Plant starts, Athabasca now yielding its hydrocarbons

journal article First synthetic crude from the Athabasca oil sands region of northeastern Alberta will reach the Toledo, Ohio, refinery of Sun Oil Co. in November. It will be an excellent grade of crude - high in gravity, free of sulfur and nitrogen. But nonetheless, it will have a strange backgroun...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bachman, W. A.; Stormont, D. H.
Language:unknown
Published: Petroleum Publishing Company 1967
Subjects:
Online Access:https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6t182tx
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spelling ftunivutah:oai:collections.lib.utah.edu:ir_eua/214312 2023-05-15T16:17:39+02:00 Plant starts, Athabasca now yielding its hydrocarbons Bachman, W. A.; Stormont, D. H. 1967-10-23 https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6t182tx unknown Petroleum Publishing Company Oil and Gas Journal; pp. 69-88 https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6t182tx synthetic crude Athabasca oil sands crude strip mining 1967 ftunivutah 2021-06-03T18:22:11Z journal article First synthetic crude from the Athabasca oil sands region of northeastern Alberta will reach the Toledo, Ohio, refinery of Sun Oil Co. in November. It will be an excellent grade of crude - high in gravity, free of sulfur and nitrogen. But nonetheless, it will have a strange background. Instead of being pumped from a borehole in the earth, like conventional oil, this crude will be the product of strip mining and an elaborate hot-water process of separating the bitumen from the mixture of sand, shale, and clay that imprisons it. Great/Canadian Oil Sands, an affiliate of Sun Oil, has spent $235 million in the last 3 years building the facilities in Alberta's wilderness that will send this synthetic crude to commercial refining centers. This money was used to clear a big lease, set up strip mining operations, build a plant complex to extract bitumen from the oil sands, set up a pipeline to move the crude to market, construct bridges, roads, homes, and service facilities in Fort McMurray for a force of workers who will operate the plant. Since July, the plant has been operating on a test basis. Production has averaged 30,000 b/d and has reached a high of 40,000 b/d. Its rated capacity is 45,000 b/d which should be reached sometime this month. The storage tanks near the processing plant began to fill in late September which was the signal for the startup of the pipeline and movement of the synthetic crude to market. Bechtel Corp. designed, engineered and constructed the huge project. Other/Unknown Material Fort McMurray The University of Utah: J. Willard Marriott Digital Library Fort McMurray Toledo ENVELOPE(-67.317,-67.317,-73.700,-73.700)
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Utah: J. Willard Marriott Digital Library
op_collection_id ftunivutah
language unknown
topic synthetic crude
Athabasca oil sands
crude
strip mining
spellingShingle synthetic crude
Athabasca oil sands
crude
strip mining
Bachman, W. A.; Stormont, D. H.
Plant starts, Athabasca now yielding its hydrocarbons
topic_facet synthetic crude
Athabasca oil sands
crude
strip mining
description journal article First synthetic crude from the Athabasca oil sands region of northeastern Alberta will reach the Toledo, Ohio, refinery of Sun Oil Co. in November. It will be an excellent grade of crude - high in gravity, free of sulfur and nitrogen. But nonetheless, it will have a strange background. Instead of being pumped from a borehole in the earth, like conventional oil, this crude will be the product of strip mining and an elaborate hot-water process of separating the bitumen from the mixture of sand, shale, and clay that imprisons it. Great/Canadian Oil Sands, an affiliate of Sun Oil, has spent $235 million in the last 3 years building the facilities in Alberta's wilderness that will send this synthetic crude to commercial refining centers. This money was used to clear a big lease, set up strip mining operations, build a plant complex to extract bitumen from the oil sands, set up a pipeline to move the crude to market, construct bridges, roads, homes, and service facilities in Fort McMurray for a force of workers who will operate the plant. Since July, the plant has been operating on a test basis. Production has averaged 30,000 b/d and has reached a high of 40,000 b/d. Its rated capacity is 45,000 b/d which should be reached sometime this month. The storage tanks near the processing plant began to fill in late September which was the signal for the startup of the pipeline and movement of the synthetic crude to market. Bechtel Corp. designed, engineered and constructed the huge project.
author Bachman, W. A.; Stormont, D. H.
author_facet Bachman, W. A.; Stormont, D. H.
author_sort Bachman, W. A.; Stormont, D. H.
title Plant starts, Athabasca now yielding its hydrocarbons
title_short Plant starts, Athabasca now yielding its hydrocarbons
title_full Plant starts, Athabasca now yielding its hydrocarbons
title_fullStr Plant starts, Athabasca now yielding its hydrocarbons
title_full_unstemmed Plant starts, Athabasca now yielding its hydrocarbons
title_sort plant starts, athabasca now yielding its hydrocarbons
publisher Petroleum Publishing Company
publishDate 1967
url https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6t182tx
long_lat ENVELOPE(-67.317,-67.317,-73.700,-73.700)
geographic Fort McMurray
Toledo
geographic_facet Fort McMurray
Toledo
genre Fort McMurray
genre_facet Fort McMurray
op_relation Oil and Gas Journal; pp. 69-88
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6t182tx
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