We have to choose - will it be the survival of mankind or will it be whatever wealth we can extract from the Athabasca Tar Sands? It seems to be an "either-or" proposition, at least according to a leading voice on global warming, the NASA Goddard Space Laboratory director James Hansen.
Hansen's warning, in a letter he wrote in June, is about as stark as it gets:
...exploitation of tar sands would make it implausible to stabilize climate and avoid disastrous global climate impacts. The tar sands are estimated (e.g., see IPCC AR4 WG3 report) to contain at least 400 GtC (equivalent to about 200 ppm CO2).
Easily available reserves of conventional oil and gas are enough to take atmospheric CO2
well above 400 ppm. However, if emissions from coal are phased out over the next few decades
and if unconventional fossil fuels are left in the ground, it is conceivable to stabilize climate.
Phase out of emissions from coal is itself an enormous challenge. However, if the tar
sands are thrown into the mix it is essentially game over. There is no practical way to capture
the CO2 emitted while burning oil, which is used principally in vehicles.
Governments are acting as if they are oblivious to the fact that there is a limit on how
much fossil fuel carbon we can put into the air. Fossil fuel carbon injected into the atmosphere
will stay in surface reservoirs for millennia.
...prior government targets for limiting human-made global warming are now known to be
inadequate. Specifically, the target to limit global warming to 2°C, rather than being a safe
"guardrail", is actually a recipe for global climate disasters.
When will Bob Rae and whoever is leading the NDP next week stand up and say that Athabasca has to be stopped? Yes, that would have significant impacts on Alberta's economy and the federal government's larder but that pales into irrelevance when contrasted with the toll that Tar Sands emissions will exact on the people of our planet, especially those who are already reeling from climate change effects caused by global warming. Others pay for our windfall with their lives. By what moral right can we demand they forfeit their future, their very lives? Just what sort of creatures have we Canadians become?
Bill McKibbon asked that very question last month in The Globe & Mail. How did Canadians allow themselves to become defined by the bitumen pits of Fort Mac? Why have we chosen to become indifferent to the point of catatonic? How did we come to turn our backs on our own future generations and mankind itself?
Amen, brother.
ReplyDeleteSince Harper won the majority a commercial is being shown frequently on US and Canadian tv channels. Check the link below:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5XQOJipRlJ8
The philistines are in the driver's seat. And we tolerate them.
ReplyDeleteIf McGuinty wins in Ontario, the country will be hopelessly divided over this issue since the people out west want the Tar Sands developed. Even the Greens are advocating building refineries and pipelines to ship Tar Sands oil east, at least according to Elizabeth May on SunTV last week.
ReplyDeleteCivil disobedience such as protests against the Keystone XL pipeline later this month in Washington, and actions by Greenpeace, will help to draw public attention to the Tar Sands, but the question you ask troubles me a great deal, MoS. What has happened to most Canadians that they just don't care anymore? These days I feel like an alien in my own country.
Canadians don't care LMA because they are tired of trying to make it from one year to the next. And if they come out in full force to protest they end up in jailor better still, have their job taken away, or best of all, called menally ill.
ReplyDeleteAnon, I understand the struggle to make ends meet, and I'm not advocating that all Canadians become environmental activists. There are other ways to object to the direction our country is taking, such as participating in the political process, and supporting environmental groups. Our lives will only get much worse if we sit back and allow big oil to pollute our air and water.
ReplyDeleteOur complacency can be highly self-serving. A fellow recently told me he opposes the Tar Sands but he's resigned to the development being unstoppable. Then he leveraged his resignation atop his supposed opposition to say, since it's going ahead anyway, we might as well invest in it. Funny how we can use intellectual manipulations to justify self-corruption.
ReplyDeleteRationalization really helps to ease our guilty feelings doesn't it? Someone recently said to me that it's the people out west who want the Tar Sands, i.e., it's their business, not ours. Too bad the pollution won't stop at the Alberta border.
ReplyDelete