In situ: the next generation for oil production
Oil sands projects are groundbreaking in the attempts to reach ‘inaccessable’ crude
Canada's oil sands can rightly be described as the world’s largest engineering play, and a testing ground for new technologies and ideas to recover more than 1 trillion barrels of previously inaccessible crude. The challenge has always been to improve recovery factors from what was previously considered unrecoverable oil. More than 80% of the oil-sands resource will be developed in situ, or in the reservoir, though that method only accounts for half of Alberta’s present oil-sands production of 1.9 million barrels per day (b/d). The oil sands are different from conventional oil, in that the bitumen does not move of its own accord. An external energy source is required to mobilise inert bitume
Also in this section
5 December 2025
Mistaken assumptions around an oil bull run that never happened are a warning over the talk of a supply glut
4 December 2025
Time is running out for Lukoil and Rosneft to divest international assets that will be mostly rendered useless to them when the US sanctions deadline arrives in mid-December
3 December 2025
Aramco’s pursuit of $30b in US gas partnerships marks a strategic pivot. The US gains capital and certainty; Saudi Arabia gains access, flexibility and a new export future
2 December 2025
The interplay between OPEC+, China and the US will define oil markets throughout 2026






