Category Archives: Energy and Resources

Enbridge Buys Encana’s stake in the Massvie Horn River Cabin Gas Plant

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Read this report from trade publication Alberta Oil on Enbridge’s purchase of a majority stake in the Cabin Gas Plant, northeast of Fort Nelson – indicating the company’s interest in BC shale gas.

“Lots of horse trading going on in northeastern British Columbia this
week. Calgary-based Enbridge Inc. announced today that it has reached an agreement
with Encana Corp. to acquire majority ownership in a gas plant 60
kilometers northeast of Fort Nelson in B.C.’s remote Horn River basin.
Enbridge will acquire a 57 per cent share in the project’s first two
phases, which together could process 800 million cubic feet of natural
gas per day.

The deal fits with a desire by Encana to offload anywhere from $1- to
$2-billion in non-core assets this year. For Enbridge, the acquisition
comes one day after company chief executive Pat Daniel told Reuters that
his firm is interested in taking part in one of several proposals on the books to ship liquefied natural gas from the coast to markets in the Pacific Rim.” (Oct. 7, 2011)

http://www.albertaoilmagazine.com/2011/10/another-suitor-emerges-for-kitimat-lng/

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New Zealand Oil Spill: Ecological Tragedy in the Making

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Read this story from the Guardian on the ecological tragedy developing off the east coast of New Zealand as a supertanker loaded with 1,700 tonnes of fuel oil and 200 tonnes of diesel recently run aground on a reef full of rare marine life.

“Conservationists have warned of an impending wildlife ‘tragedy’…with populations of penguins, whales, seals and seabirds set to be hardest hit…A severe weather warning for the Bay of Plenty area on Monday has
heightened fears that the stricken cargo vessel Rena…will start to break up, with grim consequences for the local marine wildlife.” (Oct. 10, 2011)

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/oct/10/new-zealand-oil-spill-wildlife-tragedy

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Emma Pullman

The Ethical Oil Bait and Switch

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In the ongoing campaign to put a positive spin on Alberta’s Tar Sands, proponents have deployed a new rhetorical attack: women’s rights. If you support women’s rights, say conservative pundits Ezra Levant and Alykhan Velshi, choose “ethical oil” over “conflict oil”. The phrase is now standard prose for the Harper government, eager to save the reputation of the much maligned “Tar Sands”.

Their website, EthicalOil.org, says those who oppose the expansion of Alberta’s Tar Sands are implicitly supporting petrocracies, like the government of Saudi Arabia, that oppress women. Getting oil from the Tar Sands is the ethical alternative, they claim, because unlike them, Canada supports free speech and women’s rights.

It is worth noting that Levant and Velshi have extensive ties to the Harper government, who themselves have considerable interest in the accelerated expansion of the Tar Sands. Levant is a former campaigner for the Reform Party and former communications director to Stockwell Day. He stepped aside in a 2002 by-election to let Stephen Harper be elected. Velshi is former Director of Communications under Jason Kenney and former Director of Parliamentary Affairs under John Baird.

I’ll hand it to them – Levant and Velshi offer a compelling bait: the opportunity to support women’s rights. But then comes their switch: we must support Tar Sands expansion and the Keystone XL pipeline, a $13 billion 2,673-kilometre pipeline that would carry half a million barrels a day (in addition to the half million already carried by its sister line, the original Keystone) of crude to Gulf coast refineries.

Their bait and switch is actually a logical fallacy that doesn’t hold up to scrutiny. In reality, if we actually want to take on Saudi sheiks, the best way to do that is to use less of the stuff and transition the economies of the world from fossil fuels to clean, renewable energy. Expanding the Tar Sands will have a negligible impact on Saudi oil profits because their oil remains cheaper to produce, and global demand for oil keeps going up. On the other hand, if we invest our creativity into breaking our addiction to fossil fuels then we would shake their power to its core. It’s that simple.

The Harper government and its allies are promoting Canada as a women-friendly alternative to “conflict oil” and repression, but the irony of claiming their support of women’s rights is that they are simultaneously defunding the vast majority of women’s organizations and programs.

Since 2006, Harper has cut funding for women’s advocacy by 43 per cent, shut 12 out of 16 Status of Women offices in Canada, and eliminated funding of legal voices for women and minority groups, including the National Association of Women and the Law and the Courts Challenges Program.

What’s worse, they cut funding from a project called Sisters in Spirit (SIS) – designed to identify and find 600 missing and murdered Aboriginal women. Through the Native Women’s Association of Canada, Aboriginal women drove and led this initiative, whose primary goal was to conduct research and raising awareness of the alarmingly high rates of violence against Aboriginal women and girls in Canada.

Amnesty International Canada says that Canadian police forces and governments have done little to prevent a long-understood pattern of racist violence against Indigenous women. According to Statistics Canada, First Nations women in Canada are five times more likely to die of violence than other women.

