What difference does it make why?Going to shut her down for the olympics?:lol:
Aaaahh. An expert. Can you give us a detailed plan then?I'm not a fan of big oil either so if anyone thinks im lobbying for them,give your head a shake.
I just know what has to be done as far as due diligence gos concerning the environment.
Just wondering if your going to pump your crap into the ocean while the rest of the world visits.What difference does it make why?
Want to get back to the subject now?
Not an expert but It was my head and wallet on the block if someone broke a regulation I signed a permit for and the fines werent cheap.A couple dead fish can have you in court for 2 years and fines that would bankrupt most peeps.Aaaahh. An expert. Can you give us a detailed plan then?
One fish?:roll:
The government and universities all did studys on the fish and said no contamination except for whats normal from leeching,the fish were actually worse upstream from the oilsands.One prey item that multiple fish utilize. Do you think they sampled all of the food web? That's why they called it a "test" species. If one invertebrate is impaired, there's a very good chance that many others are as well.
A couple dead fish can have you in court for 2 years and fines that would bankrupt most peeps.
Well, stick your query into one of the Oly threads or the BC forum, then.Just wondering if your going to pump your crap into the ocean while the rest of the world visits.
One does not necessarily lead to the other. Can you show where raw sewage is worse than leaked oil on habitat?And if environmental laws are off topic then forgive me but Im trying to show you that Alberta's are stricter then B.C.'s.
Therefore it only stands to reason that B.C. is polluting much more then Albertas oilsands.
Not just AB. But this thread is about AB and AB has a hand in spreading oil around. Oil is proven to be bad. If it was left alone it would not cause the amount of damage it has.So why are we being pidgonholed as the bad environmentalists?
We are.
Victoria, BC, Plans to Stop Dumping Raw Sewage in the Ocean
Ferry sewage won't be left out in the ocean anymore - Headlines - News - News1130 - ALL NEWS RADIO
What is AB doing about its wastes? What is it doing about sour gas leaks? What is it doing about contamination of rivers?
blah blah blah
This is just more sidetracking from the problem and you are still saying , "They do it so we can, too.":roll:
Not just AB. But this thread is about AB and AB has a hand in spreading oil around. Oil is proven to be bad. If it was left alone it would not cause the amount of damage it has.
The government and universities all did studys on the fish and said no contamination except for whats normal from leeching,the fish were actually worse upstream from the oilsands.
I know from experience that theres one hell of a lot of monitoring going on.
You turned it into an AB thing when you said BC pollutes.And here I thought this thread was about the enviro damage the oilsands supposedly created,now I see it's just an Alberta thing,thanks for clearing that up for me.;-)
Better late than never I guess:
http://www.wcel.org/articles/Enbridge_downriver_sept09.pdf
Oil spill in Red Deer reservoir: 1000s of oil pipelines cross water sources | Water Matters
The Epoch Times | The (Other) High Price of Oil
CBC News - Edmonton - Oil leaks into popular Alberta lake
blog2009: Fearing water pollution, NWT towns call for oil sands slowdown
LiveLeak.com - Alberta researchers study rock snot
How long can a spill or a leak affect habitat?
EXXON VALDEZ OIL SPILL: Ten Years Later
20 Years Later: Exxon Valdez Spill Lingers | ScienCentral | Science Videos | Science News
Smith said the pipeline, built in 1959, was last inspected in January.
Rachel Notley, Alberta's NDP environment critic, slammed the provincial government for a shortage of pipeline inspectors.
"Alberta has 392,000 kilometres of pipeline and only 85 inspectors," Notley said in a news release Monday. "That means each inspector is in charge of a stretch of pipe that could reach from Edmonton to Florida."
roflmao Never been a leak in 30 years? 2007 & 2008 were more than 30 years ago?What rivers?
What sour gas leaks?
Which wastes? I have piles of books on this stuff,you cant just dump anything anywhere anymore,if its contaminated it go's to the Hazerdous waste plant.
I live right smack in the middle of the most poisonous concentrated sour gas fields in the world and in 30 years there has never been a leak.
Those municipal discharges are treated,not raw sewage or industrial waste.You obviously did not read the report you posted. They concluded no such thing. They made similar conclusions to the university study that I referenced. That's a Queen's University researcher.
The claims you make are flatly at odds with the poorly referenced report you use. I call it poorly referenced because they don't indicate which actual study found what in the body of the report.
If there were no discharges allowed, the report would not have recommendations like:
Yup. Look at that last one... The tax payers should be paying for companies to clean up their act. That's bull sh!t.
- A goal of zero discharge should be pursued.
- If zero discharge is not immediately attainable, then time lines should be established.
- A moratorium or reduction on input should be put into place until we better understand causes of river problems.
- There should be a cap on all expansion or additional loadings until we know more.
- We need to work towards a closed loop system.
- Pollution prevention should be a guiding principle.
- This is a good news study which shows industry's willingness to use the newest technology toreduce negative impacts on the river system.
- Municipalities should find ways to lower discharge. Governments should provide infrastructure support.
The monitoring they advise clearly indicates that what you say is one hell of a lot, is not adequate.
Your argument's are bull sh!t. I don't give a crap what supposed expertise you have. It's flatly at odds with the very reports you cite as your evidence.
I'm thrilled to meet such a hero.Theres some old pipelines around built in 1959 that need to be replaced,Alberta has more pipe under the ground then we do roads and we have lots of roads.
With the recession you get this.
I'm one of those 85
I'm thrilled to meet such a hero.