Monday, May 17, 2010

Oil Sands Riskier than Gulf Spill, Say Investor Groups

By Matthew O. Berger
IPS

As the oil leaking into the Gulf of Mexico destroys habitat and livelihoods, the extraction of oil from Canadian oil sands deposits is having a similar impact on fragile ecosystems and communities deep in the North American interior.

The dramatic impact of oil sands expansion should give the companies involved and their investors pause, cautions a new report commissioned by Ceres, a coalition of investors and environmental groups, and authored by the financial risk management group RiskMetrics.

Oil sands development is "kind of like the gulf spill but playing out in slow motion", said report co-author Doug Cogan, director of climate risk management at RiskMetrics. He called it a "land-based" version of the gulf disaster.
Read more here.

Walkerton’s lessons poorly learned

A national water update revealing the emerging two tier system of safe drinking water access that is emerging in Canada ten years after Walkerton.


Ten years after Walkerton, Canadians remain at risk of waterborne disease outbreaks as a growing divide emerges between those who have access to safe drinking water and those that do not.

Ecojustice and Forum for Leadership on Water (FLOW) have issued Seeking Water Justice: Strengthening Legal Protection for Canada’s Drinking Water, a national brief on the status of drinking water quality in Canada. The paper reveals a two tiered system of drinking water management where urban centres benefit from better standards, technology and personnel while rural and first nations communities remain at risk due to inadequate infrastructure, patchwork provincial laws, and a lack of binding drinking water standards from the federal government.

The report is endorsed by Assembly of First Nations and National Specialty Society for Community Medicine.

“Walkerton and Kashechewan demonstrated the risks involved with poor water management,” said Ecojustice Staff Lawyer Randy Christensen. “That risk remains, especially in rural and First Nations communities.”

Canada remains one of the few industrialized countries without national legally binding drinking water standards. Only four jurisdictions – Ontario, Quebec, Alberta and Nova Scotia – boast drinking water that meets the current voluntary federal standards. Other communities do not fare as well:
• Latest available data shows that 1776 drinking water advisories are in place in Canada.
• As of April 30th, 116 First nations communities were under Drinking Water Advisory for risk of waterborne contaminants
• 20%-40% of all rural wells have coliform or nitrate concentrations in excess of drinking water guidelines,     threatening citizens with illness or even in severe cases, death.
• Less than half of Canadian provinces and territories require “advanced” treatment of surface water, which is standard practice in the European Union and the United States.

“It’s unacceptable for a wealthy country in the 21st century to have these sorts of problems,” said FLOW Program Coordinator Nancy Goucher. “Canadians deserve and demand better leadership to ensure safe drinking water for their families.”

“Every family in Canada should have access to clean, safe drinking water as a fundamental human right," said Assembly of First Nations National Chief Shawn A-in-chut Atleo. "Similar to the findings of the Expert Panel on Safe Drinking Water for First Nations, the Seeking Water Justice report, outlines solid steps that can be taken toward ensuring safe drinking water in First Nation communities. This includes working with First Nations in full partnership to identify solutions, such as developing national water standards and ensuring stable and sustainable funding supports to address gaps in infrastructure and training at the community level."

The Report calls for strong federal water standards that meet or exceed the current best practices in other industrialized countries, to extend those standards to all communities, and to ensure adequate resources for the safety of drinking water on First Nations reserves.

For more information contact:
Randy Christensen, Staff Lawyer, Ecojustice (647) 654-2156
Nancy Goucher, Program Coordinator, Forum for Leadership on Water (647) 891-0338
Karyn Pugliese, Acting Director, Communications, Assembly of First Nations 613-241-6789 ext 210

Sunday, May 16, 2010

If the Gulf Oil Spill was Over Your City: Google map


Here is what the spill looks like over my home city of Regina, Saskatchewan in Canada.

Compare for your city here.

Bolivia: Between development and Mother Earth

By Federico Fuentes, Cochabamba
Saturday, May 15, 2010
Green Left News

Bolivia’s silver mines in Potosi helped make Europe rich. The tremendous success of the April 19-22 World Peoples Summit on Climate Change and Mother Earth Rights held in Cochabamba, Bolivia, has confirmed the well-deserved role of its initiator — Bolivian President Evo Morales — as one of the world’s leading environmental advocates.

Since being elected the country’s first indigenous president in 2005, Morales has continuously denounced the threat posed by the climate crisis and environmental destruction.

Morales has pointed the figure at the real cause of the problem: the consumerist and profit-driven capitalist system.

