How is the clean up job going with Puget Sound, 20-30+ years and still toxins and pollutants are flowing into it. Does anyone really think they can stop this polluting of the Athabasca River system. Man is to busy thinking about today.
I know but he keeps ignoring facts so I edited and added a few more to my last post.
Tonington; What's was your line of work anyway? I'll be sure to mention it from now on whenever you have something to say that isn't directly related to your work...[/QUOTE said:First of all I was just making suggestions to try to avoid the discussion turning into a battle royal. Kakato is very capable of defending himself so I will leave that to him. As for my line of work, I worked as a surveyor and technician for 35 years in the business of highway and bridge location. I (like Kakato) worked either directly under or indirectly under an engineer. Engineers are smart people and know (what they know) a lot. However some engineers spent years working up through the ranks while others have a piece of paper from an institution and quite frankly when they arrived in the field their "knowledge" and preconceptions were laughable. I don't belittle book knowledge (you have to know your sines and cosines) but that is only a small part of having a working knowledge.
How is the clean up job going with Puget Sound, 20-30+ years and still toxins and pollutants are flowing into it. Does anyone really think they can stop this polluting of the Athabasca River system. Man is to busy thinking about today.
First of all I was just making suggestions to try to avoid the discussion turning into a battle royal.
Pelosi, like many Americans wants alternative energy to gain some traction in the USA and Alberta is lobbying against it with Big Oil.
I seriously question the value of this thread. You guys are going to continue to insult each other, and completely dispute anything either one says.
Let's face it: the tar sands could be better from an environmental point of view.
Enough said.
You 3 all have your points of view, whether it's due to paychecks or whatever, and you aint gonna change. So why bother with the bull****.
I'm inclined to agree- along with a couple of other threads about global warming and cooling that after about day 3 just got to be a bunch of anal repitition.
There is an easy answer to your concern in this matter...
Stop reading them.
The part about no fungal communities. The paper you yourself cited in the thread about US ambassador to visit oil sands, that paper contradicts the "no fungal communities on the soil above the bitumen deposits"
Did you even read it?
Any soil that has organic matter in it will have a microbial community growing in it.
I'm just going by what the industry says, and the paper you posted here bud. So don't get your panties twisted in a knot because you don't understand soil science...
No, you're not. The ground wasn't dead. Muskeg isn't dead. Boreal forest isn't dead.
Jesus christ you're thick...you remove soil above the deposit and stockpile it...There is plenty of life in the soil you're removing.
And the soil you removed
.
Stick to running your machines, and leave the matters scientific to people trained in science. How is it that you know better than the folks who wrote the paper that you called an unbiased report?
It's already a battle royal...I don't want the tar sands shut down, but you wouldn't know that if you were going by what some in here say. I'm not even against using oil. But it's not so convenient to pigeon hole someone if you don't ignore the relevant parts. Gerry, Avro, myself, have all said we don't want the place shut down. But we're argued against by people who insist that we're vile hypocrites who want to destroy jobs. That's nonsense. And frankly, when you tell me that I should stick to what I know, I know ecology very well. You can't get a BSc in agriculture without understanding ecological principles.
I have two objections, and they're very simple to show. The first, is that these operations are adding heavy metals to the watershed, and that impacts the health of everything in that area, fish, insects, plants, and more importantly the people who live there. The second, is quite simple also. There is no way that humans can take a functioning eco-system, and destroy it, and then reclaim it to make it better. Technically, you need remediation to first remove all the toxins you've added, and there's no way that you can actually make the eco-system stronger afterward even if you've removed all the toxins. You've altered the conditions so radically during the process, that competition will favour certain species. That tips the balance, and when you tip the balance in an ecosystem, you are making it inherently unstable. That's standard ecological theory. We've changed the ecosystem dynamics. Rolled up in that is the reduced ecological servicing.
Now, here's the last and key point. The reclaimed land is far better than the industrial land it replaces. That's obvious, and not controversial at all. I'm glad that there are people like Kakato doing this work. If there wasn't then Northern Alberta would be a wasteland for millenia. However, just because it is improved from open pits and tailings ponds, has grass growing, trees, birds, etc does not mean that it has been improved from the pre-industrial condition. It maybe aesthetically pleasing, more so than the bogs, muskeg, fen that were growing there before the land was stripped, but that does not mean it is made better. Bogs, muskeg, fen, all have a role to play within boreal forests. The boreal forest requires these niches. That, also, is uncontroversial.
Does that make it clear? I'm not demonizing the work Kakato does, I'm just disagreeing that the reclaimed land is better than the undisturbed boreal forest it replaces.
Until the city of Victoria stops pumping sewage directly into the ocean, I think that it will take a very long time to fix that ridiculous mess.
Kinda makes you wonder where David Suzuki or Forest Ethics is on this, afterall, that ought to be a no-brainer as the technology has existed for decades... I guess that if you live on the Left-Coast of Canada, it's A-OK to poison the marine environment as long as you piss and moan about the oil sands.
I would, but I like to constantly post drivel because it supports my employer's perspective.
Once again as you dont seem to GET IT....the deposits are at the surface,thick black gooey bitumen ore,nothing is growing on it.
Where do you think they come from? From the bitumen. Emissions come from the upgraders. Just like burning coal proliferates the mercury stored in the coal.All the toxins we added? Where do you think they came from?
I'm inclined to agree- along with a couple of other threads about global warming and cooling that after about day 3 just got to be a bunch of anal repitition.
There is an easy answer to your concern in this matter...
Stop reading them.
I would, but I like to constantly post drivel because it supports my employer's perspective.
There ya go JLM, cappy's answer to everything. If you don't like what the oil company's are doing, stop using oil. If you don't like what's being posted, stop reading. I guess if you don't like the pollution in the air his answer would be to stop breathing.