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Writers Articles And Opinions |
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25 May 2010
By Dahr Jamail
The tar sands
mining project in Alberta, Canada, is possibly the
largest industrial project in human history and
critics claim it could also be the most destructive.
The mining procedure for extracting oil from a region
referred to as the “tar sands,” located north of
Edmonton, releases at least three times the CO2
emissions as regular oil production procedures and
will likely become North America’s single largest
industrial contributor to climate change.
Most of the
oil produced by the project will likely be consumed by
the United States, a country that, along with Canada,
is already heavily invested, on many levels, in the
project.
The project
is operated by Imperial Oil, whose parent company,
ExxonMobil Canada, has a long-term production goal of
more than 300,000 barrels of bitumen (extra heavy oil)
per day. To do this, they will require new equipment
to be shipped through the United States.
Trucks and
trailers moving specialized, nontoxic mining equipment
from where it is manufactured in Korea to the Kearl
oil sands project, located in the Athabasca oil sands
in northeastern Alberta, are slated to use highways in
Idaho and Montana to transport the gear. This would
happen after it has been shipped across the Pacific
Ocean to Portland, Oregon, where it would then be
barged up the Hood and Snake Rivers to Lewiston,
Idaho, from which it would be hauled over land into
Canada.
Pius
Rolheiser, a spokesman for Imperial Oil, said this is
the most cost-effective method of moving the
equipment, much to the chagrin of many residents in
these states.
The basis of
most opposition to this idea is that the tar sands
project will contribute so heavily toward worsening
climate change. There are other criticisms as well,
like those aimed at the size of the equipment to be
shipped along routes that are designated “wild and
scenic” highways that wind precariously through
fragile ecosystems.
“We can
speculate that this will have a significant impact on
Bull Trout habitat, an endangered species and on
Grizzly Bear habitat, which the EA [Environmental
Agency] in Montana has noted as an issue from the
construction itself, sediment buildup, paving
equipment and such,” Nick Stocks, co-founder of the
group Northern Rockies Rising Tide in Missoula,
Montana, a group that promotes local, community-based
solutions to the climate crisis and takes direct
action toward confronting what it sees as the root
causes of climate change, told Truthout.
“In Montana
the construction of new pullouts and the repaving and
upgrading of existing pullouts is cause for much
concern along the Montana portion of Highway 12,”
Stocks added. “Community members and organizations
have fought to clean up both of these areas and
protect them as the wild and scenic places they are.
New construction, new turnouts and this proposed new
corridor all run contrary to decades of work and
investment the community has had in maintaining these
places. The risk of spill, mitigation procedures and
sediment issues in the rivers have not been adequately
taken into account.”
The “modules”
from Korea comprise loads that are more than 150 feet
long, approximately 30 feet high, 25 feet wide and
weigh roughly 500,000 pounds. The giant trucks that
will move these are from the Dutch company Mammoet
(Dutch for mammoth). The rigs are so tall they do not
fit under highway overpasses, are so wide they take up
two traffic lanes and the estimated top speed of
transporting them is 30 miles per hour. The trucks are
12 times the size of normal tractor-trailer trucks and
each one has 48 tires.
Much of the
designated route for transport contains only two
lanes, with little or no shoulders, and would have to
be modified by adding pull-out lanes, removing
overhead power lines and traffic lights, as well as
moving signs.
“Where are
these industrial mega-rigs going to find the room to
construct pullouts along the Northwest Scenic Passage
Byway?” Brett Haverstick with the group Friends of the
Clearwater, said to Truthout. His group is a nonprofit
whose mission states that it works to “defend the
Idaho Clearwater Bioregion’s wildlands and
biodiversity through a forest watch program,
litigation, grassroots public involvement, outreach
and education.”
Highway 12 in
Idaho runs through what is known as “Wild Clearwater
Country,” which is “the northern half of central
Idaho’s Big Wild” that “contains many unprotected
roadless areas and wild rivers and provides crucial
habitat for countless rare plant and animal species”
according to the group.
“As it
stands, the highway is only two lanes wide, with the
Middle Fork of the Clearwater River hugging one
shoulder and the other being right up against granite
cliffs or forested lands,” Haverstick, who is the
education and outreach director of the group
continued, “There is no place to build a pullover
along many stretches of the route.”
Stocks told
Truthout that Imperial Oil’s current plan is to have
all the construction completed in time for the test
run and that much of it is already occurring.
“Members of
the Nez Perce tribe and individuals were kept in the
dark regarding the reason behind expanding the
highway, but many now feel that the expansion was
driven through in preparation for this Corridor,”
Stocks continued, “More specifically, Idaho doesn’t
have the same environmental review process that
Montana does where transportation issues are
concerned. There has been no review of the damage that
might be caused by building the equivalent of a 30
foot wide asphalt football field every two miles.”