Morales is leading a powerful indigenous movement pushing change in Bolivia and the region, which raises restoring harmony with nature as one of its key banners.

This revolutionary movement, with indigenous and peasant organisations in the forefront, has pushed the traditional Bolivian elite from power through a combination of electoral battles and mass insurrections.

It has begun the struggle to create a new “plurinational” Bolivia — based on inclusion and equality for Bolivia’s 36 indigenous nations.

There is an immense sense of indigenous pride and empowerment in Bolivia, a country whose original inhabitants were traditionally excluded.

This revitalised indigenous pride was a key feature of the Cochabamba conference, reflecting the important role of the region’s indigenous and peasant movements in environmental struggles.

The conference’s final declaration contained a strong emphasis on “the recovery and strengthening of the knowledge, wisdom, and ancestral practices of Indigenous Peoples” as an alternative to the destructive capitalist model.

Bolivian vice-minister Raul Prada said the conference represented the start of a “world revolution of Vivir Bien”.

Vivir Bien is an Aymara indigenous concept that means “living well and not at the cost of others”.

Imperialism
Together with these elements of indigenous “cosmovision”, the declaration included a strong anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist sentiment, again reflecting the mood of the summit.

It argued that, “for there to be balance with nature, there must first be equity among human beings”. It squarely denounced “developed countries, as the main cause of climate change”, calling on them to assume “their historical responsibility”.

Imperialist capitalism, benefiting First World multinational corporations, has not only intensified divisions between rich and poor within countries and environmental destruction. It has also entrenched divisions between developed and underdeveloped countries.

Having carved up the world among them, imperialist countries such as the United States and Australia have used their domination over Third World countries to keep them underdeveloped.

The economies of underdeveloped countries have been geared towards extracting raw materials for the benefit of the economies of the imperialist nations.

This gearing of Third World nations’ economies to providing cheap raw materials for export, at the mercy of market prices often manipulated by speculators, rather than seeking a rounded internal development, helps keep these countries in a state of permanent dependency and poverty.

Perhaps no country demonstrates this system better than Bolivia.

Four hundred years ago, the Bolivian mining town of Potosi was the third largest city in the world. Millions of tonnes of silver were extracted — helping finance a large part of Europe’s industrial development.

Today, thousands of cooperative miners work Potosi’s hollowed out silver mines in sub-human conditions to eke out a basic living.

Bolivia, whose resources made Europe rich, is South America’s poorest nation — its economy dependent raw minerals and gas exports.

Bolivia’s challenge
Breaking this dependency is a key challenge for the Bolivian government — and brings with it many difficulties.

In the 2005 election campaign, now-Bolivian Vice-President Alvaro Garcia Lineras summed up this dilemma when he said Bolivia’s choice was “industrialisation or death”.

The Morales government has reclaimed state control over gas and mineral reserves and nationalised 13 companies involved in gas, mining, telecommunications, railways and electricity.

This increased state intervention means the public sector has increased from 12% of gross domestic product in 2005 to 32% today.

With the 2006 nationalisation of gas reserves and signing of contracts with private companies in the sector more favorable to the state, the hydrocarbon sector alone has dramatically increased its contribution to the state budget from US$678 million in royalties in 2005 to $2 billion last year.

This extra revenue has allowed the government to increase social spending, particularly through new benefit payments to pensioners, families with children in school and pregnant women.

An estimated 2.8 million people out of Bolivia’s population of 9 million receive one of these new payments.

All of the macroeconomic indicators show important improvements in Bolivia’s economy. Last year, Bolivia had the highest rate of economic growth in the region.

Having maintained a budget surplus for the past five years, the government has ensured its international reserves have reached a record US$9 billion.

Despite this, the government has largely proven unable to make serious headway with its industrialisation program.

Several of its key mining projects face serious strife (see the article next page) and the country is yet to open a single gas processing plant.

A combination of troublesome relations with multinationals and a lack of technical cadre, among other factors, help explain why.

As a result, Bolivia’s economy — and therefore the social programs — is arguably more dependent on extraction-based activity than five years ago.

Debates and dilemmas
This problem gets to the heart of debates that arose at the climate conference over difficult questions. These include the involvement of progressive governments, such as in Bolivia, Venezuela and Ecuador, in oil mining in the Amazon, as well as the deepening of the extraction-based economic model in Latin America.

Alberto Acosta, the former president of Ecuador’s constituent assembly that produced the world’s first constitution that explicitly defends the rights of Mother Earth, said: “It is necessary to question the capitalist logic and construct a post-capitalist society.”

