Showing posts with label Alberta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alberta. Show all posts

Friday, 10 May 2013

Indigenous impacts of oil and tarsands -- by Melina Massimo-Laboucan


Melina Laboucan-Massimo is a member of the Lubicon Cree First Nation. She has worked with Redwire Media Society, the Indigenous Media Arts Group and the Indigenous Environmental Network. She is now a tarsands climate and energy campaigner with Greenpeace.

She tells the story of her people below, The Lubicon are one of many First Nations threatened by extractive industries. 

Awaiting justice: the ceaseless struggle of the Lubicon Cree
by Melina Massimo-Laboucan (reprinted from Briarpatch 28 Feb 2012).

The traditional territory of the Lubicon Cree covers approximately 10,000 square kilometres of low-lying trees, rivers, plains, and wetlands – what we call muskeg – in northern Alberta.
For three decades, this territory has undergone massive oil and gas development without the consent of the Lubicon people and without recognition of our Aboriginal rights, which are protected under Section 35 of the Canadian Constitution.

In the 1970s, before this encroachment on the land began, my father’s generation and my grandparents’ generation survived by hunting, fishing, and trapping throughout the region. Back then, and even into my own generation, people were still living off the land. I remember going out on the trapline, and I remember when the water was still good to drink. But as oil and gas have come through the territory, that’s changed.



Jiri Rezac/Greenpeace
Currently there are more than 2,600 oil and gas wells in our traditional territories. Over 1,400 square kilometres of leases have been granted for tarsands development in Lubicon territory, and almost 70 per cent of the remaining land has been leased for future development.

Where there once was self-sufficiency, we are seeing increased dependency on social services as families are no longer able to sustain themselves in what was once a healthy environment with clean air, clean water, medicines, berries, and plants from the boreal forest. Our way of life is being replaced by industrial landscapes, polluted and drained watersheds, and contaminated air. And it’s very much a crisis situation.

In the North, we are seeing elevated rates of cancers and respiratory illnesses as a consequence of the toxic gases being released into the air and water. And while over $14 billion in oil and gas revenues have been taken from our traditional territory, our community lives in extreme poverty and still lacks basic medical services and running water.



Colin O’Connor/Greenpeace
Canada’s treatment of the Lubicon has been repeatedly condemned by the United Nations, and UN Special Rapporteur Miloon Kothari has called for a moratorium on oil and gas development in Lubicon territory.

On March 26, 1990, the United Nations Human Rights Committee ruled that Canada’s failure to recognize and protect Lubicon land rights violated the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. In 2006, the United Nations Human Rights Committee again called on Canada to address outstanding land claims in Lubicon territory before granting further licences for economic exploitation, yet this resource extraction is still happening.

In 1899, when Treaty 8 was officially signed in northern Alberta, treaty commissioners overlooked the Lubicon Cree due to their remote and hard-to-reach territory. The Lubicon people therefore never ceded their traditional territory to the Crown. This has led to a precarious and unstable relationship with both the provincial and federal governments as both have continuously undermined the sovereignty of the Lubicon people. For decades the Lubicon have tried to settle these outstanding land disputes, but unfortunately it serves the government’s interests to keep the Lubicon land claim in limbo due to the territory’s rich oil and gas deposits.



Jiri Rezac/Greenpeace
When the construction of an all-weather road began in the early 1970s, the Lubicon people started to contest the encroachment on their traditional territory of multinational corporations intent on exploiting the land. For the 14 years that followed, the Lubicon attempted to assert their rights through various court proceedings at both the provincial and federal level.

By 1988, the Lubicon concluded that it was necessary to use other means of direct action so their voices and message would be heard. On October 15, 1988, the Lubicon people erected a peaceful blockade, which was successful in stopping oil exploitation in the territory for six days. Only then did Alberta premier Don Getty meet with the Lubicon chief and agree to a 243-square-kilometre reserve under the Grimshaw Accord.

Despite this agreement, the Canadian government offered the Lubicon substandard conditions in the land settlement agreement. Even Getty described the offer as “deficient in the area of providing economic stability for the future.”

Unfortunately, due to the take-it-or-leave-it approach of the federal government, the land claim negotiations continued from 1989 until 2003 when the talks broke down completely and both parties walked away from the table. To this day, the Lubicon Cree have been unable to settle a land claim, which has drastically hindered their ability to protect themselves and their traditional territory from further exploitation and destruction.

