Christina lake sagd oil sands project

Feb 8, 2018 Cenovus's Christina Lake project in northern Alberta uses steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) Cenovus's Christina Lake project in  Jul 22, 2015 Canadian oil-sands producer Cenovus Energy relies on a technique called steam-assisted gravity drainage, or SAGD, and most of the oil sands' multinational Foster Creek was really the first project to have achieved an economic HC: At Foster Creek as well as at our Christina Lake production sites , we  Dec 8, 2016 Cenovus's Christina Lake project in northern Alberta uses steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) technology to produce oil. Courtesy, Kristian 

Christina Lake Oil Sands - Conklin, Alta. Kiewit Energy Canada fabricated and set 43 modules, built the central processing facility, constructed well pads, and laid pipelines for Phase 1 this 3,000 bpd facility. Cenovus returns to profitability and lays out a plan for growing SAGD footprint. Feb 16, 2017. Feb 16, 2017. Dec 8, 2016. A leaner Cenovus shifts from penny-pinching to growth in 2017. Dec 8, 2016 CENOVUS • CHRISTINA LAKE OIL SANDS PROJECT CENOVUS • CHRISTINA LAKE: LOCATION MAP • AUG 2012 GOLDER & ASSOCIATES • CHRISTINA LAKE PHASES Located in the southern Athabasca oil sands region, 150km south of Fort McMurray in north-east Alberta, the Christina Lake Project is a 200km2 steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) oil sands development. SAGD involves using a pair of horizontally stacked wells. The top well injects steam which separates the bitumen from the sand. The Christina Lake Project is currently the focus of MEG’s oil development. Located in the southern Athabasca region, this multi-phased project is located 150 kilometres south of Fort McMurray in northeast Alberta. Image: Joey Podlubny/JWN. MEG Energy announced this week that it will return to growth at its Christina Lake SAGD project south of Fort McMurray.. The project, which started operating as a SAGD pilot in the late 1990s, has three operating commercial phases totalling capacity of 60,000 bbls/d. • Utilize steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) technology to extract bitumen from the oil sands • Operating Area– Christina Lake Project Phases 2 (includes Phase 1) and 2B • 50%-ownership of the Access Pipeline . 6

Feb 8, 2018 Cenovus's Christina Lake project in northern Alberta uses steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) Cenovus's Christina Lake project in 

Cenovus returns to profitability and lays out a plan for growing SAGD footprint. Feb 16, 2017. Feb 16, 2017. Dec 8, 2016. A leaner Cenovus shifts from penny-pinching to growth in 2017. Dec 8, 2016 CENOVUS • CHRISTINA LAKE OIL SANDS PROJECT CENOVUS • CHRISTINA LAKE: LOCATION MAP • AUG 2012 GOLDER & ASSOCIATES • CHRISTINA LAKE PHASES Located in the southern Athabasca oil sands region, 150km south of Fort McMurray in north-east Alberta, the Christina Lake Project is a 200km2 steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) oil sands development. SAGD involves using a pair of horizontally stacked wells. The top well injects steam which separates the bitumen from the sand. The Christina Lake Project is currently the focus of MEG’s oil development. Located in the southern Athabasca region, this multi-phased project is located 150 kilometres south of Fort McMurray in northeast Alberta. Image: Joey Podlubny/JWN. MEG Energy announced this week that it will return to growth at its Christina Lake SAGD project south of Fort McMurray.. The project, which started operating as a SAGD pilot in the late 1990s, has three operating commercial phases totalling capacity of 60,000 bbls/d. • Utilize steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) technology to extract bitumen from the oil sands • Operating Area– Christina Lake Project Phases 2 (includes Phase 1) and 2B • 50%-ownership of the Access Pipeline . 6 Phase G of the Christina Lake expansion was halted in early 2015 due to market conditions but has been restarted in Q1 2017. First oil came in late 2019. Phase G carries a capital cost of $950M The expansion would increase the facility's bitumen production to 310,000 barrels per day. Application approved April 2011. Estimated construction Phase 1E 2012 - 2014; Phase 1F 2012 - 2015. Phase 1G The project uses the steam assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) process to extract bitumen from oil sands that are too deep for mining. www.cenovus.com/operations/oil/christina-lake.html Nearby cities: Cold Lake , Lloydminster , North Battleford, Saskatchewan

The Christina Lake Project is currently the focus of MEG’s oil development. Located in the southern Athabasca region, this multi-phased project is located 150 kilometres south of Fort McMurray in northeast Alberta.

Phase G increases nameplate capacity at Christina Lake to 260,000 bbls/d, growing its position as the largest SAGD project in Alberta. “Due to mandatory production curtailment in Alberta, Cenovus delayed the ramp-up of Christina Lake Phase G in 2019,” the company said on Tuesday. The Christina Lake Regional Project is MEG Energy’s primary producing oil sands development, located in the Southern Athabasca region of Alberta, Canada. Christina Lake is a multi-phased SAGD project, and currently the focus of MEG's oil development. Learn more;

Cenovus Christina Lake. Christina Lake is the second producing project owned by Cenovus. Construction began in 2000, with first production in 2002. Oil is about 375 meters underground, so it is extracted using SAGD. Current capacity is 210,000 bbls/d, regulatory approved capacity – 310,000.

Feb 25, 2020 Get access to our complete database of historical oil and gas prices, energy statistics CENOVUS • CHRISTINA LAKE OIL SANDS PROJECT Feb 25, 2020 Get access to our complete database of historical oil and gas prices, energy statistics and oil MEG ENERGY • CHRISTINA LAKE PROJECT The Christina Lake Project is currently the focus of MEG's oil development. Comprised of approximately 200 square kilometres of leases, this SAGD operation  Christina Lake Thermal Expansion Project (Phase E - G). Previous Next. Christina Lake oil sands project. courtesy of 

FILE PHOTO: Rows of steam generators line a road at the Cenovus Energy Christina Lake Steam-Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) project 120 km (74 miles) south of Fort McMurray, Alberta, August 15, 2013.

The Christina Lake project comprises approximately 200km² of oil sands SAGD technology involves the use of pairs of stacked horizontal wells drilled to a 

The Christina Lake Project is currently the focus of MEG’s oil development. Located in the southern Athabasca region, this multi-phased project is located 150 kilometres south of Fort McMurray in northeast Alberta. Image: Joey Podlubny/JWN. MEG Energy announced this week that it will return to growth at its Christina Lake SAGD project south of Fort McMurray.. The project, which started operating as a SAGD pilot in the late 1990s, has three operating commercial phases totalling capacity of 60,000 bbls/d. • Utilize steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) technology to extract bitumen from the oil sands • Operating Area– Christina Lake Project Phases 2 (includes Phase 1) and 2B • 50%-ownership of the Access Pipeline . 6 Phase G of the Christina Lake expansion was halted in early 2015 due to market conditions but has been restarted in Q1 2017. First oil came in late 2019. Phase G carries a capital cost of $950M The expansion would increase the facility's bitumen production to 310,000 barrels per day. Application approved April 2011. Estimated construction Phase 1E 2012 - 2014; Phase 1F 2012 - 2015. Phase 1G