However, he added: “We have to clearly point out those that are responsible [for the climate crisis] and look at our responsibilities.

“While it is true that the rich are the principal culprits, our countries that are tied to the world economy with an extractivist logic guarantee that these processes of accumulation continue reproducing themselves.”

It would be suicidal to argue that Bolivia should simply shut down its gas and mining industry, with the deadly social impacts that would entail.

The dilemma, however, was summarised by former Bolivian hydrocarbon minister Andres Soliz Rada. He described the “trap” Morales finds himself in, between “his industrialist offers with which he achieved his re-election and the indigenist demands to comply with his proclaimed defence of the environment”.

Morales expressed this dilemma when he responded to environmentalist and indigenous groups who oppose oil exploration in the Amazon by saying: “What will Bolivia live off?”

Without oil revenue, there would be no money for government benefits payments, he added.

Morales’s comments might surprise some only familiar with his powerful denunciations of inaction on climate change on the international stage. But the reality is his government’s proposed industrialisation program and redistributive social spending is a big part of why it maintains high popular support.

This contradiction is enforced on Bolivia by the imperialist system. Overcoming it ultimately requires rich nations to pay their climate debt — and help provide the means for poor countries such as Bolivia to develop sustainably.

In the meantime, Third World governments that seek to break the deadly cycle of poverty and underdevelopment will face difficult choices.

In 2007, Garcia Linera explained: “The outlook according to which the indigenous world has its own cosmovision, radically opposed to that of the West, is typical of latecomer indigenists or those closely linked to certain NGOs ...

“Basically, everyone wants to be modern. The Felipe Quispe [indigenous] insurgents, in 2000, were demanding tractors and internet.”

One example of this was the recent tensions between indigenous peasants groups over changes to the government’s land reform law.

Indigenous organisations from the Amazonian region in the east strongly criticised former vice-minister of land, Victor Camacho, and the Unique Confederation of Rural Labourers of Bolivia (CSUTCB) peasant confederation, for trying to “peasantise” indigenous communities via changes that would prioritise individual, and not collective, land titles.

This apparent contradiction between an “Andean cosmovision” (a concept that seemingly leaves out the other 34 indigenous groups based in Bolivia’s non-Andean regions) and indigenous peasants demanding individual rather that collective land titles can be understood if we grasp the dynamic underlining the Morales government.

Indigenous nationalism
Rather than representing a desire to return to ancient indigenous times, this government is the product of a new anti-imperialism whose roots lie in previous nationalist movements.

It surpasses previous nationalist experiments because, for the first time, it is not military officers or the urban middle classes leading the project, but indigenous and peasant sectors.

Its solid core is represented not by indigenous organisations of indigenous peoples (who are also peasants) that have most questioned the apparent divorce between the governments Panchamama (“Mother Earth”) discourse and its action. It is represented by organisations of those peasants (who are also indigenous) that benefited from previous land reforms by nationalist governments — and today own individual plots.

This is not to deny the important role the specific organisational, economic and political models of the country’s indigenous people play in the process. This is what most clearly differentiates it from previous nationalist governments and is a crucial aspect of its revolutionary dynamic.

Nor can it be denied that the Bolivian government is the leading global advocate in defence of the environment and promoter of a global alliance to wage such a struggle, incorporating strong elements of indigenous cosmovision in its discourse.

However, there is the need for a serious debate in Bolivia, which appears to be beginning post-summit, over how to begin a transition from its extraction-based and dependent economy towards a post-capitalist, sustainable society.

This will require going beyond romantic declarations of the birth of a new “civilisatory and cultural perspective”, or a “world revolution of Vivir Bien”, and understanding the complex reality of Bolivian society and the difficult process of change underway.

Back to Marx: How can his work help us to understand modern times?

Translated Saturday 15 May 2010, by Gene Zbikowski and reviewed by Henry Crapo
L'Humanite


The world economic crisis has ended the taboo on referring to Marx. More and more works are being published on the author of Das Kapital, and the press is publishing special sections on him.

A discussion with Edgar Morin, the philosopher and sociologist, emeritus research director at the CNRS who holds honorary doctorates from many universities around the world and with André Tosel, the philosopher and specialist in Karl Marx and Marxism, professor at the University of Nice.
Read this article at L'Humanite in English.

Tainted Love

Gloria Jones - 1964

Scientists to spill oil in Arctic to test clean-up

Canadian Press

Inuit leaders are concerned over federal plans to dump crude oil into northern waters next to a proposed marine conservation area so scientists can test new ways of cleaning up Arctic oil spills.

