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Oil Sands Riskier than Gulf Spill, Say Investor Groups
WASHINGTON - 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.
The value in the oil sands is bitumen, a thick, heavy form of petroleum with a tar-like consistency that requires energy-intensive processing to separate it from clay and sand. The bitumen is not drilled for but mined, and that mining has led to the razing of boreal forests and fouling of water supplies in parts of the 140,000 square kilometers of Alberta in which the oil sands are found.
Cogan drew the connection between the huge amount of seawater being polluted in the Gulf of Mexico and the huge amount of freshwater that is polluted in the course of extracting oil from the oil sands.
It takes up to four barrels of water to obtain one barrel of oil, as opposed to one barrel of water to one barrel of oil for more conventional oil extraction.
That water is then left in tailings ponds that currently cover 80 square miles. Those toxic ponds pose a hazard to migrating birds, risk contaminating nearby soil and water resources, present health problems to downstream communities and, the report notes, pose the risk of "a catastrophic breach".
The particulates in the mining waste take decades to settle out in the ponds. "After 40 years of production, no oil sands companies have yet fully reclaimed tailings ponds created by development," says the report.
The report also notes how expansion of oil sands in Alberta is turning one of the world's largest carbon sinks - the province's vast boreal forests - into a fast-growing emitter of carbon dioxide.
It argues the water- and energy-related risks - combined with the added costs of emerging climate change regulations and the potential for litigation from affected communities - should make expansion of oil sands development unappealing to investors.
The argument is not a new one. While environmental and indigenous groups have campaigned against the impacts of oil sands development, numerous reports from institutional investors have pointed out the risks to shareholders in the companies involved.
Ceres' report, titled "Canada's Oil Sands: Shrinking Window of Opportunity", comes in the midst of a slew of company annual meetings. Like in past years, a number of shareholder resolutions calling for greater disclosure of the financial risk tied to oil sands investments have been filed with companies including BP, Shell, ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips.
These companies, said Cogan, "may need oil prices approaching 100 dollars a barrel to justify [oil sands] expansion, but not more than 120 dollars a barrel in order to sustain consumer demand".
This financial fine line is difficult to walk, especially given the huge capital commitments that developing the oil sands requires. These large initial investments can lock shareholders' investments in for decades, leaving that money vulnerable to future lawsuits and regulations.
As in offshore drilling, then, an increased thirst for oil has brought an increased potential for disaster - environmentally and financially.
In the wake of the explosion on one of its offshore oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico Apr. 20 - and the ever-ballooning oil slick that has resulted - BP has lost about 30 billion dollars in market value and seen its share price dip to a six-month low.
Ceres says that oil production from the Gulf of Mexico and Canada's oil sands has doubled in recent years to 3.9 million barrels a day, and that it now supplies nearly a quarter of total U.S. oil needs.
"All oil is getting dirtier and more difficult to find, as the disaster in the Gulf of Mexico illustrates," noted Bob Walker, vice president of sustainability at Canada-based Northwest and Ethical Investment.
His firm has criticized companies like BP and Shell in the past for doing a poor job of disclosing to shareholders the risks tied to oil sands investment.
"Producers are optimistic that they can double oil sands production over the coming decade, and more than triple output by 2030 to produce more than 4 million barrels per day. That is more than double current oil production in the Gulf of Mexico," says the Ceres report. They are already producing 1.3 barrels a day.
The long-term impact on the people and environment in Alberta are "arguably greater" than the headline-grabbing disaster still unfolding in the gulf, it says.
Andrew Logan, director of Ceres' oil and gas program, said the gulf spill "underscores that all oil development carries risk and potentially large costs...These risks will only grow" as companies turn to increasingly risky oil development opportunities.
"The report's findings are our wake-up call," he said.
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21 Comments so far
Show AllHow is it that in Canada, growing hemp for oil is legal but not used and don't give me excuses about cold weather? Hemp can grow in any climate.
Entheogens hidden in hemp may wake up the spirit ... and what would that do for the flesh?... or the flash? or the petrol stash?
very smooth and delightful refrain
its leagal, but one needs a permit. Harper don't like permits.
Thanks for the clarification.
We can complain all we care,,,
until WE change our habits none of this will change, government is not do it for us.
Throw ur cell phones away and get out of ur vehicles except
for ur pay day and food.
Goddamnit, I get so sick of you people and your simplistic quick fixes, throw away our cell phones and get out of our vehicles. Wow! Rocket science! Except it wont work unless you live in a city with good public transport. I live in the bush.... what am I supposed to do? Walk the 13 k's to town from milk, bread etc. Well I dont have a whole day to waste or a way to make a living if I did that. And what about everyone that does not live in a city? How do we manage?