On April 29, 2011, a rupture in the Rainbow Pipeline resulted in a spill of about 4.5 million litres of oil in our territory – one of the biggest oil spills in Alberta’s history. When the pipeline broke, oil went down the corridor and into the forest, but the majority of it was soaked up into the muskeg, which is like peatland moss and takes thousands of years to be generated. The muskeg is not an isolated system. It’s not “stagnant water,” as the government claims. It’s actually a living, breathing ecosystem that supports life and is connected to all the water in the region.



Jimmy Jeong/Greenpeace
On the first day of the spill, the school was not notified. When students started to feel sick, they were evacuated from the school under the assumption that it was a propane leak. When they got outside into the field, they realized that the problem was extended throughout the community.

During the first week of the spill, community members experienced physical symptoms: their eyes burned, they had headaches, they felt nauseous. We were told that air quality was not a problem, even though Alberta Environment didn’t actually come into the community until six days after the spill. This is problematic since a government granting permits for this type of development, often without the consent of the people, has an obligation to take care of those whom they are directly putting at risk. A lot of people were left wondering what they should do, and if pregnant women and small children should even be in the community.

The Rainbow Pipeline is now 45 years old. When it broke in 2006 and spilled 1 million litres of oil, the Alberta Energy and Utilities Board stated that stress and corrosion in the pipeline’s infrastructure contributed to the spill. Five years later, 4.5 million litres spilled in our traditional territory. We’re also seeing pipeline breaks like this in other parts of North America, from Kalamazoo, Michigan, to the Kinder-Morgan spill along the West Coast. Will it ever end?

How many more communities have to be put at risk for this type of development, and who is really benefiting? What are we leaving to future generations? We need to shift away from a fossil fuel-based system and push for renewable energy systems that enable us to be self-sufficient and self-sustaining.
For over a century now, the Lubicon Cree’s rights have not been protected or respected. For decades the Lubicon have led local, national, and international lobbying efforts to fight for what is inherently theirs and to protect their right to their land and to clean air and good water. But despite years of raising awareness and increasing exposure, the Lubicon people still wait for justice.

See also Lubicon timeline, and Kairoscanada position.  

Saturday, 14 August 2010

Tarsands continuing pollution more than BP spill

Dr Kevin Timoney's database of tarsands pollution exceedances is now online, thanks to Greenpeace, Keepers of the Athabasca, Global Forest Watch Canada, Environmental Defence, Sierra Club, and the Pembina Institute.
4 min video interview from Petropolis.

See CBC Edmonton story 30 July 2010. Syncrude and Suncor refused to cooperate, perhaps because their own reports to the Alberta government show continual violations of air and water standards. The Harper government in Ottawa recently removed a toxic, naphthenic acid, from a list of hazards that industry must report.

Timoney's introduction says the database "may in some small way contribute to replacing a culture of impunity with one of responsibility. When Albertans decide they will no longer tolerate bad government, things will get better. Until then, tar sands and other corporations will continue to pollute at will, sure in the knowledge that they operate outside meaningful controls and immune from prosecution. This work is dedicated to Alberta’s civil servants, many of whom strive to serve the public knowing full well their efforts may be nullified at some point along the chain of command."

Melina Laboucan-Massimo, climate and energy campaigner with Greenpeace says: “These data indicate a legacy of mismanagement and a lack of oversight by a government that seems more interested in public relations than in addressing the toxic legacy the tar sands are imposing on Albertans...local communities and workers who are often left without any recourse when exposed to emissions and contaminants.”

Tuesday, 20 July 2010

Avatarsands and other videos

"Canada's Avatarsands: the scenes too dirty for theatres"

Based on a full-page advertisement in Variety magazine 2 Mar 2010 by 55 environmental organizations -- including Environmental Defence Canada, Greenpeace, FOE, Sierra Club, and Corporate Ethics International -- that shocked the oil industry into a multimillion dollar greenwash campaign. See examples on the CAPP (Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers) and Canada's Oil Sands websites.

More Dirty Oil Sands videos, Polaris Institute's Tar Nation video game, Art not Oil (UK) on BP oil spill, ExxonMobil TV Commercial spoof by 'Solar Dave" Dugdale, Democracy in Action (US) Tar Sands Blow video. Follow the oil money in US politics: Oil Change International and Opensecrets.org. Since 2008 Exxon has spent $80 million, Chevron $33 million, boasting that their lobbyists prevented US Congress action on tarsands crude, lowcarbon fuels, oil shales, and shale gas. See this report by the lobby Center for North American Energy Security.

