The Needle and the Damage Done

Images of oil addiction in Canada’s tar sands 5

Pop quiz: After Saudi Arabia, which country has the most proven oil reserves? Wrong. Not only wrong, but wrong part of the world. Unless you are among the .00001 percent who guessed Canada—in which case, congratulations!

Canada has 179 billion barrels of proven “oil” reserves. I use quotes because it is not normal oil—i.e., it is not as “good” as regular oil (an extremely low bar, if you ask me). Almost all of it lives in Alberta’s tar sands, a sticky, greasy combination of 10 percent bitumen and 90 percent sand, clay, and water that underlay an area the size of Florida.

This vast store was first discovered by the Cree, and used benignly enough to patch canoes. It was first utilized by industry in 1967 with a mine operated by Suncor. The primary method of extraction is to remove the “overburden”—Orwellian newspeak for what the rest of us might call living Earth: lakes, streams, old-growth Boreal forests, and wildlife. Once all living matter is removed, some of the largest open pit mines in the world are used to extract the bitumen.

Twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, trucks haul 400-ton loads to polluting industrial facilities called “upgraders” that turn the sands into synthetic crude. Some of our biggest companies and largest cities buy tar sands gas and diesel—unwittingly, at this point. Current production is over 1.4 million barrels per day. Canada plans to at least triple that in the next decade.

I went to the tar sands this fall. My organization has been challenging Canadian officials publicly to keep their dirty oil and generating media around the issue since January. I have read many reports, books, and articles, and been briefed by my staff and others who have been there. None of that prepared me for what I would witness.

The tar sands are what you get when you combine 18th Century nonchalance about toxic substances, 21st Century greed, and medieval sensibilities about the ethical treatment of human beings. It is the place that inspired Al Gore to say in Rolling Stone: “It is truly nuts. But you know, junkies find veins in their toes.”

That junkie is us—and Canada is the pusher.

But there are some simple ways to improve things. Like not exempting the tar sands from practically every environmental law in Canada—that would be a start. Like applying basic precautions including cleaning up toxic tailings ponds, installing air pollution controls, and conducting health assessments of workers and downstream communities. Like consulting with First Nations, implementing carbon capture and sequestration, and pursuing biodiversity offsets.

Instead, Canada’s response to criticism has been to launch a $25 million public relations campaign. More recently the federal government made an earnest but laughable overture to President-elect Obama—a climate-protection deal that protects the tar sands from potentially forthcoming U.S. climate regulations. This is not going to change anyone’s impression of the most destructive fossil-fuel project on the planet—but it will mean further delay in real change. And that’s something no one on this planet can afford.

To get involved and learn more, check out Forest Ethics’ Stop Tar Sands campaign.

Todd Paglia is the executive director of Forest Ethics.

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  1. Wolverine Posted 6:50 am
    20 Dec 2008

    EerieIf these images don't deeply disturb you to the point of giving up driving or at least driving a lot less, there's something wrong with you.
  2. AnnaKay Posted 10:07 am
    20 Dec 2008

    Environmental criminalsDoes anyone care what all those toxins will do to people who live there?  Look at Ecuador where Chevron dumped over 18 billion gallons of oil and toxic water into the streams. Today the drinking water is contaminated and over 1,000 people have died from cancer and thousands more are sick with skin disease and respiratory illness.

    If you want to find out more about what is surely the largest environmental disaster on the planet, read this blog, http://www.thechevronpit.blogspot.com.com and this article, http://www.http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/laplaza/2008/1 ...
  3. Werdna Posted 11:42 am
    20 Dec 2008

    plummeting oil pricesOne of the benefits of the plummeting price of oil is that investment in Tar sands has also plummeted.  Many projects have been stopped (or at least put on hold until the oil prices climb back up again).
  4. noracharles Posted 2:10 am
    22 Dec 2008

    Tar SandsUnfortunately PM Harper is in the pocket of his oil buddies and will never regulate the tar sands. He laughably set emissions targets that are intensity-based (so overall emissions will rise) and tried to make it look like he was getting tough on the tar sands. And in the election he said they wouldn't export raw bitumen to countries with lower environmental standards than us, which made me laugh and weep because that rules out no one (heck, I'm pretty sure China may be more environmental friendly than us. We are still pushing Asbestos on developing countries to prop up the Quebec industry and by industry I mean a measly 600 or so jobs).
    Sadly, many of my fellow Canadians have bought into his lies (you repeat these lies enough  people start accepting them as truth) and the media here pander to Harper and heck, are probably afraid of him since he sues anyone who has the guts to disagree with him (see his lawsuit against the Liberal party and Elections Canada).

    There will be no change unless Obama flexes his muscle and forces change on Harper.
  5. no more tar Posted 1:30 pm
    24 Jan 2009

    Tar Sands Photo Album
    I was surfing the net and found this amazing resource of tar Sands Air photos. They really show the horror of this disgusting industry.

    Here is a link.
    http://www.egamiimage.ca/alberta_tar_sands.html

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