What it it about some of the people who post here anyway, you seem wedded to the simplistic. Idiots! it took us about 300 years to get where we are today. It will not be fixed over night.
Idiot! Please engage yourbrain before using your keyboard. it makes it simpler for the rest of us.
thank you
Pete
I agree that there really is no quick fix to this problem. It's bigger than cell phones, and cars, bigger than all the cheap plastic toys that parents buy for their kids, bigger than the inumerable amount of plastic bags that are thrown away daily after 1 use... The fact is that out entire, really the whole thing, way of life is based on using up oil. And using it at a phenomeonal rate.
The only way this will change (and unfortunately it won't, as much as us progressives, or environmentalists want it to happen) is if people, en masse, begin to make radical changes to their life styles. Radical along the lines of quit driving, grow your own food, accept that some food or products are simply unavailable in particular regions or particular times. Essentially, until we all start living the way people lived several hunderd years ago, oil extraction will continue to become more difficult, dangerous and energy intensive, reducing the actual returns on investment.
The obvious problem is that people will never do this. We are raised from birth to believe that we are living during the pinnacle of human society. Literally, everyone now, at least in developed nations, gets to live like a king of old. We may not have servants but we have oil to power every convenient device we can think of. We don't have exquisite carriages, but we have cars. We have access to a wider variety or foods in more abundance than most rulers throuhout history. We have constant, on demand entertaiment, the list goes on ad nauseum. This has created a society that is self entitled and self righteous, like yourself evidently. You choose to live in the bush and still believe that you should have every amenity available to everyone else. And why shouldn't you, this is a democracy (I'm assuming you live in Canada or USA, either way democracy may not be the best descriptor but that's a whole other post...) so you should have the same rights and freedoms as everyone else, right? It is this mentality that is causing the problems. We all want everything, and we want it fast and we want it easy and the TV keeps telling us that it is normal to think this way. From your post it sounds like you are not planning on changing your behaviour, no surprise, not many people are. The ones of us who are will just keep banging our heads on the wall in frustration I guess as everyone else continues to make excuses for their lifestyle. And there are many exccuses to be had.
On a different note I'm glad the comparison between the oil spill and the tar sands is finally being done. I have read, on Wiki, that somewhere near 1% of the Athabasca river is being diverted to for use on the sands. Its a big river, that's a lot of water being contaminated beyond any future use.
Head Smashed In Harper Jump empirePie
Mr. corporate carper Harper please don't jump
there's room for one more engaging hump
for the likes of Trumps or baron Blacks that don't take their lumps
just stump for ‘An act of God’... to recite your Boreal blight
please don’t leap....
the tailing ponds just need more time to steep
Begger thy neighbor still has plenty of feet
like the ones that compete on your Afghan beet
since....
Rational Homo economicus man is so upbeat
and he’s got the whole world at his teat
Is your premier failure the host for success we need?
Is the chaff of sustenance a snake or a staff?
Do we compound the bull or cull the golden calf?
Does the loon still call? or the buffalo jump inthrall?
What is the footprint of looney desire?
Say Sugarstein may have a limmo for hire.
How come no articles today about Obama's responsibility in the oil flood in the Gulf of Mexico?
That oil blow out is the biggest ecological disaster ever caused by humankind. I am not exaggerating.
The destruction from this blow out will last for decades. It is killing sea life at all levels of habitat.
The food chain is polluted of every level.
Who's administration gave permits to drill with Armageddon to this planet.
Impeach him and remove him from office. Obama is criminal, corrupt and incompetent.
Where does the line get drawn to cease the oil destruction?
Because all of the oil we take, no matter how easily or hard the extraction goes, eventually contributes to environmental destruction.
Consumed, plasticized, burnt, chemicalized, its products are all
toxified. The oil keeps up the big agriculture, plastic packages for food, energy for refridgeration, transport, storage. Oil to buy and consume, and bury the waste or pile it up, or dump it into the ocean. The same for all of our luxury goods that we so easily tire off and dump. All for the creation of stuff to stuff up our world.
So even when the oil is cheap, what we do with it is expensive, and we defer the costs. If the deferred costs were paid now, oil would be already too expensive to extract.
Maintaining and powering the machines and lives of our billions in cities. If the world oil stopped right now most of those lives will be in danger or at least affected and major reorganisation of logistics from farm to feed would have to occur.
Instead its happening in slow motion. Extraction energy costs per barrel are approaching the energy content of a barrel of oil. But the unpaid costs are already exceeding the cost of extraction.
Large scale environmental destruction is happening everywhere. From extraction accidents and even normal operations. Just from the continued enabling of civilisation. No wonder that our trashy stuff has to come from the exploitation labour of human beings that are treated like cheap trashy stuff.