"We don't want this project," said John Amagoalik, manager of lands for the Qikiqtani Inuit Association.

The Department of Fisheries and Oceans has asked a northern regulatory board to approve a plan to dump up to 1,200 litres of oil into Lancaster Sound on the Northwest Passage.

The request comes as a time when the world is watching the continuing oil-spill debacle in the Gulf of Mexico and Canada debates the future of its own offshore drilling regulations.

Amagoalik said the proposal is badly timed and throws into question the sincerity of federal efforts to protect Lancaster Sound.

"They're proposing to do it the latter part of August and early September," he said. "There will be thousands, perhaps hundreds of thousands, of beluga migrating through those waters at that time.

"This, we think, is very risky."

Ken Lee of the Bedford Institute of Oceanography says in his application to the Nunavut Impact Review Board that increased accessibility in the Arctic is also increasing the risk of oil spills. He says current clean-up techniques are of limited use in ice-choked water and new methods have to be tested.

"Testing in actual environmental conditions, not just in the lab or in southern rivers, is needed so the new techniques can be used in the Arctic," says Lee's application.

His team wants to test a new way to break up oil slicks into tiny droplets that would disperse more widely and decompose more quickly. Bedford researchers believe they have developed a way to do that by using fine clay particles instead of chemicals.

The tests would involve using a Coast Guard vessel to release 12 oil spills, each up to 100 litres. All slicks would be monitored by helicopter and oil would be cleaned up -- one way or another.

"The oil released during the study will either be effectively dispersed into the environment or gathered up to ensure no impacts on the environment," the application promises.

But Amagoalik worries that the tests are just one more risk in an area with abundant populations of bowhead whales, narwhal, beluga, walrus, polar bears and uncountable numbers of birds.

He points out that Lancaster Sound could already see seismic testing for oil and gas and a major military exercise this summer. As well, the waters of Baffin Bay, just to the east of the sound, are full of energy companies lining up to drill exploration wells.

He wonders if federal actions aren't speaking louder than federal words.

"If, by their actions, they are revealing what their intentions are in Lancaster Sound, then we're concerned about it. We're trying to create a national marine conservation area in that region, and we want to put this conservation area in place before any of this stuff happens."

Negotiations with Parks Canada on the specifics of the conservation area have just begun, Amagoalik said.

The Nunavut Impact Review Board will accept comments on the proposal until May 28 and plans to rule on it by the middle of June.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Oil Leaks And Other Human Disasters

By Bill Fletcher, Jr.
Black Commentator
May 12, 2010

Each day I get angrier and angrier watching the disaster in the Gulf of Mexico worsen. As more facts emerge as to the accidents for which BP is responsible, or the manner in which oil companies have been given almost carte blanche in terms of their ability to drill off-shore, my anger and frustration heighten. And, watching the television reports on the impact that has already been felt by the people and environment of the Gulf Coast only heightens the fury. Yet what I began pondering in light of this disaster and the April disaster at the Upper Big Branch/Massey Energy mine in West Virginia, was the question as to what changes will be brought about as a result. 

There was a time when human-originated disasters generally seemed to bring about some sort of reform in the system; sometimes mild, other times more significant. These disasters normally captured the attention of the public, such as the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire in the early 20th century, or the exposures of workplace health and safety violations in the 1970s. One could even include here Ralph Nader's famous "Unsafe at any speed" expose of the automobile industry.

Things are different now.

What seems to have changed is that we are now more programmed to take a voyeuristic approach toward disasters and not translate our outrage into action. The impact of Hurricane Katrina is an example. While the hurricane itself was a natural disaster (though it can be argued that its intensity may have been related to global climate change), the situation on the ground and the overall lack of preparedness, accompanied by the anemic reaction by the federal government, was anything but natural.

That said, the national, popular response which combined fury at what was happening to the Gulf Coast residents with significant compassion, did not translate into social action. In fact, despite the evidence of human misdeeds, whether the blocking of bridges to stop New Orleans residents from fleeing to the sluggish response of the federal  government to offer support to the introduction of pro-business economic approaches to the rebuilding of the Gulf, there was effectively no national movement for justice for the Gulf Coast. While there were instances of protest, the more common response was one of anger mixed with despair.

The current Gulf Coast disaster in the form of the leak from the BP drilling site is almost beyond belief, but after all is said and done, what changes will be introduced? After all, shortly prior to the disaster President Obama announced his willingness to open locations on the East Coast to off-shore drilling.

