHGs). The impact of development and the industry’s role as a contributor is important to discuss and understand.
- Canada is responsible for about 2 per cent of global GHG emissions.
- Oil sands make up about 4.6 per cent of Canada’s overall GHG emissions.
- Oil sands account for about 0.1 per cent of global GHG emissions.
- About 20 per cent of GHG emissions from a barrel of oil are created during the production, refining and transportation to market of the product while 80 per cent comes from consumption of the oil, mostly through the tail pipes of vehicles.
- The full life-cycle GHG emissions from Alberta’s oil sands are higher than those from light, sweet conventional crude.
- Light, sweet conventional crude is declining by 4.5 per cent each and every year.
- The full cycle GHG emissions from oil sands are similar to the full life-cycle GHG emissions of oil from many other regions of the world and are less than Venezuela or Nigeria. These countries are the sources of crude to which Canada would have to turn to replace the decline of light sweet crudes if we did not have access to the oil sands.
Fact: The oil sands industry is reducing its GHG emissions.
- Oil sands projects have reduced their carbon dioxide emissions by 39 per cent per barrel since 1990. They continue to work at reducing their emissions intensity even further, mostly through improving energy conservation.
- In 2007, Alberta was the first jurisdiction in North America to legislate GHG reductions on large industrial facilities.
- In the first year of legislated GHG reduction, companies made the equivalent of 2.6 million tonnes of reductions, which is similar to taking 550,000 cars off the road.
Fact: Industry and government are investing time, expertise and funding to find new ways to further reduce GHG emissions.
- The Integrated CO2 Network (ICO2N) developed by industry is a proposed carbon capture and storage (CCS) system for Canada, which would move carbon dioxide (CO2) from industrial sites via pipeline to storage sites deep underground. Visit the ICO2N website for more information.
- Studies show the ICO2N proposal has the potential to reduce Canada’s CO2 emissions by 20 million tonnes – the equivalent of annually removing four million cars from the road.
- In July 2008, the government of Alberta announced a $2-billion fund to assist in the construction of CCS projects with a target of removing some five megatons of GHGs per year.
Facts sourced by Oil Sands Developers Group (Summer 2010).
Sources for all facts available upon request.



