Canada is in their Reagan years and they don't even know it. 30 years from now they will look around and wonder what the hell happened to their country. The Canadian Prime Minister is a conservative from oil rich Alberta. His name is Harper. He followed Bush to the middle east with fighting troops when the conservatives first took office. His predecessors, the Liberal party, would not send troops to enable Bush to fight his war.
The Canadians should have been defending their border to the north instead of fighting "the terrorists". Won't they be surprised when foreign countries show up with drilling rigs and gun boats on their northern frontier. The ice cap is melting. There is now a viable shipping route to the north. Canada has not been demonstrating it sovereignty in the north. It may be questioned by resource hungry nations.
Canada receives revenues, (a good commission), from the oil sands at the expense of the environment. The destruction of the fresh water supply is out of sight and out of mind. Canada also has large hog farms in the north. The pork is not sold in Canada. It all goes south of the border. The hog farms are trashing the fresh water supply also.
Today's multinational corporations concentrate on the income statement with no regard for the balance sheet. I guess there is no tomorrow. Maybe these people know something we don't.
"Canada is in their Reagan years and they don't even know it."
Harper has zero charisma, and Canadians have never given him more than 35% of the vote. Which means he's nothing like Reagan.
He's more like the Bushes: oil company Manchurian candidates.
@ Neutron,
Why do you have to start your comment with a swearword?Is your vocabulary that limited?Or do you not feel strong enough in your convictions,that you have to resort to that kind of language?You can plead on behalf of the oil-companies and other irresponsible corporations as much as you want,but it does not alter the fact,that we cannot sustain our wasteful ways.There are far too many planes in the air,and not just commercial ones either but worse,military ones,that fly around to kill innocent people in an attempt to steal their natural resources,that we carelessly squander anyway to cause more damage to our fragile eco-system.And all that based on a stack of lies and false pretenses.No sense blaming Obama,like DCH does,because Obama is not in charge;the corporations are,in collusion with their moneymaster bankers,who are under the control of 'Big Brother',who also controls the Federal Reserve and the Bank of England.But don`t let history,facts and/or logic mess up your head any more.Just keep dancing around your 300 year golden calf(your figure,not mine).
Our mother earth has fallen mortally ill because of the barbaric behavour of her greedy children,who show no respect for her,even on her deathbed.Is your attitude a result of living in the bush,as you call it?You cannot expect all the modern facilities of city-life there.Either you move to the city,or quit your belly-aching.A good bit of advice would be,if you took your own and engage your brain first.
You see Neutron,I do not believe in religion.And Christianity would be my last choice anyway.Look at the trail of blood,injustice and carnage that they left in their wake,while trying to colonize and enslave other people.What a shameful legacy.And look at their life-style of debauchery over the centuries.Like Lord Acton so nicely put it:"Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Great men are almost always bad men".Your abuse of God`s name does not offend me personally,because I no longer believe in those fairy-tales(I did once),but for those,who do believe,your choice of words is offensive.
First of all "oil sands" sounds better than what it really is: "TAR SANDS".
Not only is the environment being destroyed, there are now reports of cancer rates and other peculiar illnesses rising in communities near these tar sands. Mostly First Nations communities.
Yes, Canada has gone back to imitating the Bush/Reagan mentality. We used to be progressive but we are now regressive.
Did you know that Americans are also buying up most of the farmed salmon that is grown on the west coast of Canada? Most of us here won't touch the stuff with the proverbial ten-foot pole. These farmed salmon (which are probably advertised as coming from the "pristine" waters of Canadian West Coast wilderness) are diseased: they are pumped full of anti-biotics, growth hormones and then packaged with artificial colouring. These farmed salmon are destroying our wild salmon with their lice and diseases.
Anyway, I know, this article is about oil but Canada right now is led by a backward, Reaganomics/Ayn Rand philosophy follower; a regressive, neo-conservative religious radical nut: Prime Minister Harper. Also, the province of BC (from whence the farmed salmon come from) is led by another neo-conservative, power-hungry, egotistical corporate ass-kisser: Gordon Campbell. (busted for drunken driving in Hawaii)
Many of us progressives in Canada are sickened by these people and the policies they are enacting/maintaining, just like you Americans were when Bush was in power.
True that! When I was a kid I was proud to be a Canadian, I thought we were all peace keepers and diplomats! Sadly we all grow up and realize that our military is no different, just smaller, our politicians are just as eager to sell us (In BC alone we have the sale of BC rail, the Vancouver Olympics, now the HST...) and our natural resources out. You can see that big business is scheming to undermine fundamental Canadian instituitions, like our public health care. Not that this is necessarily a new trend, BC history is rife with corporate abuse and gov't collusion with big business.
