Tory MP says we'll be able to drink from oilsands tailing ponds

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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Minister says tailings ponds will be so clean 'you'll be able to drink from them'

Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver says oilsands tailing ponds are being cleaned up to the point "you'll be able to drink from them" and NDP Leader Tom Mulcair's only interest is in seeing the oilsands shut down.

Mulcair said he wants to create a discussion about sustainable development with his trip to Alberta to tour an oilsands project and meet with the province's political leaders on Thursday.

"We're hoping to be able to continue working on issues of sustainable development. We have a view that the way [Canada is] doing things right now doesn't internalize the cost — we're not applying the basic rule of polluter pay," Mulcair told reporters on Parliament Hill Wednesday.

"C-38 [the omnibus budget bill] is another part of this discussion, because up until now, whenever a company's environmental practices didn't correspond to legislation, you changed the practices; now, [the government] is changing the legislation."

Mulcair said his goal was a discussion about "breaking the boom and bust cycle" and promoting sustainable development.

But Oliver responded that Mulcair's goal is simply to shut down the oilsands.

And later, on CBC's Power & Politics with Evan Solomon, Oliver said tailings ponds created through oilsands development are being cleaned up.

"The fact is the tailings ponds are being cleaned up and you'll be able to drink from them, you'll be able to fish from them," Oliver said. "The land will be brought back to its original state."

Mulcair is making the trip following his recent criticism of the government's handling of the oilsands. He'll take a helicopter tour and visit a Suncor project early Thursday and will meet separately with Fort McMurray Mayor Melissa Blake and Deputy Premier Thomas Lukaszuk later in the day.

Mulcair has been critical of the federal government's environmental regulation of the industry and has claimed exports from resources such as the oilsands have created an artificially high dollar that is hurting Canadian manufacturing.

Mulcair says the effect has been similar to the so-called "Dutch disease" that harmed the Netherlands economy decades ago following the discovery of natural gas, and has argued that making resource industries pay the full cost of development, including environmental impacts such as pollution, would even the playing field for other industries.

Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver and other federal ministers and Western Canada politicians have responded with harsh criticism, saying Mulcair is trying to drive a wedge between the West and Eastern Canada.

But Mulcair said Wednesday his comments were not directed at a specific region, calling allegations he was against the West a "straw man."

Oliver spoke to reporters moments after Mulcair, saying the NDP leader doesn't support the oilsands and wants them shut down at the cost of "hundreds of thousands of jobs."

Oliver dismissed Mulcair's more measured tone in recent days as "action by stealth," alleging Mulcair's true agenda is to impose a "crushing new carbon tax."

Mulcair, Oliver spar over NDP leader's Alberta trip - Edmonton - CBC News
 

Locutus

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Jun 18, 2007
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If Bear can do it, so can you kid. :lol:
 

captain morgan

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 28, 2009
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A Mouse Once Bit My Sister
How much have you drank if it is so clean? While you are at it, why not try some of those mutant fish in the Athabaska?http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/story/2010/08/30/oil-sands-athabasca-river.html
http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/story/2010/08/30/oil-sands-athabasca-river.html

I drink lots and the fish is delicious.


Oilsands mining linked to Athabasca River toxins - Technology & Science - CBC News



Oh, the CBC.... how nice that you post a link to an objective and reliable source
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
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Of course it exists, the question is, does it make economic sense? And over what time period is this transformation to drinkable water supposed to take place?

I would say yes, if it's done once after ALL the oil is extracted.
 

captain morgan

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Mar 28, 2009
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A Mouse Once Bit My Sister
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