Monday, February 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

International energy researcher to focus on oilsands at Calgary university

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Oct, 2014 12:20 PM

    CALGARY - Nanotechnology similar to that used to kill tumours in cancer patients could be adapted to improve in situ oil recovery in Alberta's oilsands, says an international researcher.

    Steven Bryant, a world-leading nanotechnology expert from the University of Texas in Austin, was introduced Thursday as the latest Canada Excellence Research Chair at the University of Calgary.

    A federal energy research program awards world-renowned scientists and their teams up to $10 million over seven years to establish research programs.

    "I don't need to remind this audience of the world-class petroleum resource here in Alberta. I don't need to remind this audience either of the litany of challenges associated with that resource," Bryant said at a University of Calgary ceremony.

    "What we want to do is reduce the environmental impact of existing development strategies to come up with entirely new ways to extract energy involving little or even no environmental impact."

    Bryant will receive $10 million from the federal government and another $10 million from the university to create a chair for materials engineering for unconventional oil reservoirs at the Schulich School of Engineering and Faculty of Science.

    He said one avenue of research will be to use nanoparticles, about a thousand times smaller than red blood cells, to improve oil recovery by making steam injected into the ground even thinner.

    "You can disperse these things in a liquid like water and they will stay dispersed. If you make these things out of ordinary iron oxide —which we call rust — and you apply an oscillating magnetic field, those particles will get hot, real hot," said Bryant.

    "They're already using that phenomenon to kill tumour cells in patients with incredible specificity. We want to see if we can use the same phenomenon to get heat into the oilsands and recover energy that way."

    Steam-assisted gravity drainage oil recovery is most commonly used in the oilsands and is widely regarded as the future of their development. Finding a way to improve the process is critically important and could reduce the environmental impact, Bryant said.

    Michelle Rempel, minister responsible for western economic diversification, said bringing Bryant to Calgary is a coup for the university and for the industry.

    "It's a big game-changer and it's a win for the community," she said.

    "The remarkable thing about research like Dr. Bryant undertakes is it has the potential to make our primary industry more sustainable, more effective and more profitable."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP steps away from Islamic booklet about risk of radical extremist groups

    RCMP steps away from Islamic booklet about risk of radical extremist groups
    WINNIPEG - The RCMP has stepped away from its involvement with a booklet being produced by two Islamic groups that is aimed at youth who are in danger of being radicalized.

    RCMP steps away from Islamic booklet about risk of radical extremist groups

    Target Canada Accused Of Selling 'Sexist' Baby PJs After Prof Posts Photographs On Twitter

    Target Canada Accused Of Selling 'Sexist' Baby PJs After Prof Posts Photographs On Twitter
    TORONTO - Hundreds of people denounced Target for selling "sexist" baby pyjamas after a university professor posted a photograph of the clothing on social media.

    Target Canada Accused Of Selling 'Sexist' Baby PJs After Prof Posts Photographs On Twitter

    Conservatives Months Late With Jihadi Tracking Tool, No Word On Completion Date

    Conservatives Months Late With Jihadi Tracking Tool, No Word On Completion Date
    OTTAWA - The Conservative government is three months late on delivering a tracking system it continues to tout as a means of stopping homegrown terrorists from joining overseas conflicts.

    Conservatives Months Late With Jihadi Tracking Tool, No Word On Completion Date

    Canada Cannot Support 4th Carrier: Telus

    Canada Cannot Support 4th Carrier: Telus
    GATINEAU, Que. - Canada should heed the lessons learned in Europe about adopting rules intended to keep wireless prices low, the former head of Austria's telecom regulator has told the CRTC.

    Canada Cannot Support 4th Carrier: Telus

    Ontario Nurses Ask Province For Medical Tourism Info

    Ontario Nurses Ask Province For Medical Tourism Info
    TORONTO - The Registered Nurses' Association of Ontario is asking the provincial government for information on which hospitals are letting foreign patients pay for health care.

    Ontario Nurses Ask Province For Medical Tourism Info

    Russia Upset Over Canadian Visa Denials For Space Conference

    Russia Upset Over Canadian Visa Denials For Space Conference
    Canada's refusal to allow Russian delegates to attend a prestigious international astronautical symposium has angered Moscow, which said the decision flies in the face of international space co-operation and amounts to politicizing space exploration over the conflict in Ukraine.

    Russia Upset Over Canadian Visa Denials For Space Conference