DOVER, N.H. — The Keystone XL pipeline extension, which would transport an oil product known as “tar sands” to refineries on the Gulf Coast, has received a wealth of media attention this year.

However, the Keystone XL pipeline isn’t the only transportation path for tar sands oil. Oil suppliers have explored a number of ways to move the controversial petroleum product to market, including pathways through the Northeast.

One of Canada’s largest pipeline operators, Enbridge Inc., developed a plan in 2008 to reverse one of its existing lines to begin moving tar sands oil east from Western Canada, where the industry is set to boom.

Enbridge’s Line 9, which starts in the western part of the country, would be capable of delivering tar sands oil to Montreal if the company reversed the flow of the entire line.

Enbridge proposed doing just that four years ago with its “Trailbreaker” project.

To move the tar sands oil on the final leg of the journey from Montreal to Maine, the company proposed utilizing the existing Portland-Montreal Pipe Line.

The line stretches more than 200 miles, cutting through Vermont and northern New Hampshire.

It now transports crude in the other direction, from Maine to Montreal.

Enbridge officials since have scrapped the Trailbreaker project, citing a sour economy. But environmental groups in both Canada and the United States believe recent actions indicate the company is working to revive the proposal incrementally.

Recently, Enbridge filed a request with Canada’s National Energy Board to reverse the flow of oil in a segment of Line 9, which connects Sarnia and Westover in Ontario.

Enbridge spokesperson Jennifer Varey said the company is making the move in order to begin transporting light crude to a facility in Westover.

Varey said Line 9’s future use will be dictated by the demands of shippers, and Enbridge has not determined whether to request permission from Canadian officials to reverse the entire pipeline.

“It’s one of those things where, if the market demand is there, there is the possibility that we would be bringing Canadian oil to those markets” in the Northeast, she said.

In addition to the activity around Line 9, environmental groups in Canada have been following developments near Montreal, where the operator of the Portland-Montreal Pipeline is seeking to build a new pumping station.

That pumping station would provide the necessary machinery to push oil over a range of mountains near the Vermont border, which would be an impediment if the flow of the pipeline is reversed.

However, the company has lost legal battles over its request in at least two Canadian courts — most recently from the Court of Quebec.

“The project itself of reversing the flow of the pipeline, at this time, is not moving forward because the market conditions, at this time, do not warrant that project to move forward,” said Denis Boucher, a Portland-Montreal Pipe Line spokesperson.

However, Dylan Voorhees, director of the clean energy project at the Natural Resources Council of Maine, which was been following the issue, worries it’s only a matter of time before the pipeline operators decide to renew the project.

Voorhees said the situation is concerning because moving tar sands presents a greater risk for an oil spill than moving conventional crude oil.

Tar sands is more acidic — and therefore more corrosive — than conventional crude oil, and it must be transported at hotter temperatures and faster speeds, according to Voorhees.

“I think that’s one of the concerns that people in New Hampshire might have, is, ‘What are the resources and special places that this pipe passes through?’” Voorhees said.

Tar sands, referred to as oil sands in Canada, are a combination of clay, sand, water and bitumen — a heavy, black, asphaltlike substance. Tar sands can be mined and processed to extract the bitumen, which is then refined into oil.

The bitumen in tar sands cannot be pumped from the ground in its natural state. Instead, tar sand deposits are mined, usually using strip mining or open pit techniques, or the oil is extracted by underground heating, according to information available from the U.S. Department of Interior.

As a result of the more energy-intensive extraction techniques, environmental groups argue the production of fuels derived from tar sands is more damaging to the environment than crude oil extraction.

California was set to become the first state in the country to implement a low-carbon fuel standard this year, which could have significant consequences for producers of tar sands products.

The standard would impose penalties on fuel suppliers that ship products with a higher “carbon intensity,” like tar sands-derived gasoline, to California. Money collected through the program would support production of cleaner fuel sources.

