Tag Archives: BC Oil Pipelines and Supertankers

Spirit Bear Guide Marven Robinson Gets Personal About Enbridge

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Marven Robinson speaks to Damien Gillis in Prince Rupert the day after the big rally he helped organize against Enbridge on Feb. 4, 2012. A spirit bear guide from the Gitga’at Nation of Hartley Bay in BC’s Great Bear Rainforest, Robinson opens up about a range of topics – from the navigational risks of the proposal to the toll dealing with Enbridge has taken on his family and community. The Gitga’at will have their opportunity to address the Joint Review Panel on Enbridge’s proposal at hearings in Hartley Bay on March 2-3. (7 min)

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BREAKING: Enbridge CEO Pat Daniel Quitting

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Read this story from the Canadian Press via Global TV on the surprise announcement by Enbridge CEO Patrick Daniel that he is stepping down – while his company faces an uphill challenge for its proposed Northern Gateway Pipeline. (Feb. 27, 2012)

CALGARY – The outgoing CEO of pipeline giant Enbridge Inc. said Monday he has no qualms about leaving the company while its controversial West Coast pipeline project remains in limbo.

The Calgary-based crude shipper (TSX:ENB) said Monday that Pat Daniel, 65, will leave his post by the end of the year and Al Monaco, the head of the company’s gas pipeline, green energy and international businesses, will take the reins.

Speaking to reporters at Enbridge’s head office, Daniel said the $5.5-billion Northern Gateway proposal is an important project to Enbridge, but there are other important proposals to ship crude east and south in the hopper, too.

“Gateway of course gets a lot of press, and is very, very important for the country, and for Enbridge, and I feel very very committed to it personally. It’s been 12 years since we started the concept,” said Daniel.

“But it’s going to take some time to work its way through. We’re very confident it will ultimately get approved. And we’ve got such great young talent in this company. I just don’t want to stand in the way.”

Enbridge faces steep challenges in its efforts to build twin pipelines connecting Alberta to the West Coast — one that would carry oilsands crude westward for export, and one that would bring imported condensates inland for use in the oilsands.

Read more: http://www.globaltvbc.com/money/enbridge+ceo+pat+daniel+retiring+as+company+pushes+west+coast+pipeline/6442589482/story.html

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Northern Gateway: Pipeline to Problems

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Enbridge’s proposal to build a 1,172 km Northern Gateway pipeline from Alberta to Kitimat through some of the most challenging and remote territory on the planet exposes wild rivers, landscapes and a pristine BC coast to inevitable oil spills. This is the most obvious argument against building this project. But a closer and deeper scrutiny reveals more fundamental flaws that are not immediately obvious.

While Enbridge may assume responsibility for the safety of its pipeline – offered with the usual over-confidence of a developer promoting its project – it cannot claim responsibility for the fleet of international tankers that would arrive almost daily to transport the oil to foreign ports. Such tanker traffic is risky enough in open waterways and accessible harbours. But a trip to Kitimat to back to sea again would require huge and notoriously unmanoeuvrable ships to navigate 580 km of narrow, winding channels. Reefs, storms, tide rips, fog, extreme waves and complex course changes make the passage treacherous. And who guarantees the quality of the ships and seamanship that would ply BC waters? Foreign captains and crews on vessels registered in countries of convenience introduce risks for oils spills that are beyond the control of Enbridge.

Enbridge’s focus, of course, is the pipeline, a $5.5 billion investment that would provide considerable employment when being built but little thereafter – except to the burgeoning oil industry processing bitumen from Alberta’s tar sands. And, as critics rightly point out, the pipeline would be a viable investment only if it operates at capacity. The pipeline, therefore, is a means to both justify and encourage the development of the tar sands, a source of oil that is recognized as “dirty” because of pollution and the huge quantities of energy and water used in production. These larger implications compound the need for a careful examination of the whole project.