The defunding of Sisters in Spirit and other women’s programming is but the tip of the iceberg of a broader trend by the Harper government to amplify certain messages while silencing others. Tightening their control, they censor dissenting voices that are inconvenient to their agenda.

Nowhere have we seen this more clearly than in the Conservatives’ tireless efforts to silence climate researchers. They have backed efforts to quash climate policies outside Canada’s borders, using a secret Tar Sands advocacy strategy led by the Foreign Affairs Department, with officials working in both the U.S. and the European Union.

They’ve worked to systematically remove funding of climate scientists and have cut virtually all programs aimed at funding climate science in Canada. One such program sent to the chopping block was the Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Science (CFCAS). The project supported 198 climate research projects around the country and provided $117 million in funding that has led to breakthroughs in climatology, meteorology and oceanography.

The Harper government even introduced rules to muzzle Environment Canada scientists, and their efforts have successfully reduced media coverage of climate science by over 80 per cent.

The Harper government and its allies can hardly extol their ethics record as they silence dissenting voices, kill funding of women’s programming and muzzle climate scientists. There is nothing ethical about oil, no matter where it comes from.

Don’t take the bait of ethical oil. We need real action and solutions to the climate crisis, not misleading rhetoric.


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Oil Companies Plead Guilty to 2007 Vancouver Spill

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Read this Vancouver Sun report on the guilty plea by three companies in a Vancouver court yesterday to causing the 2007 oil spill from KinderMorgan’s Trans-Mountain Pipeline that contaminated a Burnaby neighbourhood and the Burrard Inlet.

“Trans Mountain Pipeline, which owns the pipeline, and two
contractors, B. Cusano Contracting and R.F. Binnie and Associates, each
pleaded guilty to one count of polluting the environment under the
Environmental Management Act. A total of 26 charges were laid
after work on a sewer project ruptured the pipeline in July 2007,
setting off a 12-metre geyser of crude oil that showered 11 nearby
houses and led to the evacuation of 250 residents. The companies are expected to pay a total of more than $500,000 in fines and penalties.” (October 3, 2011)

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BC Oil and Gas Commission Investigating Link Between Fracking and Earthquakes

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Read this story from the Calgary Herald on the Oil and Gas Commission’s investigation into whether or not natural gas hydraulic fracturing operations are causing earthquakes in Northeast BC.

“Since 2009, there have been 31 earthquakes in the Horn River Basin,
an active natural gas extraction area. Before 2009, the area had not
experienced any recorded earthquake activity, said Friedrich. The
earthquakes ranged in size from 2.5 to 3.5 on the Richter scale, which
typically means they can be felt but rarely cause damage. Three of the earthquakes took place as hydraulic fracturing was underway, said Friedrich.” (Sept 30, 2011)

http://www.calgaryherald.com/news/Controversial+fracking+linked+earthquakes/5481341/story.html

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NDP Leadership Candidate Brian Topp Takes on Tar Sands, Loss of Local Jobs to Foreign Refineries

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Check out this must-read piece from the Georgia Straight’s Charlie Smith on NDP federal leadership candidate Brian Topp’s critique of the Tar Sands and the woeful economics of the proposed Keystone XL pipeline – which would ship raw bitumen and jobs from Alberta to refineries in Texas.

“I think it is a fundamentally wrong economic choice and a wrong
environmental choice with enormous consequences on the streets of
Vancouver and all across the country…[Canada is] throwing a raw resource to somebody else’s industrial economy for them to get the value and the benefit from. We’re robbing our children of the value of this resource.” (September 29, 2011)

http://www.straight.com/article-472791/vancouver/ndp-candidate-targets-tarsands-economics

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A Warning From the People to Christy Clark

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This is not a threat – just a warning to both senior governments. Something is happening in this province that I’ve warned about for a couple of years – let me explain.
 
For years governments have brought in environmental policy, especially as it relates to fish, rivers, wildlife areas and the like which divides the environmental community.
 
In the fishing area, the federal government, in particular, has encouraged all manner of interest groups – some based upon geography, some on species of fish, some professional fishermen, some sports, and on it goes. Divide and rule.
 
With wildlife issues, it’s been much of the same approach.
 
Starting about five years ago something happened that I and others in the environmental field noticed and reported on – a great number of what I will call well-off people from West Vancouver who had fought to save Eagleridge Bluffs from the rape the tractors of the uncaring and stubborn Transportation minister, Kevin Falcon; who went en masse to Delta to help local people fight the desecration on their area, also by the same Transportation Minister who, incidentally, has complained that we’re not like China, which couldn’t care less about the environment and brooks no dissent.
 
The “better-off” communities getting seriously involved in environmental issues was demonstrated by the good citizens of Tsawwassen fighting the overhead power lines, a battle that again brought people from other communities into the ring. These were not the first times environmental groups have helped one another but it showed that environmental concerns had crossed, for want of a better word, “class” lines.
 
Then, Delta did the unbelievable – it voted in an independent MLA who defeated the Attorney-General of the province – didn’t you notice that, Premier?
 