New Hampshire is among 11 states in the Northeast and mid-Atlantic considering a similar program called the Clean Fuels Standard, which has been in development for nearly five years.

Arthur Marin is executive director of Northeast States for Coordinated Air Use Management, the group developing the Clean Fuels Standard.

Until this year, he said, the group had been modeling its design on the California fuel standard, but recent developments in the Golden State have cast doubt on the constitutionality of the program.

Opponents challenged the program in court in December, arguing the fuel standard violates the commerce clause of the U.S. Constitution because it attempts to impose a penalty for extraction techniques used in Canada, outside of the state’s borders.
With California’s program facing an uncertain future, NESCAUM is now examining alternative models for a low-carbon fuel standard, Marin said.
Marin said those involved with the project are realistic about the inevitable rise of tar sands-derived fuel production.

“We’ve had many discussions with representatives from Alberta, from the oil companies … and I think everyone understands that that’s a potential new source of oil that’s going to be playing in the United States market,” he said.

Last month, the nonpartisan, nonprofit news group InsideClimate News reported that New Hampshire Attorney General Michael Delaney and his counterparts in the other NESCAUM states were recently contacted by an oil industry group regarding the uncertainty over California’s standard.

The oil industry also has taken an interest in developments in the New Hampshire Legislature. Last month, the House passed bills that would pull New Hampshire out of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, an air quality compact, and free it from any commitment to the low-carbon fuel standard.

HB 1487, the bill barring the state from adopting the Clean Fuel Standard, passed the House on a 243-96 vote.

Rep. James Garrity, chairman of the House Science, Technology and Energy Committee, said he helped to promote HB 1487 because his time in the Legislature has given him insight into the drawbacks of participating in regulatory pacts such as RGGI. Garrity said opponents object to the program because it relies on a “central-planning, state-directed” approach to developing clean fuels.

“We’re making the message clear to the rest of the New England states,” he said. “New Hampshire’s not going to go there.”

One of the state’s representatives in the regional fuel standard talks, Mike Fitzgerald, called the House bill “somewhat unfortunate.” Environmental regulations such as the low-carbon fuel standard must be adopted broadly to be effective, he said, and New Hampshire’s primary leverage in the discussions has been the fact that it might or might not participate.

The House bill does not prevent the state from helping to draft the fuel standard. But if New Hampshire declares it won’t cooperate, the state will be in a weaker position to shape the regulations, which could have an impact on fuel prices.

One of New Hampshire’s primary concerns in the discussions is ensuring the standard doesn’t increase the price of gasoline or diesel fuel, according to Fitzgerald.

“Obviously, the state is looking at what can we do to mitigate climate change, and so there would be, potentially, some balancing of economic and environmental interests,” he said, “but obviously, if there was something that was going to significantly impact the price of petroleum and diesel and gasoline, that would be a major concern.”

Although the prospect of tar sands piping through New Hampshire’s north country remains hypothetical, Garrity said he would back initiatives to ship the product through the state, and oppose new efforts to curtail tar sands production.

“Tar sands oil is no different from oil coming from Texas or Saudi Arabia,” he said. “It’s all refined into the same product, so what I get at the pump is gasoline. What I get is No. 2 fuel oil in my fuel tank. When your prevailing world view is all fossil fuels are evil, nothing but zero will satisfy.”
___
(c)2012 the Foster’s Daily Democrat (Dover, N.H.)

Visit the Foster’s Daily Democrat (Dover, N.H.) at www.fosters.com.

Distributed by MCT Information Services

Join the Conversation

26 Comments

  1. You could  leave out the “Tar sands” part and   just substitute oil. Why? Oh, because the people who have a problem with  Tar sand oil have a problem with oil no matter it’s source. To focus on this variety is just  another in an endless attempt  to limit  supply  and  drive energy prices up for the consumer.
    “When your prevailing world view is all fossil fuels are evil, nothing but zero will satisfy.” That is all this is about,nothing more.

    1. I guess the reason that they referred to the product as “tar sands” was because the material is tar sands. Just goes, folks like you deal in obfuscation of facts in order to serve your own interests. What else is new?  

