No Pathways, no pipeline: How the massive carbon storage project would work, if built


CALGARY — There’s no pipeline without Pathways and no Pathways without a pipeline.

That was the quid pro quo spelled out in a sweeping energy accord signed between Alberta and Ottawa in November.

Alberta is spearheading early planning and regulatory work on a potential new one-million-barrel-a-day pipeline to the West Coast that would provide an outlet for increased oilsands production and boost exports to Asia. But the “grand bargain” with Ottawa to help clear the way for the pipeline calls for a meaningful offset to the carbon emissions it would enable.

Enter Pathways: a multibillion-dollar plan to transport and store 16 million tonnes of carbon dioxide a year from the oilsands by 2035. The project has been in the works for around four years, but the companies proposing it, the province and federal government have yet to figure out how they’ll share the costs and the risks. The Alberta-Ottawa agreement set an April 1 deadline to reach a three-way deal, but the matter remains unresolved.

The Pathways project is being proposed by the Oil Sands Alliance (formerly the Pathways Alliance), which is made up of five major oilsands players: Canadian Natural Resources Ltd., Cenovus Energy Inc., Imperial Oil Ltd., Suncor Energy Inc. and ConocoPhillips Canada.

Carbon capture and storage is “probably the most cost-effective pathway for most industrial decarbonization in Alberta,” said Brendan Frank, vice-president of policy at Clean Prosperity, a climate policy group.

Here is a rundown on the technical and economic aspects of Pathways:

Capture

Pathways members would be responsible for installing carbon capture equipment at their own oilsands sites. Flue gases would be collected from boilers, steam generators and other combustion equipment. A chemical process would separate out the carbon dioxide, which would then be compressed into a liquid. Costs would vary site by site due to the transport distance to the storage hub and how emissions intensive each operation is, Frank said.

Transport

A project overview posted by the Oil Sands Alliance in March says it’s proposing to build a more than 650-kilometre pipeline network to bring CO2 from as far north as the Fort McMurray, Alta., area south to a storage hub in the Cold Lake, Alta., region. It does not account for the investments needed in the individual oilsands plants to capture emissions. The plan includes 16 small lateral segments connecting to 13 oilsands sites, both mines and steam-driven operations. The laterals would feed liquefied CO2 into a wider transportation artery, which would then connect with a distribution line running to the storage hub.



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