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Archive for the ‘environment’ Category

Today is WORLD WATER DAY and I’m honouring  it by launching my next media campaign

http://coastaltarsands.ca

There’s very little time left before the Harper government plans to approve the Enbridge Corporation’s Northern Gateway Pipeline Project in early 2014. This plan includes hundreds of supertankers navigating through the inside passage along the central coast of British Columbia, loaded with millions of barrels of Alberta Tarsands Bitumen for export to China.

This is one of the most pressing environmental issue of our time. These coastal waters are intense, the shorelines extremely rugged, and the environment extremely diverse. Before deciding its future people deserve to see more than animated TV ads, with glass calm waters absent of a maze of islands, produced by the Enbridge Corporation which is spending $350 million promoting its project.  My media project will reveal the reality of this incredible environment and I need your help to complete it. More details: http://coastaltarsands.ca

I’m taking an innovative approach to this media production by producing a series of short ‘mini-docs’ that I will post on the internet to meet pressing public deadlines, which will be combined to complete a full length documentary. I’ve started a fund raising campaign via Indiegogo to cover the production cost of the first ‘mini-doc,’ which needs to be released prior to the BC Election May 14. http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/coastal-tarsands

Please join me by donating and help spread this message by forwarding to friends.

Bottom line! Oil and Water Don’t Mix!

Best wishes,

Richard Boyce

Producer/Director

Island Bound Media Works

http://coastaltarsands.ca

http://rainforestmovie.ca

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Idle No More!

“Stephen Harper has awoken a sleeping giant”

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Home

This is where we come from and what we are doing. It’s not nice, it is mindboggingly stupid. Maybe it all just boils down to brain chemistry, one insanely little microscopic flaw that prevents us from really seeing anything at all…

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It has to be done.

It’s no secret that the largest oil and gas corporations yield more power and influence than most governments, but quietly lurking in the shadows are their investors/shareholders. My theory is that a good chunk of the people who vote for Harper have their rrsps/mutual funds tied up in oil and gas. It’s one of few things that adequately explains why they would support a federal government that treats Canadians like enemies to revenge upon rather than serving them with even a thin regard for the public interest.  Birds of a feather flock together, whether it is just plain greed or cognitive dissonance and/or obsession/ addiction, so voting for anyone else could lead to personal loss and Harper may guarantee that before he is done.

It has to start somewhere and Seattle appears to have started on the right track.

Mayor McGinn Calls On Seattle To Divest From Fossil Fuels

Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn wants the city to get its money out of fossil fuels. He has called on the city’s two main retirement funds to divest millions of dollars invested in oil and gas companies.

Climate change activists have been urging colleges and institutional investors nationwide to abandon the fossil fuel sector. McGinn is the first elected official to heed their call.

On Dec. 21, McGinn ordered the city’s finance director not to invest in any coal, oil or gas companies. As mayor, Mike McGinn has control over $1.4 billion of the city’s cash balances. None of those short-term balances are currently invested in fossil fuel stocks.

But the city’s two main retirement funds, worth another $2.6 billion, have major investments in the energy sector. McGinn doesn’t control the retirement funds. But he asked the boards that manage those funds to divest from fossil fuels and to offer city employees climate-friendly investment choices.

Burning of fossil fuels is the main driver of global warming.

The city hasn’t tallied its investments in the fossil fuel sector yet. But they include at least $17 million in ExxonMobil and Chevron stock, according to McGinn.

“We should make a statement by the use of our investments about the importance of not continuing to pump global warming pollution into the air,” McGinn said. (more…)

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Atomic Overlook

Atomic Overlook

Atomic Overlook

Atomic Overlook

Clay Lipsky – Atomic Overlook

All this reminds me of Alex Colville’s painting, Pacific.

AlexColville_Pacific.ti

This fellow has evolved to where he now occupies the potential last chapter of history where the only options are waiting and suicide.  He is the typical postarctic human no longer required to take action or even consider it. It’s a nice day, and there may be some more, who knows?