So, why the hurry and why the federal government’s objections to a thorough environmental assessment of the Northern Gateway project? Because other oil supplies will soon be available when new technologies are extracting oil from the vast shale sources being discovered elsewhere. The hurry is to secure markets before the opportunity evaporates, a race that inevitably leads to miscalculations, undue risk and promised trouble. And future competition could make this pipeline less than profitable, subjecting it to the eventual cost-cutting measures that are prelude to disaster.

The rush to build the Northern Gateway also obscures long-term perspectives. Canada has no national energy policy. The $20 billion invested in the tar sands by China may be in China’s interests, but what of Canada’s? The eastern half of this country gets its oil from foreign sources arriving in Atlantic ports, a compromise to national energy security. Why not develop the tar sands to meet Canadian interests, refine our own oil on site, and thereby gain energy self-reliance and extra jobs?

This raises the issue of “ethical oil”, an argument used by advocates for the Keystone XL pipeline that is proposed to transport Alberta crude to America’s Gulf States. Foreign oil, they argue, is deemed “unethical” because it comes from countries of dubious political reputation. The same argument is being applied to the Northern Gateway pipeline. Although Alberta’s oil is environmentally “dirty” and the transportation route is risky, at least Asia, like the US, would be receiving Canada’s “ethical oil”. Curiously, the argument doesn’t seem to apply to the half of Canada presently receiving its oil from the same international sources as other countries. Why is the issue of “ethical oil” applicable to the US and Asia but not to Canada? Wouldn’t we be more “ethical” by supplying ourselves with our own “ethically” superior oil?

Money, of course, lurks behind the facade of “ethics”. Huge amounts are to be made by building the Northern Gateway pipeline. Most of the benefits, however, would go to Alberta and the oil industry operating there. Canada would benefit from thousands of new jobs. But as usual, the issue is more complicated than first appearances. Robyn Allen, a noted Canadian economist, points out in her study of the Northern Gateway project that the premium price received for oil going to Asia would force up the price in Canada by $2-3 per barrel, an effect that would dampen the Canadian economy and counteract any benefits accruing from the pipeline. The multi national investors in Alberta’s oil industry would benefit at the expense of everyone else in Canada.

And this raises the phenomenon of the so-called “Dutch Disease”. The Dutch discovered to their chagrin that a huge influx of revenue from oil inflated the value of their currency, made their exports more expensive and less competitive, increased unemployment and weakened their entire economy.

Other disadvantages of oil-supported economies are also noteworthy. Unstable boom-and-bust economic cycles are created by fluxuating oil prices. And a single source of monetary wealth tends to cause governments to neglect the other vital drivers in their economies.The resulting loss of diversity is diminished democracy, alienation, cynicism and social unrest. The eventual outcome is the failed petro-state so reviled for its “unethical” characteristics.

And a final argument against the Northern Gateway pipeline is the extra carbon dioxide emissions it will encourage. Refining Alberta’s tar sands already produces about 6 percent of Canada’s total greenhouse gases. A doubling of production will double emissions to about 12 percent – an annual 90 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent by 2020. This output further handicaps Canada’s ability to meet its reduction obligations to the global community and further vilifies Canada’s already dismal environmental reputation. From every conceivable perspective, the Northern Gateway is a pipeline to problems.

Postscript: In order “…to find the best solution for Canada”, Enbridge is considering changing its pipeline port from Kitimat to Prince Rupert (Globe & Mail, Feb. 10/12).

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Transport Canada Clears Enbridge Tanker Route, Baffling Many

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Read this story from the Vancouver Sun on Transport Canada’s decision to clear the proposed tanker route from Kitimat relating to the Enbridge Northern Gateway pipelines as safe for navigation by some of the world’s largest vessels. (Feb. 24, 2012)

Transport Canada says oil supertankers can safely access a terminal in Kitimat to collect loads of crude from Enbridge Inc.’s proposed Northern Gateway pipeline project.

The federal department has determined that the marine passages connecting Kitimat to the Pacific Ocean contain no obstructions that could pose a safety risk to fully loaded oil tankers. It expects the project would attract 250 or more such tankers a year to the northern B.C. community.

