Tar-sands
mining in Canada is unleashing mercury pollution
3
January, 2013
Drilling
for tar-sands oil in Alberta has long been recognized as a driver of
climate change, helping to nudge the mercury up in thermometers
around the world. Now, it appears that it’s also dousing the
Canadian province with straight-up mercury pollution.
Canadian
government researchers have discovered that oil-sands operations
have puffed out mercury over 4.7 million acres of northeast Alberta,
boosting levels to as much as 16 times higher than background levels.
Mercury is a potent poison that’s frequently emitted by mining and
fossil-fuel burning. It
can harm the
brains, hearts, kidneys, lungs, and immune systems of children and
adults alike.
The
federal scientists stress the mercury loadings around the oilsands
are low compared to the contamination seen in many parts of North
America, including southern Ontario and southern Quebec.
But
they say the mercury is “the No. 1 concern” when it comes to the
metal toxins generated by oilsands operations. It is also a major
worry for aboriginal and environmental groups concerned about the
oilsands’ impact on fishing, hunting and important wildlife staging
areas downstream of the oilsands.
Environment
Canada scientists are sampling everything from snow to lichens to
bird eggs as part of the federal-provincial joint oilsands monitoring
program.
Allowing
the Keystone XL pipeline to be built would only boost the worldwide
market for the volatile spoils of Alberta’s oil boom, making the
mercury pollution problem all that much worse.
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