Our environment is being decimated, beetle kill, tar sands, factory fish farming, now a new port in Kitimat to funnel oil out to Asia, I'm hearing about a potential new dam going up near the already disgusting Williston Lake that displaced the indigenous popluations.
Quite frankly, I am running out of things to be proud about, even our music is going downhill. We went from The Tragically Hip to Nickelback, come on, can it get worse than that...
capitalism knows no bounds
The u.s. capitalists have been jealous of the Canadian tar sands, so they are making some on the gulf's beaches.
Sonnenberg's revenge, eh?
To: DCH
Why do you blame Obama when all of this started when he was a mere child? Are you just stuck up on Blacks, or what?
Now, within miles of where I live, a Canadian company has bought a large parcel of excellent farm land on which to build a refinery for tar sand production. Why don't they refine the tar sands in Canada? We know, don't we? The greedy people here who have signed up to sell their acreages are now having second thoughts of having sold, but it is too late. They will be using 12 million gallons of Missouri River water a day. This is an area of farms and soon more than 3,000 field bums will be building these plants. I hope the mothers know enough to lock up their girls.
What a tragic end to the most verdant part of the great state of South Dakota.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
Now would be an excellent time for an organized Left to appeal much more broadly to the middle-class to support a Green New Deal, but the American left, such as it is, did not prepare or organize enough to seize this opportunity and, unfortunately, America and the world will pay for the ongoing failures of the American right AND left regardless of how insanely idiotic they become.
That said, the current obsolete 19th century political spectrum from communism to fascism has failed to honestly or comprehensively address the two greatest problems of our age: Global environmental degradation and human over-populations' acceleration of the degradation of the biosphere due to the resource demands placed on the planet by our sheer numbers and the inefficiency of prevailing resource distribution, energy systems, waste disposal and recycling systems around the world. I no longer believe that economists and politicians are either fit or capable of constructively influencing governance or governing. Their ideologies are too personal, too self-interested, too capitalist, and especially, too SUBJECTIVE. Wantonly so now on a globalist scale that is operating out of control at the peril of humanity and too many other living species.
A new Third Way is called for and I believe that way must be an attempt to create a global system of environmentally sustainable resource management and humane human population reductions that harmonizes human population groups and their activities to the specific ecological and resource limits of the regional habitats they inhabit on a long-term sustainable basis. To achieve this would require a global participatory economic (parecon) democratic body of scientists employing a scientifically OBJECTIVE decision making process based on regional optimized habitat/population plans generated by the most advanced computerized biospheric and resource information gathering system ever attempted. One that combines real time biosphere data gathering with verifiable geographic annual resource extraction and utilization data into one system. Such a system should be able to develop "down-growths" plans for populations and economies.
Under such a system capitalism could only be allowed to remain under heavily regulated and enforced conditions with the profit incentive confined by scientifically imposed limits that absolutely prevent capitalism from continuing to undermine the biosphere.
The failure of doctrinal communism was its vain notion that it could entirely stamp out capitalism. Capitalism will always find a way to thrive in secret in black markets and always has. It operates on a psychological level of reptilian brain gratification than can only ever be carefully regulated and conditionally limited--with eternal vigilance--but never fully eliminated. Capitalists, especially American capitalists know this. Even so they whine endlessly about any attempts to regulate them as being somehow "destructive" of capitalism. Utter nonsense. I believe it can and must be gelded and broken like a headstrong stallion.
It's preaching to the choir to say that the tar sands are bad news for a host of environmental and social reasons. And, unfortunately, I agree with some of the commentators here that there is a lack of political willpower to stop the tar sands juggernaut.
However, there is a way to stop the tar sands.
The Beaver Lake Cree (BLC) First Nation has filed suit against the Alberta and Canadian governments to stop the expansion of the tar sands in their traditional territory. Aboriginal and treaty rights in Canada are constitutionally protected, and the BLC have treaty rights to hunt and fish in their traditional territories. The tar sands companies have applied for and received 17,000 permits to expand into the BLC's territory, but the BLC are arguing that this is illegal because such development would seriously impact fish stocks and wildlife, and therefore infringe their rights to hunt and fish.
Precedent judgments issued by the Supreme Court of Canada (i.e., Mikisew Cree) support the BLC's position.
The BLC has an excellent shot at winning this case. This could be a show-stopper for the tar sands, and a massive victory for protection of the environment and our natural heritage.
To learn more about their fight, please visit www.raventrust.com. There's a video that explains the above far better than I can: http://www.raventrust.com/projects/beaverlakecree/video-tarsands.html