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It’s been interesting to see the media making so much of Daniel Breton’s long  and illustrious  “criminal” life. You would swear being poor automatically made you a breaker of rules, a natural born cheat who only knows deception and wild behavior. Anyone who has ever attended a public consultation with the BAPE  (Bureau d’audiences publique sur l’environment) knows what a useless puppet like organization it has been in it’s hopelessly inadequate and anal retentive recommendations. The BAPE has a noticeable pattern of making a few lightweight “green” recommendations on a project before basically giving way to whatever the developers had wanted in the first place, despite a strong presence of concerned citizens asking for major changes, if not an actual shut down of the project. I have seen Daniel Breton at many such consultations with the BAPE. If  there is anyone amongst us who knows that the BAPE needs to change their corporate/political culture and actually start fulfilling their mandate as a public interest organization on environmental issues as they are part and parcel of  urban development in Montreal and across Quebec, it is Daniel Breton. But it looks like he got crucified for demanding that they do their on the public dime jobs.

Ethan Cox has written an excellent article.

The political assasination of an honest politician: Daniel Breton resigns as Quebec Environment Minister

by Ethan Cox

I don’t like the PQ much, and I believe their recently released budget was an embarrassing affront to those Quebeckers who naively expected them to actually do the things they promised to do during the campaign. All the more so with a leaderless and election shy Liberal party guaranteeing their minority government the ability to govern as a majority in the near term.

But the carefully manufactured “scandal” which brought down PQ Environment Minister Daniel Breton, who resigned his cabinet post yesterday, is no cause for celebration. Easily lost in a sea of real scandals, and disgraced politicians riding off into the sunset, is the political assassination of a good man for the crime of considering, however fleetingly, a challenge to the status quo.

That his political enemies so easily took down Breton, and that the PQ so happily threw him to the wolves without so much as the pretence of a defence, is a clear message to anyone who would seek office to challenge the way things are: don’t, or you’ll be sorry.

First, the facts. Such as they are. Breton, a co-founder of the Coalition Quebec-Vert-Kyoto and one of this province’s foremost ecologists and environmental activists, beat out Quebec Solidaire star candidate Manon Masse for the seat representing Montreal’s downtown eastside and gay village in September’s election. It was the culmination of a political odyssey which saw him run unsuccessfully for the Green Party and the NDP, before finally joining the PQ.

His subsequent appointment to the Environment portfolio by Premier Pauline Marois was lauded by the progressive community, who saw in the new minister an ally who could be counted upon to restore the integrity and competence of a department which had become some sort of a sad little joke under previous governments.

Quebec has some of the strongest environmental laws on the books in North America, but suffers from a near complete inability to enforce them. A strong minister with the heft to fight for his budget line could therefore get a great deal done without the need to pass legislation through the fractured National Assembly.

Sadly, while activists were popping the bubbly, the corporate interests with most to lose under an activist environment minister were organizing to eliminate the perceived threat. This before Breton had done a single thing of substance. (more…)

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By Elizabeth May

In what has become an annual media photo-op, Stephen Harper made his seasonal trek to Canada’s North in August.  The bravado of proclamations of “use it or lose it” Arctic sovereignty and flexing of nationalistic muscle is wearing thin. The commitments for deep sea ports and ice breakers and new research stations have begun to run aground on the reality of broken promises.

First promised in 2005 and again in 2008, the much-ballyhooed new icebreakers — in fact, armed, troop-carrying icebreakers — have been delayed once again. The Chinese, with no Arctic coastline at all, now have icebreakers in Canada’s waters while our Coast Guard’s Amundsen is in dry dock.

The construction of the deepwater port naval port in Nanisivik promised in 2007 has yet to be begun, despite promises it would begin two years ago.  Also two years ago, the Prime Minister announced a major new satellite project, the Radarstat Constellation Mission. It now appears to be mired in budgetary delays.

Additionally, Stephen Harper has promised the creation of a new Canadian High Arctic Research Station (CHARS) to be built in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut. This is one of the more bizarre announcements. It was first pledged in the 2007 Speech from the Throne claiming the government would “build a world-class Arctic research station that will be on the cutting edge of Arctic issues, including environmental science and resource development. This station will be built by Canadians, in Canada’s Arctic, and it will be there to serve the world.”

It is bizarre because at the same time that the Harper Conservatives are pledging millions to build a new research facility from the ground up, they are shutting down a world respected facility further north, closer to the North Pole. The PEARL station (Polar Environmental and Atmospheric Research Laboratory) at Eureka on Ellesmere Island, recently had $10 million invested in state of the art equipment to monitor ozone depletion and the build up of greenhouse gases. Closing it down is a scandal.

The language for CHARS’ mandate suggests a coziness with resource development. The unbelievable waste in shutting down PEARL, already in operation and producing critical work, only to build a brand new facility with a vague mandate and claim to be the world’s leading high Arctic research station is stunning. My theory is that killing climate science is the goal, and being able to throw out a big number being spent on Arctic research is about spin to claim that science is not being abandoned. Money will be spent on Arctic research, but not in areas that threaten the Harper agenda.

Notice how the promises of the last six years of Harper’s northern agenda are cloaked in military goals. Our icebreakers must be armed and capable of carrying troops. Why exactly? The deep water port is a naval port, not commercial and not even of use in the all too rapid growth of tourism to the Arctic. As Michael Byers pointed out in a recent Globe and Mail article, international cruises are now plying the once impassable waters of the Northwest Passage, without reliable navigational charts and with an inadequate level of search and rescue infrastructure should our foreign visitors run into trouble.

Last month, the Prime Minister laid out some promises for which his follow through is a mere formality. He is promising that mining and oil and gas industries will stake out the Arctic and begin a pell-mell level of development. With C-38 and the removal of the vast majority of environmental reviews, with the loss of habitat protection in the Fisheries Act and so on, the Arctic is wide open for environmental assault. Harper claimed $38 billion worth of development, coming from two dozen projects are barrelling toward the fragile Arctic environment. These projects include drilling for oil and gas along the Arctic coastline, as well as mining projects.

It is all too clear how Stephen Harper views the melting Arctic. Not for him the grim warnings of science – nor will he heed the news that fires, floods and droughts have been increased globally as the jet stream slows down due to a warming Arctic.  The melting of the Arctic is only cause for celebration. In his entire trip to the Arctic, the Prime Minister made no mention of the fact that the world was approaching an all-time record level of loss of Arctic ice.

The threat to our Arctic territories is in rapidly changing Arctic climate and the positive feedback loops that allow the melting ice to expose dark ocean water and cause the melting to accelerate. None of this is good news to anyone aware of the science of climate change.

The National Snow and Ice Data Centre has reported that Arctic sea ice has already dropped below the 2007 melt record – and there are still two to three weeks of melt to go. On August 26 the ice dropped below 4 million km2, an all time loss of Arctic sea ice. This is a melt of more than 40% of summer ice extent in the past decade alone.

Stephen Harper has it wrong. Arctic sovereignty is not a case of “use it or lose it.” It is an imperative to “protect it or lose it.” Harper’s version of Arctic security will bring about Canada and the world’s increased insecurity. His is not an agenda of leadership. It is the 2012 version of Stanley Kubrick’s 1964 dark classic Dr. Strangelove. Stephen Harper is leading us toward destruction.

Article here.

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Awesome reclamation project in Madrid, Spain, shows us once again how Turcot is shaping up as a totally blown opportunity. As cities around the world tear down elevated freeways, eliminate congested roadways, here in Quebec we have decided that the ideal thing to replace a freeway with is (drumroll) another freeway!

The video below also mentions how the Madrid project placed an emphasis on opening views of the old city. Here, the Griffintown development is going to block some of the most wonderful views of downtown available. There is a 1% get to live there 99% get their views taken away mentality with that Griffintown project and it’s usually called elitism.

Website

Article

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And that is about the size of it. Canada is led by a man who is so enthralled by the madness of the wealthy right wing in the US that he is determined to destroy Canada at all costs. There is no reality with Stephen Harper, he would have all environmentalists in prison, sell our water (hell, the tar sands alone will use up one third of Canada’s fresh water, let alone most of our natural gas) as if it was just another commodity, destroy all possibility of freedom and prosperity for future generations, and create a record deficit as he does  his best to make the rich richer. Like junkies in the worst throes of withdrawal  this wealthy 1% needs more, more wealth, more power, more control, and all in the name of a God who couldn’t possibly approve. And they want it right now.

From The Guardian on Facebook.

Stephen Leahy

Canada cuts environment spending

Canada’s Stephen Harper government is spending more than 60 billion dollars on new military jets and warships while slashing more than 200 million dollars in funding for research and monitoring of the environment.

Amongst the programmes now crippled is Canada’s internationally renowned ozone monitoring network, which was instrumental in the discovery of the first-ever ozone hole over Canada last spring. Loss of ozone has been previously linked to increases in skin cancer.

“The proposed cuts go so far the network won’t be able to do serious science,” said Thomas Duck, an atmospheric scientist at Halifax’s Dalhousie University.

Canada was the pioneer in ozone monitoring, developing the first accurate ozone measuring tool that led to the discovery that the world’s ozone layer was dangerously thinning in the 1970s, which in turn led to the successful Montreal Protocol on Ozone Depleting Substances.

