From Deseret News archives:
Oil sands venture is set to begin
In 2008, Temple Mountain Energy will begin commercial production of 150 million barrels of proven oil reserves based on its pilot project located in Uintah County.
Larry Clynch, CEO of the Minnesota-based company that specializes in unconventional fuels, said Temple Mountain's innovative oil sands process development has proven technical solutions to tap into the vast domestic petroleum reserves lying idle just outside of Vernal on Asphalt Ridge.
"With the completion of design, engineering and economic evaluation, TME is ready to construct the first production module on the site in 2008 along side its pilot plant," said Clynch, who has 40 years of a wide range of experience in crude oil operations in both the United States and Russia, including pipelines and terminals.
Temple Mountain has been operating on two small-mine permits and its pilot plant since June on their leases seven miles south of Vernal. A large-mine permit is in the state approval process.
The pilot plant, expected to be in full operation by December, will process 100 tons of oil sands an hour. Starting next year, four production modules will follow one every six months, capable of processing 250 tons of oil sands per hour each, working 20-hour days, for a full production capacity of 1,000 tons per hour.
Temple Mountain holds leases of 1,280 acres on Asphalt Ridge, where there are 150 million barrels of known oil sands reserves. The large-mine permit for the commercial mining operation covers 300 acres.
More than 80 million barrels are surface-mineable oil, said Clynch, with deposits are found at or just below the surface.
This is not the first continuous oil sands production in the United States, but it is the first of its size that uses technology that has its grounding in soil reclamation from difficult sites to process the oil sands.
The process involves separating oil from the sands through a highly technical system that employs water, vibration and flotation.
The process used by TME needs little or no heat or steam, thereby reducing cost. Water is used in a closed-loop system, which allows 85 percent to be recycled. The 15 percent loss is evaporation and water that is held by the resulting clean sand.
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