“The proposed shipping routes are appropriate for the oil tankers that will be used at the proposed terminal,” says the assessment by the federal department, submitted Thursday to a joint regulatory panel reviewing the $5.5-billion pipeline proposal for the federal government.

The review, posted online by the joint panel, notes the routes provide the required clearances for good vessel manoeuvrability and allowances for very large crude oil tankers to safely navigate…

…Environmental groups, first nations and other pipeline critics of Northern Gateway have flagged narrow marine passages and inclement weather as among the biggest contributors to a risk of oil tanker spills in coastal waters that they associate with the pipeline.

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Transport Canada’s Clearing of Enbridge Ignores the Facts

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What an interesting pair of stories – on the one hand Transport Canada has said that tanker traffic is safe on our pristine west coast while another tells of Enbridge repairing its faulty pipeline that resulted in yet another spill for the company this past May in the Northwest Territories.
 
Now sisters and brothers, repeat after me: LEAKS AND SPILLS FROM THE TAR SANDS TO THE COAST AND THEREAFTER, DOWN THE COAST ARE INEVITABLE AND THE CONSEQUENCES WILL BE CATASTROPHES.
 
We are being subjected to an Orwellian barrage of bullshit.

What I’m saying re the pipelines and tankers is true – the dangers of this horrific Northern Gateway are absolute. They are mathematically inevitable.
 
This is not some hyperbole but absolute fact matched I might say by Environment Canada’s own documents which predict periodic oil spills from tankers with one “major spill every 15 years”.
 
I wonder of Environment Canada has ever met with Transport Canada.
 
If you scan Enbridge’s documents you will see reams and reams of stuff on how to deal with spills and nary a suggestion that they can be avoided.
 
It’s interesting to note how the PR flacks have got people changing “Tar Sands” to “Oil Sands”, which this gunk clearly is not.
 
The federal government, with backing from Victoria, is now embarked on a careful policy of propaganda and bribes. They want us, the public, to accept the inevitability of the pipelines and tankers. The propaganda will be flying. Evermore bribes will flow to First Nations, communities and lower level governments. BC citizens of all stripes will be tempted with prospects of jobs (about 560, mostly in Calgary – with fewer than 40 permanent ones in BC). The construction jobs will mostly be done by expert teams with lower income, short term jobs to locals.
 
As the huge campaign gets going and you are bombarded with crap, please remember this – it is inevitable that there will be leaks and spills and the consequences to our land and oceans catastrophic…And remember, no one is going to stop the pipelines and tankers after a disaster – they will continue to run as if nothing had happened!
 
When these catastrophes happen, and you have supported them either actively or by your silence, please then look your kids and grandkids in the eye and say, “I didn’t care enough to fight the bastards.”
 

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A freeze frame from Enbridge's pipeline route animation

According to Enbridge, BC’s Rugged Wilderness is a Putting Green Between Two Molehills

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Last week I was privileged to host an evening at the Vancouver International Mountain Film Festival which featured four recent documentary films dealing with Enbridge’s proposed twin Northern Gateway pipelines and the Alberta Tar Sands that would feed it.

Close to 400 people turned out to North Vancouver’s Centennial Theatre to take in the show, which included adventure filmmaker Frank Wolf’s entertaining and insightful On the Line. The film documents Wolf’s arduous 50-plus day trek with his pal Todd McGowan along the entire proposed Northern Gateway route and first portion of the associated supertanker route from Kitimat – the pipeline’s terminus. The rugged wilderness of Wolf’s film is a starkly different landscape than the one Enbridge portrays in its idyllic promotional video depicting the pipeline right-of-way (see video below).

Wolf and McGowan travelled by bicycle, raft, kayak and on foot, using the company’s own GPS mapping data to plot their course. While the pipeline would stretch 1,177 km from Bruderheim, Alberta, to BC’s Central Coast, the pair journeyed 2,400 km in total. The disparity in distances gives you a sense of the steep mountain terrain the pipeline must traverse, over two major alpine ranges – the Rockies and Coast Mountains. So treacherous is the path through the latter peaks that the company proposes to drill two 6 km tunnels through the Clore River and Hoult Creek valleys near Kitimat.

