Dubai Telegraph - In Canada, deserted oil wells are environmental time bombs

EUR -
AED 4.307662
AFN 75.65645
ALL 95.455382
AMD 433.035491
ANG 2.099447
AOA 1076.768783
ARS 1636.860327
AUD 1.626298
AWG 2.111312
AZN 1.99669
BAM 1.95591
BBD 2.370113
BDT 144.388141
BGN 1.956602
BHD 0.444402
BIF 3502.307889
BMD 1.172951
BND 1.489746
BOB 8.131389
BRL 5.80165
BSD 1.176766
BTN 110.920564
BWP 15.755888
BYN 3.325559
BYR 22989.842205
BZD 2.366713
CAD 1.602169
CDF 2716.554865
CHF 0.915682
CLF 0.026553
CLP 1045.063663
CNY 7.981991
CNH 7.981616
COP 4385.546991
CRC 539.802822
CUC 1.172951
CUP 31.083205
CVE 110.272157
CZK 24.311053
DJF 209.550028
DKK 7.473452
DOP 69.980366
DZD 155.132327
EGP 61.837278
ERN 17.594267
ETB 183.735061
FJD 2.567297
FKP 0.862672
GBP 0.865245
GEL 3.143253
GGP 0.862672
GHS 13.238746
GIP 0.862672
GMD 85.625652
GNF 10327.318134
GTQ 8.985736
GYD 246.203881
HKD 9.183732
HNL 31.283497
HRK 7.535741
HTG 154.124748
HUF 357.026418
IDR 20376.096548
ILS 3.403148
IMP 0.862672
INR 110.814383
IQD 1541.586917
IRR 1539967.542208
ISK 143.815622
JEP 0.862672
JMD 185.35045
JOD 0.831578
JPY 184.015502
KES 151.920982
KGS 102.539973
KHR 4720.06492
KMF 491.466945
KPW 1055.668813
KRW 1717.505805
KWD 0.361199
KYD 0.980655
KZT 544.970726
LAK 25824.235848
LBP 105018.682784
LKR 378.928134
LRD 215.948619
LSL 19.199619
LTL 3.463419
LVL 0.709507
LYD 7.443356
MAD 10.785516
MDL 20.245969
MGA 4886.004719
MKD 61.666615
MMK 2463.011404
MNT 4199.687323
MOP 9.491735
MRU 47.080447
MUR 54.800109
MVR 18.127941
MWK 2040.401971
MXN 20.276983
MYR 4.596825
MZN 74.956934
NAD 19.199783
NGN 1597.01982
NIO 43.301888
NOK 10.926269
NPR 177.458928
NZD 1.975285
OMR 0.450996
PAB 1.176766
PEN 4.07603
PGK 5.121049
PHP 70.959441
PKR 327.879986
PLN 4.231562
PYG 7202.344676
QAR 4.289452
RON 5.263969
RSD 117.404627
RUB 87.561202
RWF 1725.197269
SAR 4.433959
SBD 9.421446
SCR 16.245024
SDG 704.357949
SEK 10.887686
SGD 1.488639
SHP 0.875726
SLE 28.854149
SLL 24596.194285
SOS 672.537919
SRD 43.904758
STD 24277.720273
STN 24.500233
SVC 10.296581
SYP 129.667759
SZL 19.194082
THB 37.824741
TJS 10.997348
TMT 4.117058
TND 3.41348
TOP 2.824185
TRY 53.175691
TTD 7.960449
TWD 36.83395
TZS 3050.721524
UAH 51.52615
UGX 4401.24815
USD 1.172951
UYU 47.054659
UZS 14259.803991
VES 582.028979
VND 30863.863161
VUV 138.51814
WST 3.180472
XAF 655.957634
XAG 0.014717
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.169959
XCG 2.12082
XDR 0.815801
XOF 655.993986
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.87078
ZAR 19.295866
ZMK 10557.966547
ZMW 22.417073
ZWL 377.689786
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    63.18

    0%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    17.45

    -0.29%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    23.42

    0%

  • BCC

    -1.4800

    72.76

    -2.03%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.97

    -0.17%

  • NGG

    -1.9400

    85.91

    -2.26%

  • RIO

    -2.4000

    103.11

    -2.33%

  • GSK

    -0.0300

    50.5

    -0.06%

  • BCE

    0.3400

    24.57

    +1.38%

  • BTI

    -1.4800

    58.08

    -2.55%

  • RELX

    -1.5900

    34.16

    -4.65%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.15

    -0.15%

  • AZN

    -2.4000

    182.52

    -1.31%

  • VOD

    -0.4400

    15.69

    -2.8%

  • BP

    -0.8200

    43.81

    -1.87%

In Canada, deserted oil wells are environmental time bombs
In Canada, deserted oil wells are environmental time bombs / Photo: Geoff Robins - AFP

In Canada, deserted oil wells are environmental time bombs

With its flaking red paint, broken pressure gauge and cranks fallen to the ground, an oil well sits forsaken in western Canada, like tens of thousands of others that have been out of service for decades -- but never plugged.