Wednesday, 25 March 2009

Tar Sands: Dirty Oil and the Future of a Continent -- by Andew Nikiforuk

Did you know the tarsands now are 20% of US oil supply? That Canada has displaced Saudi Arabia? Why are critics ignored, censored or fired? What can ordinary citizens do? Veteran environmental journalist Andrew Nikiforuk tells about its environmental impacts and Canadian governments' role.


The frenzied development ($100 billion and counting) of the oil sands in Fort McMurray, Alberta, in the last six years has made Canada the world’s fifth greatest global exporter of oil and turned the country into “an emerging energy superpower.”

Combining extensive scientific research and compelling writing, Andrew Nikiforuk takes the reader to Fort McMurray, home to some of the world’s largest open-pit mines, and explores this twenty-first-century pioneer town from the exorbitant cost of housing to its more serious social ills. He uncovers a global Deadwood, complete with rapturous engineers, cut-throat cocaine dealers, aimless bush workers, American evangelicals, and the largest population of homeless people in northern Canada. Tarsands production:

  • burns more carbon than conventional oil,
  • destroys forests and displaces woodland caribou,
  • poisons the water supply and communities downstream,
  • drains the Athabasca, the river that feeds Canada’s largest watershed, and
  • contributes to climate change.

The book does provide hope, however, and ends with an exploration of possible solutions to the problem.

"The Alberta tar sands are a cesspool of pollution. Nikiforuk’s elegantly written book delivers all the gory details about toxic lakes, heat-trapping greenhouse gases, and the fiction of reclamation. Tar Sands also reveals how Canada’s new status as a petrostate has jeopardized its democracy. His 12 steps to energy sanity should be required reading for every citizen."-- Georgia Straight

"Award-winning journalist Andrew Nikiforuk explores why, while the world is going green, Canada is going black in Tar Sands, which includes a fascinating look at Fort McMurray’s black-gold rush town, often lawless and corrupt." -- Canadian Bookseller

"Required reading for the President in preparation for his first foreign trop is the book Tar Sands: Dirty Oil and the Future of a Continent, by Andrew Nikiforuk, which was published to wide acclaim in Canada in the fall… It details the impact [of]... the world’s largest energy project and one of its dirtiest and most dangerous. In anticipation of Obama’s visit, Prime Minister Harper told the press: ‘To be frank on the oil sands, we’ve got to do a better job environmentally.’ Read Nikiforuk’s book and you’ll see why Harper’s comment has already won the award for Biggest Understatement of 2009." --Huffington Post

"Investigative journalist and national treasure Andrew Nikiforuk documents the exorbitant economic, social and environmental costs of building Alberta’s Tar Sands." -- Maisonneuve

"Nikiforuk believes the tar sands should be developed gradually and with far greater environmental sensitivity… Nikiforuk paints a picture of the current development as an environmental cesspool. In fact… the tar sands are Canada’s single largest growing source of carbon dioxide, and by 2020 will account for no less than 16% of the nation’s total emissions." -- Regina Leader-Post

“[Tar Sands] provides an excellent guide to all of the environmental repercussions of our oil dependency. The political analysis is also good, sounding a warning about our dangerous energy 'interdependence' with the declining American empire…” -- Quill & Quire

"It’s an important book, one that every Canadian should read to find out how the world’s largest energy project will affect us." -- David Suzuki Foundation

"If you want to be scared, you don’t need to watch a horror movie or read the latest Stephen King bestseller. Real terror can be found by simply firing up Google Earth… [where] you can see what Alberta's tar sands look like from space. It’s not a pretty sight… A recent book by celebrated journalist Andrew Nikiforuk, Tar Sands… explores what these grey spots on Google Earth mean to Canada’s environment and economy. It’s an important book, one that every Canadian should read to find out how the worlds largest energy project will affect us." -- Georgia Straight

"In his recent book Tar Sands… Nikiforuk lands a knockout blow on the kissers of the oil industry, oil-friendly bureaucrats, and petrol-guzzling North Americans. It is obvious that this Canadian is sick and tired of watching his own beloved habitat mutate from a pristine Northern ecosystem to a veritable toxic wasteland. …His book combines intensive research with a lively, caustic writing style… sort of enlightened invective. This makes for an astonishingly entertaining read that raises your hackles while raising your awareness about a seriously dangerous issue. …With Nikiforuk barking and biting at the heels of the oiligarchs stomping around his home turf, every Canadian and American will have little difficulty recognizing that bitumen is far too dirty to have a place in the future of our continent." -- Sustainablog