One scene in particular from Wolf’s film illustrates how difficult it would be to reach – let alone clean up – a spill along the pipeline route, as he and McGowan are trapped atop a mountain for several days due to extreme weather. This after hacking their way through the thick bush of the Rockies.

With these images of BC’s dense, raw, unforgiving wilderness fresh in my mind after seeing On the Line, a colleague recently forwarded me Enbridge’s take on the same pipeline corridor. The company’s “route animation” depicts an innocuous pipe running through a handful of architectural model shrubberies scattered atop a flat, perfectly manicured putting green.

Whereas the real pipeline would cross 1,000 rivers and streams, there are but a handful of water bodies in this cartoon. And, apparently, Alberta oilmen don’t realize that in BC we have these things called “trees” – some of them pretty darned big at that.

In Enbridge’s animation, the mighty Rockies and Coast Mountains have been reduced to mere molehills. The treacherous 150-plus km wind tunnel that is the Douglas Channel is but a wide, calm canal, ideal for a riverboat cruise.

Clearly, in Enbridge’s eyes, we have nothing to worry about from their Tar Sands pipelines or supertankers on one of the world’s most treacherous coastlines. Never mind the rugged wilderness of Frank Wolf’s film or the very real geological concerns recently raised in these pages by eminent fish scientist Dr. Gordon Hartman – the Enbridge twin pipelines are but a walk in the park. See for yourself below…

Frank Wolf’s On the Line trailer:

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Kinder Morgan Receives Support from Tar Sands Players to Double its Pipeline to Vancouver

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Read this story from the Vancouver Sun on pipeline giant Kinder Morgan’s recent step closer to expanding its existing Trans-Mountain Pipeline from the Alberta Tar Sands to Vancouver – which would result in up to 300 loaded supertankers a year passing through Burrard Inlet. (Feb. 21, 2012)

CALGARY – Kinder Morgan Energy Partners said on Tuesday it has received enough binding commitments from shippers for a proposed $3.8 US billion project doubling the size of its 300,000 barrel per day Trans Mountain oil pipeline to begin initial design work for the expansion.

The company said a recent open season held to gauge shipper interest in expanding the Alberta to Vancouver pipeline had received support from a diverse group of customers. It will make a final decision on moving the line’s capacity up to 600,000 bpd by the end of March.

“The response to our open season was very encouraging,” Ian Anderson, president of Kinder Morgan’s Canadian unit, said in a statement. “The strong support received through this process will now allow us to complete initial project design and planning.”

Canadian oil producers, supported by the government, have been urging development of a line that would let them tap high-paying Asian markets and U.S. West Coast refineries. The majority of Canada’s oil exports currently flow to the U.S. Midwest, where a glut of crude at the Cushing, Oklahoma, storage hub has depressed prices.

Production from Alberta’s oil sands, the world’s third largest crude oil reserve, is set to nearly double to 3 million barrels per day by 2020.

Trans Mountain, which takes oil to the port of Vancouver and refineries in British Columbia and Washington state, is the only pipeline carrying oil sands crude to the Pacific. Space on the line has been rationed for months as customers look to ship more oil than the line can handle.

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Son of Oil Executive’s Powerful Testimony at Enbridge Hearing in Prince Rupert

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Read this excerpt published by the Vancouver Observer from the powerful testimony delivered at the recent Enbridge Joint Review Panel hearing in Prince Rupert by Lee Brain, the son of an oil executive. (Feb 20, 2012)

The major thing I witnessed in my time on the refinery that I feel constitutes as evidence was my observations of the relationship dynamics between corporate headquarters and the managers on the refinery. What I witnessed time and time again, was the technical experts knowing the damage, risk and adverse effects of the project, versus what corporate would portray to the general public after reading their materials.

