Topic: PollutionThe Unusual Chemistry of the Tar Sands

Petroleum deposits have long been known to cause intense social and atmospheric impacts: not only are they sites to extract crisis-inducing fossil fuels, they ravage local communities and natural spaces, causing immense destruction on any scale you choose. But, as Aaron Bradshaw explains, the chemistry of these sites is proving to be more complex than scientists had previously imagined. He tells It's Freezing in LA! that clean-up of these spaces may yet again rewrite our understanding of our place in the biosphere. Illustrated by Sonja Burniston.

By Aaron Bradshaw

North east Canada is home to the Alberta Tar Sands, one of the world’s largest and most destructive industrial projects. Diminishing reserves of oil and gas have led to exploitation of ‘unconventional’ deposits, of which Alberta boasts the third largest proven reserve in the world. Here, bitumen mixed with sand in natural shallow deposits is stripped from the Earth’s surface in huge mining operations. The economic and social effects of the tar sands are multiple and complex: the subject of extensive activist and political campaigns. But they also introduce a profound distortion into ecological and chemical behaviours, one which offers an important lens for reflecting on the living world and our position within it.

Illustration

Disturbed from deep underground by high pressure steam, pumped to extract oily bitumen, a single molecule of naphthenic acid traces a journey. It advances upwards, disperses into the steam and is driven into huge open pit reservoirs. From here it leaches into rivers and lakes, circulating through aquatic food chains, permeating membranes, flowing through the bodies of amphibians and fish. In some of these bodies the molecule fits snugly into receptors on cells, like a key into a lock, unleashing a stream of biological effects. In one case, it sets off a cascade of biochemical and cellular reactions, leading to a malignant growth in a fish. In another, it prevents a tadpole from metamorphosing into a frog, confining it to the water for its artificially shortened life.

Because of their chemical similarity with biological molecules, some chemicals associated with oil deposits, including naphthenic acids, can act like drugs. Once inside bodies, these agents are able to modulate, mimic, interrupt, disrupt and hijack the physiology of organisms at all stages of their life. Developing organisms, in particular, need specific chemical and hormonal messages at specific times, and the wrong messages at the wrong times can lead to disastrous outcomes: cancer, developmental abnormalities, death. The hormonal system is exquisitely sensitive to chemical cues, and the ability of molecules like naphthenic acids to interfere with this system has earned them the title Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals (EDCs). The oil sands deposits contain abundant mixtures of EDCs.

Because of their chemical similarity with biological molecules, some chemicals associated with oil deposits, including naphthenic acids, can act like drugs.

The above describes just one route for the journey of EDCs and related pollutants- from underground oil sand deposits to neighbouring freshwater and wetland ecosystems. These molecules, however, are part of a larger story of the environmental impacts of oil sands mining in Alberta, Canada. Inside bodies, the distribution of chemicals follows the laws of pharmacokinetics - from the Greek pharmaco - drug, and kinen - to move: the movement of drugs. Outside of them, chemical distribution is governed by natural processes: geochemical, biological, climatic. Social, political and economic factors mould and are moulded by these natural processes.

The journey of our naphthenic acid molecule is tied into these technological, economic and biological pathways. In addition to the planned and engineered routes of chemical transfer governed by oil pipelines and logistical networks, mining of the tar sands creates new and unpredicted pathways of chemical motion. Tailings are the materials left over after bitumen is extracted from sand during the oil sands refinement process [1] and this liquid waste is stored in huge open lakes, called ‘tailings ponds’. Tailings ponds are deep pits dug out of the Alberta boreal forests and wetlands, which entails the immediate loss of biodiversity in these ecosystems. Containing a cocktail of toxic chemicals, the lakes themselves cannot support the life of aquatic organisms, and are amongst the largest environmental concerns produced by the oil sands industry. Even after the water has been ‘detoxified’ and pumped out for reuse, the beds of these lakes remain covered in an oily residue, saturated with toxic hydrocarbons. It takes decades for plants to recolonise these barren sites. Meanwhile, chemical components of brimming ponds leach into nearby lakes and rivers - it is here that our naphthenic acid molecule is set into motion, exceeding its planned ‘containment’ and triggering unplanned biological effects.

As indicated above, these unplanned (and unconsidered) effects are predominantly destructive. In the laboratory, naphthenic acid mixtures taken directly from oil sands tailings cause toxicity in fish and amphibians. Lab conditions can only approximate the real world, however, and some of the more destructive effects of EDCs on wetland and aquatic ecosystems may come from their intersection with ecological and climatic cycles. During the winter, oil sands activity slows down, hampered by the cold weather. The resurgence of activity coincides with the reproductive patterns of some amphibians, potentially increasing the negative impact of chemicals on the metamorphosis of tadpoles. In some cases, the effects of these agents are realised only in the offspring of the exposed organisms, or in their offspring, manifesting in sexual development issues and increased cancer rates.