      1.  So ,are you saying  I am wrong on this? That those who have issues with  Tar sand oil  have a problem with oil in general?
        Are you saying  that  Mr. Garrity’s quote is some how false or misleading?

        1. I have a huge problem with the tar sludge. It is not oil, why are you trying to make this sludge into something it is not? From a Rolling Stone story on it:

          Extracting oil from the tar sands is a nasty, polluting,
          energy-intensive business. To get at the tar sands, oil companies must first
          cut down huge tracts of the boreal forests that cover Alberta before deploying
          huge, industrial-scale shovels and draglines to dig up the tar sand itself – a
          black goo that resembles roof tar mixed with beach sand. After dumping the goo
          into enormous vats of superhot water to separate out the sand and skim off the
          oil, refiners use an expensive and complex process called hydrocracking to turn
          the thick, sulfury gunk into gasoline or diesel. Finally, all the water and
          sand left over from the process – laden with heavy metals and toxins – is
          pumped into giant holding areas that form massive lakes of toxic sludge. In
          Alberta, all this takes place on a scale so large that it can be seen from
          space; the “lakes” of sludge alone are among the largest human-built
          projects in the world. It has also wreaked enormous environmental destruction
          in Canada: killing off scores of migrating ducks, polluting local water
          supplies and coinciding with an alarming increase in cancer rates for
          indigenous people who live downstream from the tar sands operations”

          A bit different then how oil is extracted.

          1.  Quoting Rolling  stone is useless, nothing they print  can be trusted, find a real source and maybe I’ll read it and we can  debate the issue.

    2. You don’t have to lift too many “rocks” out of the way to find most truths about any of the topics reported on, especially those that drive energy prices. Expand your prevailing world view to include the financial section of the news and you may find out who truly impacts costs, starting with speculators. They share a lunch table with hedge fund managers.

      1.  Sure. And  do you know what speculators do? They speculate. And  in the case of  all things petroleum based  a good part  of what they speculate on  would include all things Liberal, and how it will affect oil supply and production. And when you have a Liberal/progressive in  the White House  these consideration carry great weight.
        Gas/fuel prices for the U.S consumer are affected by a number of things ,and we could spend all day  on them . This one,Speculators , is one of the big three. The other two are the value of the dollar and the amount of tax per gallon.

          1.  Yup, never been to found  of these folks. But you have to consider  Governments role in this.When  the Gov takes more in taxes  per gallon than  what is made in profit by anyone in the chain ,there is a problem, a monumentally huge problem.
            We have a  segment of out society that hates oil and  they are doing every thing they can to  drive it’s price up. Our President is one of these folks and has said so many times.His administration is loaded with these folks.  We have  these folks  entrenched in our governments regulatory agencies and many are now  in charge. Add these folks and their actions  to the deflated Dollar….

    3. Why does this and all liberal rags call any energy project CONTROVERSIAL? Why do they blame everyone else for high gas prices? Read Obamas book, he says gas should be $6.00 a gallon. Congrats democrats we are almost there!

    4. Read.  All petroleums are not created equal.  The petroleum source is actually bitumen, a high viscosity, semisolid (mined not pumped) in a sand matrix.  It’s more acidic and must be transported at a higher temperature.  Since it’s a (very) crude, it needs special and expensive refinery processes.  Such rfefineries are generlly lacking on the East Coast.  The conservative Bible (Wall Street Journal) pointed out a month ago that more than one East Coast refineries may be closing becasue of lack of access to cheaper, lighter crudes.

      1.  And? I’m pretty sure we are smart enough to make a pipe that wont leak to  pump this stuff through, and this has nothing to do with access to light crude, but I can bet  Liberals have something to do with it.

