Syncrude Tailings Dam | |
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Syncrude Tailings Dam - Mildred Lake Settling Basin, enclosing tailings pond |
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Location | Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada |
Coordinates | |
Construction began | 1978 |
Demolition date | Still in operation |
Dam and spillways | |
Height | 133 to 288 ft (41 to 88 m) [1] |
Length | 11.3 miles (18.2 km) [1] |
The name Syncrude Tailings Dam often refers to the Mildred Lake Settling Basin (MLSB). This is an embankment dam that is, by volume of construction material, the largest dam in the world. It is located 40 km (25 mi) north of Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada at the northern end of the Mildred Lake lease owned by Syncrude Canada Ltd.. The dam and the tailings artificial lake within it are constructed and maintained as part of ongoing operations by Syncrude in extracting oil from the Athabasca Oil Sands. Other tailings dams constructed and operated in the same area by Syncrude include the Southwest Sand Storage (SWSS), which is the third largest dam in the world by volume of construction material after the Tarbela Dam.
Contents |
Syncrude Canada Ltd has oilsands mining operations on three lease areas (Mildred Lake, Aurora North and Aurora South), all about 40 km north of Fort McMurray[2]. There are many tailings dams on those leases. The lease that has the greatest number of tailings dams, and the largest tailings dams, is the Mildred Lake lease. The Mildred Lake and Aurora North leases together contain: the Mildred Lake Settling Basin (MLSB), Southwest Sand Storage (SWSS), West In-Pit (WIP), East In-Pit (EIP), Southwest In-Pit (SWIP), Aurora Settling Basin (ASB) and Aurora East Pit Northeast (AEPN-E). Those referred to as “in pit” have only small containing embankments[3]. In Aurora South lease the main tailings dam will be the External Tailings Area (ETA)[4]. This doesn’t exist in 2010, construction will start before 2016.
Site | Facility | Fluid Fine Tails (106 m3) | Water (106 m3) | Total Fluid (106 m3) |
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Mildred Lake | MLSB | 196.5 | 13.4 | 209.9 |
Mildred Lake | SWSS | 46.3 | 10.1 | 56.4 |
Mildred Lake | WIP | 168.6 | 22.9 | 191.5 |
Mildred Lake | EIP | 0.1 | 2.5 | 2.6 |
Mildred Lake | SWIP Jr. | 1.2 | 0.3 | 1.5 |
Mildred Lake | SWIP Major | 13.2 | 28.6 | 41.8 |
Aurora North | ASB | 76.7 | 48.3 | 125.0 |
Aurora North | AEPN-E | 0.21 | 0.81 | 1.01 |
The Mildred Lake Settling Basin is located on the north side of the Mildred Lake lease area. It is a tailings pond that serves three purposes. Firstly, the embankment was planned[5] as storage for a substantial volume of sand. Secondly, the basin acts as a storage basin for process water, which is recycled, with a planned ultimate storage capacity[5] of 350×106 m3. Thirdly, the fines that are not captured elsewhere settle and compact in the basin, and are later pumped out for long term storage. This means that the MLSB is a true dam in the sense that it is filled with water in the long term, rather than being quickly filled by solids as in many other tailings dams. The embankment has a circumference of about 18 km, an average height of about 40 m and a maximum height of about 88 m[5].
Two starter dams were constructed during 1976 to 1978[5] and were required until sufficient sand was available for building the embankments. The north starter dam had a crest elevation of 312 m. The original ground surface varied from 294 m to 305 m while up to 1.5 m of original ground was stripped for a trench above which was a compacted clay core. The crest width was 30 metres.
The main embankment was taken to a final elevation of 352 m for more than half of its length by 1994 and completed in 1995[3]. For construction purposes the embankment was considered to be in a collection of 30 “cells”, each with a crest length of about 600 metres. Acceptable side slopes were determined on a cell-by-cell basis, based on the strength of available materials and foundation movement[5]. The slope of the outer part of the embankment is much smaller than that of the inner part, in a ratio of about 4:1.
As this dam is frequently appears in lists as the largest dam structure in the world, it is necessary to estimate the accuracy of the quoted volume of construction material. The quoted the length of the embankment of 18 km is reliable. The average height of the embankment is quoted to be 40 m[5], and a check on this using four cross sections[3] yields 45 m, which is of the same order of magnitude. The average base width of the embankment is variously 1,800 m[5], 800 m from Google Earth and 660 m[3]. So whereas one report[5] gives an embankment volume of 720×106 m3, calculations based on the width of the embankment base from these three sources give embankment volumes of 660, 290 and 240×106 m3 respectively. So there's some uncertainty as to the total volume of construction material
The SWSS facility[6] is located in the southwest corner of the Mildred Lake lease area. It was commissioned in 1993. The facility was designed to provide coarse tailings sand storage, returning water and thin fine tailings to other sites within the Mildred Lake Project area. The crest elevation is 400 m[6] or 390 m[3]. An upgrade to increase the water storage to a maximum water surface level of 397 m was constructed in 2009 to 2010.
The embankment length is 19.5 km. The maximum embankment height is at least 30 m and the average embankment height is about 18.5 m[3]. The average embankment base width is about 800 m from Google Earth. So the total embankment volume is about 145×106 m3.
This is located to the South East of the Aurora North lease, adjacent to the Muskeg River.[7]
The embankment length is 11.6 km and the average embankment base width is about 260 m from Google Earth. The surface elevation is 341.4 m.[7]