The oil sands are driving Alberta's economic engine, and in a time of continental economic insecurity, Alberta can play a central role in providing some economic stability. But as I've previously written, the future environmental costs of how the oil sands are currently being extracted are too high for my liking (and apparently too high for many American municipal politicians).
Calgary Mayor Dave Bronconnier has invited a group of American Mayors to Alberta to allow them to see the effects of the oil sands. I'm sure there are some nice boardrooms in downtown Calgary, but you'll nary find a tailing pond in sight from Centre Street.
The chemical-filled tailing ponds that dot approximately 50 square kilometers of northern Alberta (equal to the size of 220,000 Olympic swimming pools) are only one of the problems facing the oil sands and other implications of oil sands extraction are easily identifiable. The effects of oil sands development have increased cancer rates in northern Alberta's aboriginal communities and have caused the rapid decline of indigenous animals such as the Woodlands Caribou.
Current oil sands operations use an unsustainable amount of water from the Athabasca River basin - using up to 4.5 barrels of water to extract and upgrade one lonely barrel of bitumen from an oil sands mine. Companies extracting the oil sands are currently allowed to continue extracting water from the Athabasca River, even when river levels are at sitting at dangerously low levels.
Ironically, with oil prices at record high levels and Alberta's Treasury overflowing, our Federal and Provincial governments have the funds and resources available to responsibly initiate real positive change in the oil sands by turning around the larger disasterous impacts that we could be heading towards in the future if we continue along the simplistic path we're on.
canadasoilsands.ca correctly states that...
The oil sands are owned by the people of Canada through their governments. Companies buy rights to access the resource, and pay royalties to government on their production.... and it's time that we as Canadians started taking responsibility for the environmental impacts we are allowing to shape our future.
Big changes need to happen in order to address the environmental challenges that we've created for ourselves, but focusing on real positive change - such as changing the way we extract our resources (and lessening our dependence on unsustainable fuels), investing in the expansion and development of public transit and new smart growth initiatives in our rapidly growing municipalities, as well as developing more environmentally efficient and sustainable energy sources (and ways of living) are more positive solutions than a public relations campaign can offer.
None of the six American mayors who sponsored the vote was available for comment on Bronconnier's invitation late Tuesday.
ReplyDeleteBut the director of the Canada program with the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmental non-governmental organization that helped the American mayors prepare the resolution, said a visit to Alberta was a great idea.
"It's wonderful that he's inviting a delegation of American mayors to go up there," said Susan Casey-Lefkowitz. "I hope that some of them will be able to accept.
"We've found when people see the tarsands, they are pretty horrified by the extent of the destruction and even the small steps that the oil companies are currently taking to try to improve things are too little, too late."
Ain't progress a bitch, eh Dave?
ReplyDeleteNews flash: Everything about modern western life is unsustainable.
Renewable energy sources will never provide enough juice for our consumption based society to keep up the current growth rates.
That said, people will fight tooth and nail to maintain the modern way of life, and if some select municipalities don't want our "dirty oil", I'm pretty damn sure countries like China and India will.
You know, those places that haven't had free energy for so long that they think it's some sort of right and not a privilege.
Don't worry about it though, as soon as those cities can't maintain basic services, a new batch of oil-sands loving mayors will surely be elected in place of the current ones.
Environmental awareness has always been the lowest issue on the political totem poll for a reason. People would rather breathe dirt and have food on their tables than the other way around. That's not about to change any time soon.
I'm really interested in why we've all seemed to pick up on the oil companies efforts to rename these projects. Oil Tar projects is what they used to be called. Now it's Oil Sands projects. Is that because Sand creates a more appealing visual picture than Tar?
ReplyDeleteDeb,
ReplyDeleteWe're calling them oilsands because that's what they are... OIL trapped in SAND.
They haven't been used as tar since the early explorers used the bitumenous sands (that seeped out of the side of cliffs on hot summer days) to seal their canoes.
Tarsands is an old term that is used only by those who are interested in heated rhetoric and are totally opposed to the projects in Alberta.
Americans really don't have a choice in this. The oil supply is more and more constrained. Where does America wish to purchase their oil from? It's "dirty oil" from a friendly country in close shipping proximity or despotic regimes halfway around the world. Oh yea they are gonna grow ethanol which uses nearly as much energy to produce in the first place.
ReplyDeletecanadasoilsands.ca correctly states that...
ReplyDeleteThe oil sands are owned by the people of Canada through their governments.
Really now? Does Canadaoilsands have anything to say about, say, a resident of Red Deer "owning" the Churchill Falls project?