Abstract

To achieve reclamation certification, oil-and-gas operations in Alberta, Canada are required to monitor the revegetation of idle well pads that no longer support operations. Currently, monitoring is completed by oblique, helicopter-collected photography and on-the-ground field surveys. Both monitoring strategies present safety and logistical challenges. To mitigate these challenges, a remote-sensing project was completed to develop and deploy a reproducible workflow using high-spatial-resolution satellite imagery to monitor revegetation progress on idle well pads. Seven well pads in the Aspen region of Alberta, Canada were selected for workflow development, using imagery from 2007, 2009, and 2011. Land-cover classes were derived from the satellite imagery using a training dataset, a series of vegetation indices derived from the satellite imagery, and regression tree classification programs, and were used to evaluate changes in vegetation cover over time. A refined version of this general workflow was then deployed across 39 well pads in the Firebag region of Alberta, Canada, using imagery from 2010 to 2016. In 2016, fieldwork was conducted across a subset of 16 well pads in the Firebag region, which facilitated a formal accuracy assessment of the land-cover classifications. This project demonstrated that high-spatial-resolution satellite imagery could be used to develop accurate land-cover classifications on these relatively small landscape features and that temporal land-cover classifications could be used to track revegetation through time. Overall, these results show the feasibility of remote-sensing–based workflows in monitoring revegetation on idle well pads.

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