"Nikiforuk …took pains to ensure his book went beyond preaching to the converted. Tar Sands begins with a bluntly worded 22-point ‘declaration of a political emergency’ and ends with a 12-step plan to regain ‘energy sanity,’ which includes action the general reader can take. In between, Nikiforuk writes not only about environmental and political concerns, but takes the reader into the frenzied boom of Fort McMurray and along the so-called ‘highway to hell’ that leads to it."-- Calgary Herald

See also the feature documentary H2Oil (2009); National Geographic March 2009 on the tarsands: Scraping Bottom and interviews with Albertans of all stripes in the video Shifting Sand; Dominionpaper.ca download special issue on tarsands (Oct 2009); Dogwood Initiative
about Haida opposition to tarsands-Kitimat pipeline-tankers to China; Andrew Nikiforuk, Tar Sands (2009) order pb or ebook; James Hoggan, Climate Cover-Up (2009) about oil industry funding -- $millions -- to climate change deniers.

Sunday, 1 March 2009

The Dirtiest Oil on Earth - ForestEthics

Supported by the Mikisew Cree and Athabasca Chipewyan First Nations, ForestEthics placed an ad in USA Today and Canadian papers on 18 feb 09, urging US President Obama to take action against dirty oil from the Alberta tarsands, with an online petition to Obama and Prime Minister Harper.
"President Obama," the ad reads, "You'll never guess who's standing between us and our new energy economy..." Suggesting Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach have turned a blind eye to tarsands impacts, it got a lot of attention from Canada's media.
Chief Allan Adam of the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation says, "Both the federal and provincial governments have failed our aboriginal community for the sake of money, for the sake of corporate interests, and for the sake of increasing energy exports to the United States. We are seeing disheartening toxicity levels in our animal life and have now received confirmation of unacceptable cancer rates to people in our community. As a people who have been here for thousands of years, we are sad that no one will listen and that government sits back and issues denials and publicity campaigns without substance."

The Beaver Lake Cree Nation of Lac La Biche, backed by the Cooperative Bank, has just launched a court case for an injunction to void Alberta's tarsands permits, grranted without consultation, on grounds that their way of life, as well as fish, animals and plants are being irreparably damaged by pollution: 26 Feb 09 report in the UK Guardian.

These news items were forwarded by CFSC's Quaker Aboriginal Affairs Committee. See previous posts, and Leslie Iwerks' documentary about Dr John O'Connor who was persecuted by Health Canada for his cancer warnings. Her Downstream premiered in December 2008.

Wednesday, 29 October 2008

Support native rights for the Lubicon -- Amnesty International

(Editor's note: The Lubicon Cree have never been offered a treaty. Removed in the 1930s from Indian Affairs band lists by a zealous federal accountant (promoted for his efforts) they have been asking for recognition for more than 30 years [see timeline], while forest and oil companies invaded their land and wantonly destroyed their traditional ecology. Quakers supported their protests throughout the 1980s. Promises were often made, and always later broken, by the provincial and federal governments which quickly caved in to the business lobbies. In recent years Canada has joined the US and NZ as one of the most fervent opponents of aboriginal rights at United Nations hearings. This is the latest stage in their long struggle for human security.)

pro-Lubicon demonstration in the 1980s
Amnesty International asks your group sign on to the letter below....
In August 2008, the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination sent a strongly worded letter to Canada expressing concern about continued, large-scale oil and gas development on disputed land of the Lubicon Cree in northern Alberta:

Over the last two decades, UN treaty bodies and special mechanisms have raised the Lubicon issue in ever stronger language - and all without action on the part of either levels of government.

This now stands as one of the most blatant examples of Canada's refusal to implement the recommendations of UN human rights experts.

With the agreement of the Lubicon leadership, Amnesty International, KAIROS and Friends of the Lubicon have put together the attached sign-on letter calling for action on the outstanding UN recommendations concerning the Lubicon and uses the example to highlight the larger issue of Canada's double standard when it comes to internationally recognized rights of Indigenous peoples.

We would like to encourage as many organizations as possible to add their names to this letter.

It's particularly timely right now as the Alberta Utilities Commission has just approved the massive pipeline across Lubicon land which was challenged in the CERD letter.

We would like to have sign-ons by next Monday (November 3).

Please send your contact name and information to: Craig Benjamin (AI Canada) at
cbenjami@amnesty.ca.
kind regards, Tara Scurr
(Business and Human Rights Campaigner, at Amnesty International Canada)

RCMP ordering Lubicon demonstrators to disband or face jail
Proposed
Open Letter to the Government of Canada and the Government of Alberta:
Uphold United Nations Recommendations on the Rights of the Lubicon Cree

The United Nations' repeated, unheeded calls for a just resolution of the long standing Lubicon Lake Cree land dispute in northern Alberta highlight Canada's disturbing double standards on upholding international human rights laws and standards.

Over the past two decades United Nations human rights bodies have repeatedly raised concerns over Canada's failure to respect and uphold the Lubicon people's rights in the face of large-scale oil and gas development on their unceded lands.

Most recently, in an August 15th letter to Canada's representative to the United Nations in Geneva, the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination questioned whether TransCanada Corporation's planned multi-million dollar gas pipeline across the Lubicon traditional territory can be legitimately authorized by the Government of Alberta or the Alberta Utilities Commission without prior Lubicon consent.

Yet, on October 10, the Alberta Utilities Commission approved the building of the massive TransCanada gas pipeline through Lubicon territory despite the absence of any agreement between the company and the Lubicon.

We share the United Nations' concern with this well-documented and longstanding Canadian human rights tragedy.

The Lubicon Cree are an Indigenous nation of some 500 people in northern Alberta. The Lubicon were overlooked when the federal government negotiated treaties with other First Nations at the end of the 19th Century. Despite having failed to negotiate any legal access to Lubicon lands, the federal and provincial governments have insisted on treating Lubicon land as Crown land. Government licensing of large-scale oil and gas development on Lubicon land starting in the late 1970s lead to the rapid collapse of the traditional economy and ways of living on the land. The result has been widespread impoverishment and devastating levels of disease and illness associated with poverty.

In 1990, after a long and extensive review of a complaint brought forward by the Lubicon, the UN Human Rights Committee found that the failure to reach a land settlement with the Lubicon constituted an ongoing violation of fundamental rights protected under binding international law.

The Human Rights Committee repeated its concern about the plight of the Lubicon when reviewing Canada's human rights record in 2005. The UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination and the UN Special Rapporteur on Housing have since repeatedly expressed concern about the failure to reach a negotiated resolution of this dispute and the continuing licensing of additional oil and gas exploitation within Lubicon lands.

Despite the urging of these bodies, there have been no real negotiations between the federal government and the Lubicon since the last round of talks broke down in 2003, and the licensing of additional oil and gas exploitation within Lubicon lands has proceeded without pause.

The persistent failure of Canadian officials to respect the rights of the Lubicon is one of the most egregious examples of Canada's double standard in respect to UN human rights mechanisms. While Canada has long championed the UN human rights system, Canadian officials have all too often chosen to ignore the UN's findings of human rights abuses within Canada. There is no clearer example than the ongoing failure to reach a just resolution to the Lubicon land dispute.

Canada has long played a powerful role at the United Nations holding other nations to account for their violations of international human rights standards. This important moral leadership is drastically undermined by Canada's failure to uphold those same standards at home.

Our organizations urge the Government of Canada to uphold its obligations under international human rights law by immediately committing to returning to negotiations with the Lubicon Cree with the intention of ensuring that their rights are fully respected and upheld.

We also remind the Government of Alberta that provincial governments also have a duty to respect and uphold international human rights laws and standards. Therefore we urge the Government of Alberta, consistent with UN recommendations, to ensure that no further development takes place within the Lubicon land claim area without the free, prior and informed consent of the Lubicon Nation, including the proposed TransCanada pipeline.


Thursday, 14 August 2008

Liar liar your pants are on fire / Shell condamné pour pub mensongère

(voir texte complet) L'autorité britannique de régulation de la publicité (ASA) a jugé la publicité «mensongère», parce qu'elle utilise le terme «ambigu» de développement durable sans donner «d'éléments qui montrent comment Shell maîtrise concrètement ses émissions de CO2 dans ses projets de sables bitumineux». L'association écologiste WWF avait saisi l'ASA après la parution d'une publicité dans le Financial Times affirmant que «le défi du 21è siècle (était) de satisfaire le besoin croissant d'énergie de façon non seulement rentable mais aussi durable».