  2. Tar sands is an environmental disaster from start to finish.

    Importing more oil will not reduce gasoline prices – but curbing speculators will.

    yessah

    1. Are you suggesting government takeover of oil markets?  Just wondering.. are you liberal or conservative?

      1. No – I want regulations that prevent hedge funds et al.  from gambling with oil futures and manipulating the market.

        Only entities that actually use oil should be allowed to trade oil futures and their should be curbs on speculation.

        yessah

  3. The lust for profits from petroleum (in whatever form) are insatiable.

    The issues that confront us are a mix of personal hardships, environmental concerns and sustainability.

    There is great wealth to be gathered by Canadian interests by pumping tar-sand oil to Maine and there are likely benefits to arise from it; however, the impact of a greatly corrosive and more toxic product being pumped at higher pressures through an aging pipeline through the watershed of Maine’s largest population center is daunting.

  4. Funny. Quebec and Paul Lepage want us to build a highway, a gas  pipe  line  and a high tension power line across Maine but they don’t want anyone  to cut across their beauty full Provence.

  5. Well let’s fire up these pumps and reverse the flow and get SOMETHING going here! We can pee and moan about greenhouse gasses and whatever else, but the fact is that we are dependent on fossil fuels and that will never change. We have a sufficient amount of the product to last for hundreds of years, and it’s right here, in America. human life on this planet in two hundred years will be unlike anything we can imagine, so we might as well go for it. The fossil fuels will long outlast humanity. Religion will see to that. History does and WILL repeat itself.

  6. First we were told prices were up because of the tsunami
    in Japan. Next it was because of Lybia. Then it was because
    of Iran. Now it is because of speculators. Will  the excuses
    never cease? I could care less if oil came out of someone’s pet rock.
    It’s oil. I could care less if it had someone’s garbage in it, it is refined.
    It becomes fuel through a controlled process. It is now a resource we
    have found an abundance of yet we just want to let someone else sell
    it to us. The greenies think we will all drive wind cars by next year. They
    think we should stop using or obtain all we can get that is there for our
    consumption becasue they are going to save the planet. I suggest they
    do not buy any product that is made or works because of oil. Let them
    all drive their bicycles and burn newspapers. I hope we drill everywhere
    we can and obtain every drop of oil we can use.

  7. Can’t wait for them to open the tap.  My only dissapointment is that the pipeline terminates in Portland instead of elsewhere in the state.

  8. “Tar sands is more acidic — and therefore more corrosive — than conventional crude oil, and it must be transported at hotter temperatures and faster speeds, according to Voorhees.”

    “That pumping station would provide the necessary machinery to push oil over a range of mountains near the Vermont border, which would be an impediment if the flow of the pipeline is reversed.”

    So a pipe designed to work by gravity flow is now going to be stressed far beyond its design limits by higher pressure to get over the mountains, higher temperature, and greater acidity.  What’s the over-under line for how long it will take for the pipeline to blow a major leak?

  9. I would suggest everyone do extensive research rather than depending on BDN articles and “blog experts” for their education about the dangers of tar sand oil – the extraction of it, the movement of it (extremely high pressure and temperatures), and the disposal of all the waste it produces.  The process of extraction uses thousands of gallons of clean water, which then become contaminated by chemicals and has to be disposed of).  Maybe ask one of the many communities who have had their drinking water supplies destroyed because of short-sighted practices; maybe start with Kalamazoo Michigan where toxic sludge was accidentally spilled into the River, or Wind River in Wyoming where water is contaminated to such a degree that it bubbles, is flammable, and people are told to not shower with the windows closed!  It’s interesting that people are so quick to “label” and dismiss – the liberals, the greenies, etc.  Maybe they know something that you don’t – have you ever considered that?  and maybe it might be in your best interest to get caught up to speed.   Most people  that I know who care about the Earth and the environment do live very simple lives – as sustainable as possible but it’s rather futile when we have mega-giant corporations spewing toxins, chemicals, and waste into our air, rivers, and landfills.  I have children, and I hope to have grandchildren some day.  I hope that they will be able to BREATHE and DRINK CLEAN WATER.  We need to protect Maine’s resources

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *