To
understand what is Fort McMurray and the role Alberta and the tar
sands plays in the climate crisis this VICE documetary,made in 2011,
is a good place to start.
It
makes clear the intimate relationship between Peak Oil, the Infinite
Growth paradigm and the destruction of the planet.
Toxic
Alberta - VICE
Once
pristine wilderness, Alberta is now a world of poisoned water,
polluted air, and rare cancer. VICE travels to the oil sands of
Canada to investigate the impact of digging for this previously
unobtainable oil.
Part one
Part two
Part three
And Sarnia, Ontario
Canada's Toxic Chemical Valley
The
first thing you notice about Sarnia, Ontario, is the smell: a potent
mix of gasoline, melting asphalt, and the occasional trace of rotten
egg. Shortly after my arrival I already felt unpleasantly high and
dizzy, like I wasn't getting enough air. Maybe this had something to
do with the bouquet of smokestacks in the southern part of town that,
all day every day, belch fumes and orange flares like something out
of a Blade Runner-esque dystopia.
Sarnia
is home to more than 60 refineries and chemical plants that produce
gasoline, synthetic rubbers, and other materials that the world's
industries require to create the commercial products we know and
love. The city's most prominent and profitable attraction is an area
about the size of 100 city blocks known as the Chemical Valley, where
40 percent of Canada's chemical industry can be found packed together
like a noxious megalopolis. According to a 2011 report by the World
Health Organization, Sarnia's air is the most polluted air in Canada.
There are more toxic air pollutants billowing out of smokestacks here
than in all of the provinces of New Brunswick or Manitoba
Listen to Paul Beckwith on the tar sands
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