L'annonce vantait ensuite les investissements de Shell dans les sables bitumineux au Canada, et dans une raffinerie aux États-Unis. «Les sables bitumineux sont une source d'énergie incroyablement destructrice», ils «ne peuvent être considérés comme un moyen durable de satisfaire les besoins énergétiques futurs du monde», a affirmé David Norman, responsable de la branche britannique du WWF.

L'ASA a interdit au groupe pétrolier de faire paraître à nouveau cette publicité.
The greenwash ad / le pub en question
Oil giant Shell misled the public when it claimed in an advertisement that its giant $10bn oil sands project in northern Canada was a "sustainable energy source", according to the Advertising Standards Authority of the UK.

The tar sands cover over 140,000 square kilometres of Alberta... This is strip-mined from vast open pits and the bitumen is then heated, using far larger amounts of energy than in normal oil operations, therefore causing greater carbon dioxide emissions. A recent report suggested that the production can create up to eight times as many emissions as conventional oil.

In one of the most significant "greenwash" rulings in some years, the independent body responsible for regulating UK advertising upheld a complaint from green campaign group WWF that Shell's advert in the Financial Times was "misleading". The ad must be withdrawn.

(see full text in The Guardian 13 Aug 2008)

Saturday, 9 August 2008

In Alberta - by David Millar

This morning after the storm the air smelled of sweetgrass. Big sky, flat earth from here to Mexico, home of fundamentalist religions of all kinds, bastion of the cowboy culture (since the 1880s cattle drives, this province has always been an outpost of Texas).

Man is an exclamation mark in an ocean of air. We are on the third prairie level, the shortgrass plain. To get here, you start in the black gumbo around Lake Winnipeg and the Dakotas, or in the Mississippi Valley. Next step is the Missouri breaks, a line of cliffs and badlands, through which you arrive in the breadbasket, the high grass prairie, fertile wheat and corn lands that stretch from Saskatchewan south to Nebraska. Just throw in the seeds and jump back. But the third level should never have been plowed. Low rainfall, buffalo grass (that curly grass like a bison's coat). Cattle country. Oil country. Country of cowboy boots, the ultimate deterrent to ordinary walking.

In town, the first thing you notice is the architecture. Stucco boxes. False fronts. Usefulness trumps beauty. (Exception: 90-year old clapboard houses, prefabs shipped in on the railway when lumber was cheap. Pure arts & crafts style, humble and well-proportioned, now surrounded by tall trees and gardens.) On main street: unmuffled pickup trucks, motorcycles, SUVs, ATVs, personal tractors, all the machines that you need to dominate the endless earth, the overarching sky, to protect yourself from wind and rain and cold. Wide clean avenues, parking lots the size of a quarter-section. Every place you go, you must drive. We're back in the 50s, when gas was going to last forever. It is an oilfull world, where God makes the good, wealthy. Pedestrians, natives and cyclists are immediately suspect. Treehuggers. Subversive, possibly criminal, sympathizers with that Nature which is still alien, unconquered, vaguely threatening.

Don't get me wrong, these are good people. They save for the future, say hello to strangers, care for their aged, go to church, volunteer. And how they volunteer! It's not the state, but neighbors that hold things together here. They have bake sales, fix up the parks, raise money for the hospital, send aid to the Third World. And they work hard at it. A life made up, less of belief, than of good habits.

But having to live like your parents is teenage hell. The only escape is booze at bush parties, doing wheelies in the grass or snow, drugs: cocaine, crystal meth, oxycontin, ecstasy, special K. And the oil boom pays for it all. And some die.

There are oases. Wherever water gleams, a little ecosystem. Birds, wildlife, fish, living at the mercy of the bulldozer.

There are a few who ask questions. A few who think that the invisible hand of the market is not the hand of God. Who talk to the natives. Who listen to the land. Who are thinking seven generations ahead. Who as I write this, are organizing house parties to discuss the tar sands. A few artists: Alex Janvier, with his visions of a chief's son; Joe Fafard, immortalizing cows and men in tractor caps. Poets, musicians. They are ignored until recognized somewhere else, in some big city.

Having lived on the prairies for almost 20 years, I started to write this about Alberta -- seen nostalgically and with new eyes -- of the exile returning. But aside from the land, the place (I suddenly realize) is almost any white North American suburb, writ large.