Indigenous First Nations people of Canada also bear the burden of these chemical leachings. Chipewyan First Nations live and hunt in proximity to the Athabasca river, downstream of the tar sands, and in 2006 a physician named Dr John O’Connor identified increased rates of rare cancers in people living in the community. Accumulation of chemical toxins in fish, which form an important part of the Chipewyan’s diet, may have been implicated in this increased cancer. Already disenfranchised by extractivism and environmental degradation, Michelle Murphy argues in her essay Chemical Regimes of Living, that in the ‘Tar Sands and Fort Chipewyan, chemical exposures are built on histories of colonial dispossession.’ These ‘downstream illnesses’ highlight the role of power relations in the percolation of petrochemical byproducts through natural, cultural and biological systems, adding an important dimension to our understanding of chemical kinetics.

Chipewyan First Nations live and hunt in proximity to the Athabasca river, downstream of the tar sands, and in 2006 a physician named Dr John O’Connor identified increased rates of rare cancers in people living in the community.

How do we move on from these destructive outcomes? As we learn more about the toxic effects of the oil sands, the clearer it becomes that restitution of their impacts demand actions similarly cut across the cultural, ecological and technological levels.

While life-forms and ecologies have been disrupted and fragmented by these operations, they may also represent systems harbouring generative capacities in the face of pollution. For instance, it has long been known that certain microbial life-forms thrive in oil contaminated areas, and that some bacteria can digest naphthenic acids, using them for growth and releasing benign by- products. Harnessing these microbes to remediate sites of oil contamination [2] has been a strong research focus of certain university departments and oil-funded startups. It is projected that, after contaminated sites are detoxified, it will be possible to reintroduce native species of flora and fauna. Remediation followed by reclamation. Covering over 200 square kilometres, tailings ponds represent important targets for detoxification and reclamation.

In one story, researchers from the University of Saskatchewan spotted a dandelion growing miraculously in a former oil sands mine. It was a fungus, isolated from the root structure of the plant, that enabled it to grow in these harsh conditions. This fungus grew in a symbiotic relationship with the plant, a relationship which one scientist referred to as ‘multitalented’: further to metabolising environmental toxins itself, the fungus stimulated the plant roots to secrete peroxidases, enzymes that can break down large hydrocarbons into smaller and safer chemicals. As the fungus-plant relationship creates a buffer zone around the root, chemicals that could once pass through the root membrane unobstructed, damaging plant life, are now captured and bio-transformed by arsenals of microbiological life. Recalibrating the distribution of industrial chemicals is achieved at the micro-level by newly emerging relationships between life forms.

These discoveries remind us that life is an active agent in the modelling and remodelling of the chemosphere, operating in unpredictable and unforeseen ways

Instead of viewing bodies and ecosystems as passive recipients of chemical contaminations, these discoveries remind us that life is an active agent in the modelling and remodelling of the chemosphere, operating in unpredictable and unforeseen ways. How do these insights inform our views of reclamation and sustainability? On the one hand, the discovery of oil-eating microbes and purifying fungi does not mean we can ‘sit back’ and let nature ‘take its course’. Valorising the self-organising features of biological evolution leads to a disavowal of anthropogenic impacts on the living world. Equally dangerous is the assumption of complete control and dominance over these emergent species and relations, a perspective which reproduces the anthropocentrism that got us here in the first place. In a time where separating the categories of the ‘natural world’ and ‘humanity’ is no longer tenable, reclamation becomes a collaborative effort between humans and non-humans in newly forming symbioses.

According to the oil sands industry, the ultimate goal of reclamation efforts is to restore mined areas and tailings ponds to their former levels of ecosystem diversity and productivity. In the Albertan region, processes involving EDCs and other contaminants leave scars and residues in plant and animal life, remoulding ecological assemblages and demonstrating that reclamation projects are unlikely to return these ecosystems to their ‘previous’ state. The reality and complexity of EDCs and other environmental chemicals suggests reclamation is a boundless venture with no fixed endpoint. Just as chemical contaminants do, reclamation efforts must transcend the borders of mining operations sites and enter into adjacent ecosystems and cultures.

In the tar sands, destruction and creation exist side by side, with toxicity and symbioses representing either end of a spectrum of anthropogenic outcomes. If there is one thing this tells us, it is that reclamation efforts must be sensitive to the complex and embedded ecological relations that the tar sands have brought into play. If we are to effectively restore the tar sands, we need to more fully understand each end of this spectrum.

[1] Oil sands tailings are a complex mixture. Here I am referring to the oil sands process affected water (OSPW). This is the material left over after the desired bitumen is extracted from the sand using high pressure steam. The steam condenses into water that is contaminated with, amongst other things, bitumen residue, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and naphthenic acids. Trillions of litres of water, taken from the Athabasca river, have been used in the process of oil sands refinement. ‘Tailings ponds’ - which are more like lakes than ponds - are where this OSPW is stored. Tailings ponds have been a central focus point in discussion about the environmental impacts of the oil sands projects because of their devastating ecological effects, their effects on the water table, and the need to detoxify them and reclaim lost land.

[2] The process of using life-forms for detoxification is broadly referred to as ‘bioremediation’.

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