Fort McMurray Athabasca Tar Sands Development Strategy

The basic premise is that the demand for synthetic crude oil is from markets external to Canada, consequently one primary objective and five secondary objectives are suggested: 1. Alberta should regulate and control the Athabasca tar sands development for the socio-economic benefit of Albertans. 2....

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Main Author: Conservation and Utilization Committee
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 1972
Subjects:
Online Access:https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/2fd38efb-2a31-4da9-9676-29579162b826
https://doi.org/10.7939/R32R3P395
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spelling ftunivalberta:oai:era.library.ualberta.ca:2fd38efb-2a31-4da9-9676-29579162b826 2023-05-15T16:17:39+02:00 Fort McMurray Athabasca Tar Sands Development Strategy Conservation and Utilization Committee 1972 https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/2fd38efb-2a31-4da9-9676-29579162b826 https://doi.org/10.7939/R32R3P395 English eng https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/2fd38efb-2a31-4da9-9676-29579162b826 doi:10.7939/R32R3P395 This material is provided under educational reproduction permissions included in Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development's Copyright and Disclosure Statement, see terms at http://www.environment.alberta.ca/copyright.html. This Statement requires the following identification: \"The source of the materials is Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development http://www.environment.gov.ab.ca/. The use of these materials by the end user is done without any affiliation with or endorsement by the Government of Alberta. Reliance upon the end user's use of these materials is at the risk of the end user. Oil Sands Strategy Tar Sands Alberta Report 1972 ftunivalberta https://doi.org/10.7939/R32R3P395 2022-08-22T20:09:57Z The basic premise is that the demand for synthetic crude oil is from markets external to Canada, consequently one primary objective and five secondary objectives are suggested: 1. Alberta should regulate and control the Athabasca tar sands development for the socio-economic benefit of Albertans. 2. The social benefits accruing to Albertans should be inherent in the development of the resource and the associated urban development. 3. The rate and direction of the development should be dependent on Canada's ability to participate economically and on Alberta's requirements for economic development. 4. The development should result in a net long term benefit and improvement to Alberta's physical and ecological environment. 5. The evolvement of tar sand technology should be led by Canadian technologists for the benefit of Canadians. 6. The development should be an integration of community, industry and government. In suggesting these objectives there is an explicit recognition of the continuous requirement for balancing the concept of \"investor confidence\" and \"controlled development\". Investor confidence must be maintained if the resource development is to complement and supplement the socio-economic development requirements of Albertans. These objectives are used in projecting a development strategy which envisages a much slower rate of development than suggested by foreign markets. The orderly development rate is regulated by the first and third objective based on the basic premise. The rate of development of one plant in every four years is consistent with present technology and construction requirements. Report Fort McMurray University of Alberta: Era - Education and Research Archive Canada Fort McMurray
institution Open Polar
collection University of Alberta: Era - Education and Research Archive
op_collection_id ftunivalberta
language English
topic Oil Sands
Strategy
Tar Sands
Alberta
spellingShingle Oil Sands
Strategy
Tar Sands
Alberta
Conservation and Utilization Committee
Fort McMurray Athabasca Tar Sands Development Strategy
topic_facet Oil Sands
Strategy
Tar Sands
Alberta
description The basic premise is that the demand for synthetic crude oil is from markets external to Canada, consequently one primary objective and five secondary objectives are suggested: 1. Alberta should regulate and control the Athabasca tar sands development for the socio-economic benefit of Albertans. 2. The social benefits accruing to Albertans should be inherent in the development of the resource and the associated urban development. 3. The rate and direction of the development should be dependent on Canada's ability to participate economically and on Alberta's requirements for economic development. 4. The development should result in a net long term benefit and improvement to Alberta's physical and ecological environment. 5. The evolvement of tar sand technology should be led by Canadian technologists for the benefit of Canadians. 6. The development should be an integration of community, industry and government. In suggesting these objectives there is an explicit recognition of the continuous requirement for balancing the concept of \"investor confidence\" and \"controlled development\". Investor confidence must be maintained if the resource development is to complement and supplement the socio-economic development requirements of Albertans. These objectives are used in projecting a development strategy which envisages a much slower rate of development than suggested by foreign markets. The orderly development rate is regulated by the first and third objective based on the basic premise. The rate of development of one plant in every four years is consistent with present technology and construction requirements.
format Report
author Conservation and Utilization Committee
author_facet Conservation and Utilization Committee
author_sort Conservation and Utilization Committee
title Fort McMurray Athabasca Tar Sands Development Strategy
title_short Fort McMurray Athabasca Tar Sands Development Strategy
title_full Fort McMurray Athabasca Tar Sands Development Strategy
title_fullStr Fort McMurray Athabasca Tar Sands Development Strategy
title_full_unstemmed Fort McMurray Athabasca Tar Sands Development Strategy
title_sort fort mcmurray athabasca tar sands development strategy
publishDate 1972
url https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/2fd38efb-2a31-4da9-9676-29579162b826
https://doi.org/10.7939/R32R3P395
geographic Canada
Fort McMurray
geographic_facet Canada
Fort McMurray
genre Fort McMurray
genre_facet Fort McMurray
op_relation https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/2fd38efb-2a31-4da9-9676-29579162b826
doi:10.7939/R32R3P395
op_rights This material is provided under educational reproduction permissions included in Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development's Copyright and Disclosure Statement, see terms at http://www.environment.alberta.ca/copyright.html. This Statement requires the following identification: \"The source of the materials is Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development http://www.environment.gov.ab.ca/. The use of these materials by the end user is done without any affiliation with or endorsement by the Government of Alberta. Reliance upon the end user's use of these materials is at the risk of the end user.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7939/R32R3P395
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