See Sierra Club - Tar Sands Time Out house parties.
Websites of Alex Janvier and Joe Fafard. Joe is actually from Saskatchewan.

Thursday, 5 June 2008

Tar Sands = tar baby

Tar baby cartoon courtesy of The Wilderness: life with Christ
You may remember the Brer Rabbit story. Once he laid paws on the tar baby, he was stuck with it. The Harper government and its allies* are sticking to the tar sands, whatever the environmental and human cost. They have taken great care to cast it in concrete by embedding it in the so-called Security and Prosperity Partnership. Fortunately, US environmentalists are now putting pressure on their government to prefer real energy conservation to "intensity" measures and dirty oil.

A report just published online by the US Environmental Integrity Project states that more than 2/3 of U.S. oil refining capacity expansion is meant to use the heavier, dirtier crude oil from Canadian tar sands; and over 1/2 of existing capacity is to be modified. In the US this will mean a 1600% increase in refinery toxics such as sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, sulfuric acid mist, nitrogen oxides, lead and nickel compounds. Effects in Canada include clear-cutting and strip-mining huge portions of intact boreal forest, creating vast un-reclaimable toxic lakes (many of which are already leaking into the Athabasca River), consuming enormous amounts of water and energy, and producing 3-5 times more greenhouse gases than conventional oil. Tar sands producers now use as much natural gas every day as 3,000,000+ home furnaces. All this is the price of oil addiction.

*see industry list: Team Alberta's $25m public relations campaign aided by federal diplomats, Alberta Enterprise Group, Alberta Oilsands, Albian, BP, Bronco, Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers, Canadian Natural Resources, Canadian Oilsands Ltd, Canadian Oilsands Trust, Chevron, CNOOC China National Offshore Oil Company, CLAC Christian Labor Association of Canada, Connacher, Conoco/Phillips, Deep Well, Deloro, Devon, Enbridge, Encana, Enerplus, ExxonMobil, Firesteel, Gasland Group, Habanero, Husky, Ivanhoe, Keystone, Ledcor, Patch, Penngrowth, Penn West, Petrocan, Petrobank, Royal Dutch Shell, Saskatchewan, Sinopec, Southern Pacific, Source Petroleum, Suncor, Syncrude, Synenco, Talisman, Teck, Titanium, Total, TransCanada, UTS.

Further reading:
EIP facts at a glance and podcast
SPP (continental integration) as a threat to Canadian democracy and sovereignty; a much-reprinted article on "The Militarization and Annexation of North America" 19 July 2007 by Chicago-based policy analyst Stephen Lendman.
TarSandsWatch: online CCPA report Fuelling Fortress America includes the involvement of Bush-Cheney's NEPDG National Energy Policy Development Group, "yellow dog" union contracts, Ft McMurray social problems, and military implications. See also TILMA
Pembina Institute report Under-Mining the Environment
The Guardian 13 Dec 2007 The Biggest Global Warming Crime in History
Mostly Water: on government persecution of the doctor who reported downstream cancers
OilSandsWatch: of 1.8b tonnes of tailings a day, only 2/1000 are recycled. Current production is 1.3 million bpd, which could increase to 3 million bpd by 2015.
OilSandsTruth: native protests against tar sands
CBC documentary Tar Sands: The Selling of Alberta (2008) on the oil lobby, environmental impacts, SPP and its effect on sovereignty; view the video on Youtube

Sunday, 28 October 2007

Video and audio from around the world

UNICEF Voices of Youth (photo: Sudan school)
Tiempo web Videos - youth and ecologists from Cameroon, Mexico, Sweden, NZ and the UK discuss climate change.
Violence and Vulnerability 22 min. film about climate change and human conflict in Kenya.
Balgis Osman-Elasha explains why Africa is so vulnerable.
Maureen Silos discusses climate change impacts on Suriname.
Vaitoti Tupa shows how it will affect the Cook Islands.
Ulrike Röhr on women's issues in the COP12 climate treaty negotiations: for instance in food, forestry, biofuels and CDM.
Podcasts on environmental issues.
US-based Climate Change Action weblog with streaming video.
Photographic art: Chris Jordan's pictures of overconsumption.
Athabasca Expedition and VBS Toxic Alberta videos. Toxic Brooklyn, West Virginia, Pacific garbage to be added.
More to be added later...