Haverstick
shares similar concerns.
“Let’s say
the pullovers are somehow, someway, modified to fit
these behemoth rigs. Is it a good idea to have these
200 foot long, 25 feet wide, 30 feet high drilling
rigs parked next to a Wild & Scenic River? What if the
pullout cannot support the weight of these 500,000
plus-pound trucks and the road or shoulder collapses
and the rig dumps into the Lochsa River? Then what are
you going to do? What a potential disaster.”
Under the
current proposal, 200 of these loads will be
transported across Idaho and Montana during a 12- to
18-month period that could start by the end of this
year. A test run is slated to occur by the end of this
summer.
Rolheiser
said Imperial Oil has spent about two years looking at
the most cost-effective way to get the prefabricated
equipment from Korea and the Montana-Idaho route is
the best option.
The oil
company’s plan involves one to two trucks per day
using US highways 12 and 200 through Idaho and
Montana, theoretically only at night so as to minimize
disturbing traffic patterns. Imperial Oil has already
given briefings to many local officials along the
proposed route.
Yet, this
idea also brings up other concerns.
“It sounds
pretty goofy to me,” said Missoula County Commissioner
Jean Curtiss, who heard about the monster-rig plan
when Imperial made a presentation to the county
commission in late 2009. “Think of what would happen
if they hit ice on Rogers Pass?”
“Obviously,
the safety of the people transporting the equipment
and the safety of the public are paramount,” spokesman
Rolheiser said at the time, “If we didn’t think it was
safe, we wouldn’t do it.”
Haverstick
feels there is more to be concerned about, in addition
to public safety.
“This project
should alarm people, whether they live in the states
in which this project is being transported through or
not,” he told Truthout, “In 1803 President Jefferson
commissioned Meriwether Lewis & William Clark to find
the Northwest Passage, the link between the Missouri
River and the Columbia River through the unexplored
Rocky Mountains. US Highway 12 was designated the
Northwest Passage Scenic Byway because it parallels
the exact route that Lewis & Clark traveled over two
hundred years ago. Besides the highway itself, much of
the primitive landscape remains the same. This Wild &
Scenic River corridor is not only home to the proud
and honorable people of the Nez Perce Nation, but it’s
the heart and soul of our American heritage.”
The Montana
Department of Transportation (MDT) and Idaho
Department of Transportation (IDT) agencies have the
ultimate authorities to approve the plan.
MDT director
Jim Lynch said Imperial won’t get a green light for
the plan unless it follows state laws and regulations,
mitigates traffic problems and proves that roads and
bridges won’t be damaged, among other issues. Lynch
said MDT has also asked the oil company to do an
environmental review.
“It’s
important that they [Imperial] recognize they have to
follow Montana environmental law and address the
impacts and that they discuss the plans with
communities to make sure communities are least
impacted,” Lynch said.
Critics of
the plan do not believe there is anything Imperial can
do to make it possible to carry forward with the
project in a way that poses no risk of damage to
wilderness, rivers, wildlife and ecosystems along the
transport route.
There is much
doubt that a thorough and honest environmental impact
assessment will be possible before the project begins
if the company intends to stay on schedule.
“If we allow
this shipping project to go through, the result will
be the creation of a heavy use high-and-wide corridor
that will be used to ship mining equipment to the
Alberta tar sands for decades,” Stocks told Truthout,
“As much as the MDT and Imperial Oil want to argue the
opposite, this is not a one time deal. The
environmental review process thus far has refused to
take into account the full scope of the proposed Kearl
project and its ramifications as the catalyst for all
the needed construction for this Corridor. In fact,
the MDT and Governor Brian Schweitzer have refused to
acknowledge the possibility that this route will be
used as a future transportation corridor even though
the MDT gave a presentation to the Montana Legislature
last year regarding the development potential of such
a ‘high-and-wide corridor’ through our state and the
Exxon’s role in the project.”
Imperial Oil
has stated it will cover the costs of the trucking
project, which will entail hundreds of changes to the
route before the massive loads could pass through the
area concerned without causing damage.
As an
example, in Missoula County alone, a briefing with
Missoula County commissioners found that Imperial
plans to relocate utility lines at about 230 crossings
and place 77 of them underground, make 16 fixes on one
street (including moving signs and traffic signals),
build or modify dozens of turnouts so the rigs can
pull over to let traffic pass.
The equipment
is to be used to mine the tar sands that are mixtures
of soil, water and bitumen. Northern Alberta contains
the largest known deposits of tar sand, with an area
roughly the size of Florida that lies under some of
the largest old-growth forest remaining in the world.
It is believed the area contains 1.7 trillion barrels
of oil, an amount equal to the world’s currently known
reserves of conventional oil.