Canada has about one-third of the ozone monitoring stations in the Arctic region. It also hosts the world archive of ozone data, which is heavily relied on by scientists around the world.

“There’s only one guy running the entire archive, and he’s received a lay-off notice letter,” Duck told IPS. (more…)

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The world premier will be screening at the Vancouver International Film Festival 2011:
Tuesday October 11 & Wednesday October 12

Inspired by his relationship with a Kwakwaka’wakw elder, the filmmaker embarks upon a cinematic journey contrasting the tree-farms that dominate the landscape surrounding his home with an ancient rainforest on the Pacific Coast of Canada.

This promises to be an awesome event. I saw some rough footage last year when the director, Richard Boyce, an old art school friend, was in town working on the post production, and it was very interesting material!

RAINFOREST
The Limit of Splendour

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From The Gazette.
What impact do the chemicals we are exposed to every day have on our bodies? That question and others will be discussed Saturday at a conference organized by the Environmental Health Association of Quebec.

According to EHAQ, some 170,000 Quebecers say they suffer from environmental sensitivities or multiple chemical sensitivities.

It is a chronic, painful, multi-system condition that can develop after a single exposure or repeated low exposures to common chemicals in the environment. The condition leaves people sensitive to very low exposures to things like cleaning products, cigarette smoke, pesticides, scented products and pets, among others, EHAQ says.

“People suffering from Environmental Sensitivities are referred to as the ‘canaries’ of our society, because they are similar to the canaries in the coalmines of yesteryear. They are sounding the alarm that the toxins are building to dangerous levels. Without proper government stewardship, there can only be an increase in illnesses related to the pollutants in the environment in the future,” EHAQ president Rohini Peris wrote in a letter to Quebec Premier Jean Charest, asking him to improve medical services for people with environmental sensitivities.

Currently, Peris said, people with the condition do not have access to doctors trained in environmental medicine in Quebec, and are unable to get insurance, and are not recognized as having a disability.

The guest speaker at Saturday’s conference is Dr. John Molot of the Environmental Health Clinic at Womens’ College Hospital in Toronto. Following his lecture, participants will march along de Maisonneuve Blvd. to Charest’s Montreal office at McGill College Ave. and Sherbrooke St., where Quebec Solidaire MNA and doctor Amir Khadir will speak.

The conference begins at noon at Concordia University’s Hall Building, 1455 de Maisonneuve Blvd., W. Room H-110. Admission is free.

– Monique Beaudin

Original Page

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The Park Spark Project

The Park Spark Project.

“Dog owners everywhere are collecting pet waste in plastic bags and then sending it to landfills. The waste contained in these plastic bags release small amounts of methane that over time is a substantial quantity. The Park Spark Project is based on substituting the common trashcan and plastic bag with a public methane digester and biodegradable bag, so that the dog waste collected is converted into a usable form of energy (methane). This methane will burn constantly in the form of an ‘eternal flame’ monument until someone proposes an idea for the use of the flame.

The energy of the digester manifested as an ‘eternal flame’ is evidence of the redundant and unquestioned nature of our behaviors. Once in place, as long as people own pets in the city and throw away dog waste, the production of energy will be continuous and unlimited.”

Of course we should also be completely rethinking how human waste is processed – out of sight out of mind will absolutely come back to haunt us big time!

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I have to say I have not been paying attention to the BP Oil Spill the way I would normally follow an environmental disaster. And I find that a lot of people are doing the same from what I see around the net. It is overwhelming. After roughly 40 days the oil is still gushing. There is no longer a realistic question of saving this thing, but trying to come to terms with the inevitable devastation.The Gulf of Mexico is an enormous ecosystem to see wiped out, but that is probably what is happening. No more fish, no more pleasant coastline, no more birds, a place that will cease to have a purpose, a 21st century version of a dead sea.

Amy Giese is an artist/blogger who has created some quick pieces as a way of inevitably coping with the situation, trying to deal with the anger and other emotions. Here is her blog.



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Going to be a day trip on Sunday afternoon with Patrick Asch, a local environmental expert, at the parc des Rapides in Ville Lasalle at 2pm/14h. The site used to be a hydroelectric dam that was converted into a nature park. It is a very interesting site and offers the opportunity to get real close to the Lachine Rapids and still be on ground.

“Meeting at the parc des Rapides entrance located behind the parking lot on boulevard LaSalle, at the end of 7th avenue.”

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