Well-to-Wheels Greenhouse Gas Emissions of Canadian Oil Sands Products: Implications for U.S. Petroleum Fuels

Cai, H; Brandt, AR; Yeh, S; Englander, JG; Han, J; Elgowainy, A; Wang, MQ

HERO ID

5035538

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2015

Language

English

PMID

26054375

HERO ID 5035538
In Press No
Year 2015
Title Well-to-Wheels Greenhouse Gas Emissions of Canadian Oil Sands Products: Implications for U.S. Petroleum Fuels
Authors Cai, H; Brandt, AR; Yeh, S; Englander, JG; Han, J; Elgowainy, A; Wang, MQ
Journal Environmental Science & Technology
Volume 49
Issue 13
Page Numbers 8219-8227
Abstract Greenhouse gas (GHG) regulations affecting U.S. transportation fuels require holistic examination of the life-cycle emissions of U.S. petroleum feedstocks. With an expanded system boundary that included land disturbance-induced GHG emissions, we estimated well-to-wheels (WTW) GHG emissions of U.S. production of gasoline and diesel sourced from Canadian oil sands. Our analysis was based on detailed characterization of the energy intensities of 27 oil sands projects, representing industrial practices and technological advances since 2008. Four major oil sands production pathways were examined, including bitumen and synthetic crude oil (SCO) from both surface mining and in situ projects. Pathway-average GHG emissions from oil sands extraction, separation, and upgrading ranged from ∼6.1 to ∼27.3 g CO2 equivalents per megajoule (in lower heating value, CO2e/MJ). This range can be compared to ∼4.4 g CO2e/MJ for U.S. conventional crude oil recovery. Depending on the extraction technology and product type output of oil sands projects, the WTW GHG emissions for gasoline and diesel produced from bitumen and SCO in U.S. refineries were in the range of 100-115 and 99-117 g CO2e/MJ, respectively, representing, on average, about 18% and 21% higher emissions than those derived from U.S. conventional crudes. WTW GHG emissions of gasoline and diesel derived from diluted bitumen ranged from 97 to 103 and 96 to 104 g CO2e/MJ, respectively, showing the effect of diluent use on fuel emissions.
Doi 10.1021/acs.est.5b01255
Pmid 26054375
Wosid WOS:000357840300086
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Is Peer Review Yes