According to Reuters article published on March 15, 2023, the Canadian and Alberta governments will establish a federal-provincial working group to accelerate remediation of oil sands tailings ponds, the Alberta government said on Wednesday, as investigations continue into an ongoing tailings leak at Imperial Oil's (IMO.TO) Kearl project.
Federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault and Alberta Environment Minister Sonya Savage met on Tuesday to discuss the incident at the 240,000 barrel-per-day Kearl mining project in northern Alberta.
Industrial wastewater containing toxins including arsenic and dissolved iron has been seeping from tailings ponds at Kearl since at least May last year. Last month, Imperial reported a separate leak of more than 5,000 cubic metres (1.3 million gallons) of tailings water from one of its holding ponds.
"The ministers also discussed accelerating collaboration on a long-term solution for the treatment and remediation of tailings ponds and will work to establish a federal-provincial working group to ensure this is developed as quickly as possible," a readout of the meeting released on Wednesday said.
Alberta's oil sands mines produce vast quantities of toxic tailings water. Total volumes reached 1.36 trillion cubic metres in 2020, according to the Alberta Energy Regulator.
Calgary-based Imperial, majority-owned by Exxon Mobil Corp (XOM.N), and the AER have both been criticised for failing to properly disclose the Kearl tailings leak to local communities. read more
Alberta has sent officials to Kearl to conduct independent water sampling, in addition to monitoring by the AER and Imperial, according to the meeting readout. Guilbeault and Savage agreed to share testing results and review information exchange processes.
Last week, federal inspectors said the leak is harmful to wildlife and ordered Imperial to take immediate action to contain the seepage.
Imperial said on Wednesday nearly 200 people are working on related activities at the site and have made progress on mitigating seepage, almost completing the clean-up of the drainage pond overflow.
The company said that monitoring and water sampling data shows no impacts to local waterways or drinking water, and that the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo has declared drinking water to be safe in the nearby community of Fort Chipewyan.