The
exploitation of the tar sands is the most rapidly
growing sector of the petroleum industry and is
speeding up as the cost per barrel of oil increases,
making the project more appealing, given that it
currently requires more energy to extract the oil than
the oil itself provides.
The tar sands
project has raised great concern from environmental
groups around the world, in addition to those in
Montana and Idaho.
“The Tar Pit
Sands project is one giant nightmare,” Haverstick
said, “There are major social, environmental,
economic, legal and political consequences. And it’s
just not a local issue, but global. This project
affects every living being, human or non-human on the
planet. The carbon footprint is enormous, possibly
bigger than anything we’ve seen before.”
Haverstick
feels, “in a time when we are supposed to be working
toward reducing our carbon footprint, scaling back the
amount of carbon dioxide we pump into the atmosphere
and searching and developing renewable energies, this
project instead puts us back another hundred years, if
not more. From a carbon emissions footprint, Tar Sand
Mining may be the filthiest form of energy production
we know of. And that’s not including the ecological
damage that occurs when drilling for this stuff. Who
knows what type of condition the remaining Boreal
Forest in Alberta, Canada and the surrounding
watershed will be in when this project is completed in
50 years. It will be on par with, if not much worse
off than mountain-top removal projects occurring in
West Virginia right now.”
There are
approximately 100 tar sand projects (comprised of
3,200 mining leases, covering an area the size of
Maryland) planned in Canada, with at least $200
billion dollars already invested.
“The tar
sands themselves have been called the most destructive
industrial project on the face of the plant for good
reason,” Stocks, whose group is active on four
continents and growing, told Truthout, “The
devastation of this mining to the Alberta boreal
forest, the Athabasca River, the Athabasca Delta and
the communities, both First Nations and not, have been
well documented.”
Indigenous
communities both downstream from the tar sand mines in
Canada as well as those along the proposed trucking
route of the mining equipment are concerned about
threats to their physical health, sacred sites and the
health of their land base.
Some First
Nations people who live downstream from the tar sands
mines in Canada are reporting increased incidence of
respiratory and cardiovascular diseases, multiple
sclerosis and rare types of cancer due to toxic wastes
leaching into the waterway from tailings ponds. Also
arsenic, at 33 times the acceptable level, is being
found in game meats that First Nations people rely on,
as well as some animals being found with tumors and
mutations.
The mining of
the tar sands, being as much solid as they are liquid,
requires great effort. The easiest method is strip
mining, though some newer mines heat and dilute the
bitumen underground to make it flow easier. Once
removed from the ground, bitumen is too viscous to
flow through pipelines as conventional crude does,
thus, it is next converted into synthetic oil to aid
transport. These processes can use huge quantities of
water and require so much electricity that one tar
sand mine has considered building a nuclear power
plant to power the mine itself.
“For Montana,
the successful development of this shipping corridor
is synonymous with Montana complacency in the
destruction of Alberta and the impact that continued
mining has on climate change,” Stocks added about the
role the shipping corridor would play toward
contributing to climate change. “In Montana, further
climate change means more beetle killed forests, fewer
glaciers, reduced springtime stream flow and more
extensive fires in summer. Agricultural lands already
feel the impact of drought and our forests feel the
impact of warmer winters. It doesn’t matter what
industry you belong to in our state, climate change is
all inclusive.”
Research
shows that tar sands mining causes an extraordinary
and often permanent, detriment to the environment. Air
monitoring near Fort McMurray, Alberta, for example,
has recorded excessive levels of toxic hydrogen
sulfide, as well as nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide
and particulate matters.
Tar sand
exploiter, Suncor Energy, received an Environmental
Protection Order from the government of Alberta in
2007 as a result.
While the MDT
does not yet know what level of environmental review
will be required before issuing the permits to
transport the mining equipment, MDT Director Jim Lynch
has said that only the direct impacts these shipments
will have on the state will be considered for
issuance.
That means
that the MDT environmental review will specifically
ignore any concerns about the effects of tar sand
mining, or the oil economy on environment.
The permits,
if issued, will net Montana and Idaho a few hundred
thousand dollars each, but critics claim the economic
impact of traffic delays alone could exceed that
amount.
The
modification of the roadways is believed to require
just a few months of construction, thus, job creation
from the project will be minimal and temporary.
The success
or failure of the initial test run scheduled for this
summer in Idaho will determine whether the rest of the
permits will be issued.
Haverstick
and Stocks say their groups, along with many others,
intend to fight the project.
“We have been
engaging in building a network opposed to these
shipments that runs the length of the route,” Stocks
said, “From the Port of Vancouver to the Port of
Sweetgrass we hope to build a viable opposition to
these shipments that will take many different forms of
action to stop them.”
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