There was a clear and present dual world operating simultaneously — completely undeniable if you are on site. So what I saw, first hand, was this dynamic between ‘what is really happening’ and what the corporate headquarters will have people believe is happening. And as we have seen in our planet, this situation is not an isolated event.

Based on my experience, what I learned was that the global system of infinite growth attracts men and woman of a certain… level of understanding, a certain type of person who will be attracted to the ideals of the current economic measurement that coordinates the global psychology of things, and a type of person who externalizes themselves and detaches from connection, and so whole-heartedly believes in their reality, their perception of things, that they project their fears out onto everyone else — and their ego becomes the driver, blindly leading them down a path of self-destruction. And they are people of high intellectual prowess, but unfortunately have yet to develop the deep wisdom that we all possess within us as human beings.

And we call these people CEO, and Prime Minister.

Read more: http://www.vancouverobserver.com/blogs/earthmatters/2012/02/20/oil-executive-sons-testimony-prince-rupert-northern-gateway-pipeline?page=0,0

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Vancouver Green Councillor Adriane Carr Speaks Out on Tar Sands Tanker Expansion Plans for Vancouver

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Read this story from the Georgia Straight on Vancouver city councillor Adriane Carr’s concerns about Kinder-Morgan’s plans to double the existing Tar Sands pipeline to Vancouver and associated tanker traffic through Burrard Inlet. (Feb 23, 2012)

Vancouver councillor Adriane Carr says she wants the National Energy Board to hold public hearings in Vancouver when it reviews an application by Kinder Morgan Canada to twin an oil pipeline connecting the Alberta tar sands and its Burnaby terminal. Carr, a member of the Green party, filed a notice of motion for the February 28 council meeting asking the mayor and council to send a letter to the company. It would request that Kinder Morgan Canada consult with the city concerning any application it makes to expand its Trans Mountain pipeline.

“The purpose is to be proactive in ensuring we get public hearings in Vancouver and the Lower Mainland area regarding any plans that Kinder Morgan might have to expand its pipeline and crude-oil tanker shipments out of Vancouver harbour,” Carr told the Georgia Straight by phone. “Through those public hearings, we can mobilize the citizens and hear from the citizens. We can see that other hearings, such as those up north, have done that.”

Read more: http://www.straight.com/article-615051/vancouver/carr-sounds-alarm-over-pipeline-expansion

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Terry Glavin on the Dangers of Becoming too Close with China

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Read this editorial by Terry Glavin in the National Post on the risks posed to Canadian sovereignty, security and control over our resources inherent in our budding new relationship with Beijing and its companies like Sinopec. (Feb 13, 2012)

This brings us to the Beijing money behind the proposed $6.5 billion Enbridge pipeline from Alberta’s oilsands to awaiting supertankers at Kitimat. That money brings us to Sinopec, also known as the China Petroleum & Chemical Corporation, and if there are suspicions Ottawa would like to clear up a good place to start would be to let everybody in on where all of Enbridge’s up-front pipeline cash is coming from. We’re not allowed to know. Seriously. Try asking Enbridge some time.

Another thing that has never been clearly explained is why Ottawa thinks Sinopec is suddenly Canada’s lifeline to economic prosperity in China. I can’t find anyone who knows anything about the oilsands who thinks so. Inconveniently, Sinopec is also the Khomenist regime’s lifeline to a nuclear bomb. I can’t find anyone in the oil industry or anywhere else who doesn’t think so.

Sinopec is the biggest buyer of Iranian oil, directly and through its subsidiary Unipec, and also via its main Iranian oil buyer, Zhuhai Zhenrong. Only last month the State Department busted Zhuhai Zhenrong under the 2010 Comprehensive Iran Sanctions law. Zhuhai Zhenrong immediately went looking for greener pastures. One of the first places it started looking was Alberta’s oilpatch. Howdy, neighbour.

Read more: http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/2012/02/13/terry-glavin-lets-be-honest-about-or-new-best-buddies-in-beijing/

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