While such measures have been put on hold in light of the BP fiasco, will the hold be released once the oil flowing from the BP site is--hopefully--capped?
My guess is that very little will change until and unless the response to the disaster is connected with a social movement. When one considers, for example, the Triangle Shirtwaist fire, the changes that were introduced in its aftermath were not the result of the conscience of government but the self-organization of workers who built a movement to demand changes. After Katrina, by contrast, there was no national movement to protect the evacuees; to challenge the  destruction of the New Orleans education system; and to oppose President Bush's efforts at rebuilding the Gulf Coast to meet the needs and desires of the rich. There were discussions about how to get Black contractors a piece of the action in terms of rebuilding and there was anger about immigrants being brought in to do the rebuilding. But somehow we lost our way.

No one can assume that the extent of the current disaster in the Gulf Coast will, on its own, lead anyone in government or industry to automatically conclude that something different needs to be done. For change, there will need to be popular force, and that means that we need to get organized. Wishing for it to happen is worse than futile.

http://www.blackcommentator.com/375/375_aw_oil_leaks.php

Petropolis



Shot primarily from a helicopter, filmmaker Peter Mettler's "Petropolis: Aerial Perspectives on the Alberta Tar Sands" offers an unparalleled view of the world's largest industrial, capital and energy project.

Canada's tar sands are an oil reserve the size of England. Extracting the crude oil called bitumen from underneath unspoiled wilderness requires a massive industrialized effort with far-reaching impacts on the land, air, water, and climate.

It's an extraordinary spectacle, whose scope can only be understood from far above. In a hypnotic flight of image and sound, one machine's perspective upon the choreography of others, suggests a dehumanized world where petroleum's power is supreme.
 
Watch the trailer here.

Tamar Sharabi - Environmental sustainability and media worker in Honduras

LatinRadical interviews Tamar Sharabi

Tamar Sharabi had been working in Honduras on projects involving sustainability and water for several years when she was witness to the effects of the coup in Honduras at the end of June last year and turned to working on a media project.

As a media worker she was directly affected by the heavy repression and was witness to the numerous human rights violations of the coup regime. She has much to say about the particular effects of domination of Honduras a by a small elite on the situation of women, and how resistance to the coup and the coup regime has led to new levels of self empowerment.

Direct download: tamar.maya_27_AprEntire.mp3 (Takes a minute to load)

Against the Coup Facebook page here.

Renewing the Left in Canada

By Thom Workman
Canadian Dimension
May/June 2010


Downloadable PDF here.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Toxins Coming to Canada

By Sarah King
Oceans Campaigner, Greenpeace
The Mark

What are the consequences of the spill for Canada’s east coast?

"Our oceans are connected and various species found in marine ecosystems off Canada’s coasts also call the Gulf of Mexico home for certain parts of the year. Once toxins enter the marine environment, they circulate throughout the ocean by currents that act as highways connecting different parts of our vast marine landscapes. At any point, these toxins will begin to move up the food chain. Ultimately, species migrating north from the Gulf will carry with them the toxic burden from the spill."

What policy recommendations would you make to mitigate those consequences?

"The sad reality with these types of spills is that once they happen, the damage is already done. Clean up efforts are complicated and all that crews can do is try to lessen the impact on coastal ecosystems and species. No 'clean-up' method even comes close to a silver bullet and some, such as dispersants, have their own consequences. The only real solution is to prevent these spills in the first place by placing a permanent moratorium on offshore drilling, and not allowing projects, such as the proposed twin Enbridge pipeline in B.C.’s sensitive Great Bear Rainforest, that allow fuel-laden supertankers to threaten our coasts. We must cut our addiction to oil and other dirty fuels and make a quick transition to clean and green energy."

Quick Facts
  • Canada has experienced its share of oil spills over the years. One of the largest spills of all time happened off Nova Scotia’s coast in 1988 when a tanker split in two. 
  • Usually only about 15-20 per cent of a spill can be cleaned up. The remaining 85-80 per cent enters the food chain and stays in the marine environment for decades. 
  • Whole populations of orca whales, salmon, herring, and other marine life off B.C.’s coast were wiped out by the Exxon Valdez spill. Environmentalists fear that Enbridge’s plan to build a 1,170km twin pipeline from Alberta’s oil sands to the B.C. coast will put the Pacific at risk of a comparable disaster. The terrain the pipeline will cross, which includes several rivers and avalanche-prone mountains, will also be vulnerable to major spills, they say.
Read more at Gulf Oil Spill: Nine Consequences: The Mark's contributors sound off on how this environmental disaster will impact everyone from coastal fishermen to Sarah Palin.