“This government is recklessly pursuing the destruction of Alberta’s environment and it has to stop,” said Mike Hudema, Greenpeace campaigner. “Unless we act quickly, the tar sands will devastate the region’s water supply, ravage a quarter of the province’s landscape and ruin any chance for Canada to meaningfully tackle climate change.
“Our activists are risking arrest and punishment to sound the alarm and to plead with politicians to prevent this crime against the environment.”
The tar sands are dirty. To produce a single barrel of tar sands oil requires three to five times the amount of water. Wastewater is collected in giant “tailing ponds” visible from space and so toxic that birds are kept away using air cannons.
Old growth forests are ripped from the ground and discarded to make way for giant earthmovers to dig up the landscape, an important habitat to wildlife. If all of the proposed leases for tar sands development are granted, the tar sands will encompass an area the size of Florida.
It also takes two to five times more energy to produce a barrel of oil from the tar sands than any other type of oil production. Energy production from the burning of fossil fuels contributes to climate change by releasing greenhouse gases. The tar sands, if current plans proceed, are expected to emit 140 million tonnes of greenhouse gases – or double the annual emissions of all the cars and trucks in the country today.
Greenpeace is calling for an immediate moratorium on new tar sands development, a phase-out of existing projects and aggressive investment in renewable energy.
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Note to editors: High resolution photos available at www.greenpeace.ca/gallery. Video available upon request.For more information, please visit
www.greenpeace.ca/tarsands or contact:
Mike Hudema, Greenpeace climate change campaigner, 780-504-5601
Jane Story, Greenpeace communications officer, 416-930-9055