Text size:

Activists and experts say the existence of these inactive oil and gas installations -- often dug hundreds of meters (yards) below the surface in Alberta province -- is a ticking ecological time bomb for the vast country.

"Every single one of them is simply steel and concrete. They erode and break down," said Regan Boychuk, the founder of Reclaim Alberta, a group advocating for the clean-up of such wells.

"Every one of these holes needs to be managed, monitored for eternity because of the danger of leaks," he told AFP.

Each one of these wells also emits methane, a potent greenhouse gas that, over a 20-year period, is "86 times more impactful compared to a molecule of carbon dioxide," stresses McGill University professor Mary Kang, who has written a study on the issue.

It's a source of pollution that she believes is likely underestimated and "has a much bigger uncertainty range compared to other methane emission sources," Kang notes.

More than 120,000 oil and gas wells are inactive but not sealed off in Alberta and Saskatchewan provinces, home to more than 90 percent of Canada's wells, according to government data released in 2022.

The oldest of these has not been used since World War I.

Overall, according to that government data, these installations have emitted an average of 16,000 tonnes of methane per year over a century -- the equivalent of 545,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide annually, or what about 237,000 vehicles emit in one year.

- Work postponed indefinitely -

Most of the wells were built sometime between the dawn of the oil and gas era in the 1860s and the end of the 1940s. In some provinces of Canada, which has the world's fourth largest proven oil reserves, they are not even registered.

After decades of industrial expansion, Alberta -- home to most of the country's oil resources, mainly in the form of oil sands -- saw the number of inactive wells increase rapidly since 2010, particularly after crude prices dropped off in 2014.

Under the polluter-pay principle enshrined in Canadian law, energy companies must pay for the plugging of wells and cleanup of the surrounding area, but there is thus far no deadline for that work to be completed.

This allows oil and gas firms to postpone the work indefinitely, or to transfer their inactive wells to smaller companies.

When these companies file for bankruptcy, the environmental burden for orphaned wells falls to provincial authorities -- and creates another bureaucratic nightmare.

Over roughly a decade, the number of orphaned wells in Alberta exploded, from 700 in 2010 to almost 10,000 in 2023.

The government in Ottawa says the cost of cleaning them up will soar from CAN $361 million (US $272 million) in 2020 to $1.1 billion in 2025.

While the Orphan Well Association in Alberta plans to get the job done over the next 10 to 12 years, some say the monumental task has been wildly misjudged.

"There are tens of thousands that fit the common sense definition, but only a few thousand are officially designated," Boychuk says.

- Polluted soil -

Albert Hummel, a farmer in southern Alberta, had seven abandoned wells on his land. But he's one of the lucky ones -- some of them were finally sealed off and "reclaimed," or restored to their original state. There are two left to handle.

"It's a slow process, it takes time," says Hummel, who lost the royalties he was earning for the use of his land once the oil company in question went out of business in 2019.

Once the soil is contaminated, it takes decades for the pollutants to evaporate. Only then can cleanup work begin.

After the ground is purified, the wells must be plugged with cement, each layer of soil carefully replaced, and the area leveled off with the surrounding fields for it to be considered "reclaimed."

Right in the middle of one of Hummel's fields, the remains of a well have prevented the farmer from using part of that land -- "it's just straight loss of production," he says, pointing to the pipes emerging from the earth.

In an effort to offset the loss and render the area at least partially useful, one small company has offered to install solar panels until the ground can be decontaminated.

"It just gives nature more time for the grass to come back, for contaminants to evaporate," says Daryl Bennett from the RenuWell project.

"It'll give a little more time to clean up the land and reclaim it, and it's producing renewable energy too."

But such solutions represent a drop in the bucket when compared to the overall cleanup at hand.

"Emissions from this legacy infrastructure, they're not going to go away," says Kang.

"It's something we're going to have to manage for years and decades to come."

C.Akbar--DT