The good folks in the Kootenays have risen as one against the Glacier-Howser private river power project and have made it plain that it just is not going to happen!

All around BC, people are rising against their political masters and saying, “No damned way.”

The BC government has seemed anxious to piss off as many citizens as they can, as their policies destroyed our salmon and traumatized our rivers. They clearly didn’t give a fiddler’s fart for our wilderness or farmland – our precious “Supernatural BC”, as Grace McCarthy aptly named it.
 
In my travels around the province doing speeches, I noticed people there I would not have expected. The mail I get is short on the old chants of days of yore and long on impatience with both senior governments – and they’re deadly serious about stopping them.
 
Now we have both senior governments in favour of pipelines across our wilderness, carrying Tar Sands sludge, called “bitumen” in polite society, and putting this highly toxic petrochemical into huge tankers to move it down the world’s most dangerous (and perhaps most beautiful) coastline.
 
Very early we’ve seen how the feds will fight – as dirty as the shit in their much loved pipelines. They have set up a federal panel review but, get this, you only have until next week to file your intention to attend but they’re not going to tell you when and where the hearings will be held until sometime in 2012! This is the sort of merry little trick the Private Power bastards work – hold the obligatory, fixed, in-advance hearing at as inconvenient a time as you can, in a place too small for the expected crowd and as far as possible from where most people live.
 
Now let’s issue the fair warning to both governments. Premier Photo-op and Prime Minister Harper – he who so nicely rewarded the worst polluter in BC history with the softest and most pleasant diplomatic post in the world – listen carefully!
 
The public of BC is no longer disputing amongst themselves. All of us now support one another, speak at each other’s gatherings and in every way possible, help each other fight our battles, shoulder to shoulder. We will no longer be divided and, to put it plainly – there’s going to be hell to pay.

Yes, there will be civil disobedience and lots of it if these pipelines are approved or there is one more river dammed. For example, with the Enbridge Pipeline, if the governments are sufficiently unfeeling and arrogant to proceed, there will be agro virtually every meter of the way.
 
It’s clear that BC First Nations, many of them hard-up, will be a huge part of the battle.
 
I might just add for Premier Clark: You’re toast unless you have a Damascus-like conversion – and I say that without a care about when you hold the next election. I also warn you that the polls you will get do not ask the right questions – I know because I’ve been questioned. You and your economic pals at the Fraser Institute are passé – you’ve disgraced yourselves from that deadly day in 2001 when you were elected, and unless there is a miraculous change, you will get your comeuppance on the next chance we have to send you back into radio, where you won’t have a government’s ass to kiss as before.
 
No one I know in the environmental movement wants trouble but that can’t and won’t stop us if you don’t stop ravaging our province. People now understand that pipelines and oil tankers are not risks at all but dead certainties.
 
You see, Premier, no one believes a single word you or the corporations say.
          
 

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CBC: Shale Gas Making BC Residents Sick

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See this story – with photos and audio – from CBC.ca on claims by several farmers near Dawson Creek that nearby natural gas hydraulic fracturing operations are making them sick.

“Wilma Avery says her lungs were damaged when one company flared its
wells and gas plant below her house during a weather inversion in March. ‘My doctor came and looked at me and said, “I think you’ve breathed
some noxious fumes.” I said, “I think I did, too,”‘ Avery said. ‘It’s a yellow pall that was completely around me. I had a cough that
lasted — to put it crudely, you lose all control of everything. Most of
the time I just sat on the toilet and coughed. All I’m asking is this
should never happen again, because the next time it’ll probably kill
me.'”

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/story/2011/09/28/bc-shale-gas-sick-farmers.html

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Eight Nobel Peace Prize Winners Line Up Against Tar Sands Expansion

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Read this story from the Winnipeg Free Press on the letter written by eight Nobel Prize winners to Prime Minister Stephen Harper, urging he stop the reckless expansion of the Alberta Tar Sands. The Nobel laureates include Archbishop Desmond Tutu.

“The letter comes three weeks after several peace prize laureates
wrote a letter to United States President Barack Obama asking him to
block the proposed Keystone XL Pipeline (TSX:TRP), which would increase
oilsands exports to the United States. ‘Just as we called on President Obama to reject the
pipeline, we are calling on you to use your power to halt the expansion
of the tarsands — and ensure that Canada moves towards a clean energy
future,’ the letter says.” (Sept. 27, 2011)

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/business/breakingnews/eight-nobel-peace-prize-winners-write-harper-to-oppose-oilsands-expansion-130709038.html

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Cartoon: Enbridge Showdown in Kitimat

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Check out the latest from our cartoonist and Kitimat resident, Gerry Hummel. The town’s council recently hosted a public forum on the proposed Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline, which would end its 1,100 km journey from the Alberta Tar Sands at the Port of Kitimat – where supertankers would be loaded with bitumen, en route to Asia and the United States. The elusive Enbridge VP for the project, John Carruthers, was there representing the company – which heard not one iota of positive feedback from the community all evening.

 

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