From the Editor:

FYI: Another fight for our wildlife and our land…. Please find the time to send in your comments regarding the Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline. These two Pipeline are planed to run 1170 kilometres through the Great Bear Sea and rainforest located along B.C.Coast..These Pipelines will carry “toxic oil sands bitumen across hundreds of salmon streams.”

We only have until August 31 to let our government know what we think of this plan… don’t delay if you are against this, send in your thoughts today… I am sure the Spirit Bear will thank you, not to mention the fish in the waters and the trees in the forest… 

I have submitted my comments online, but you may also fax or snail mail yours in… Please see information at the end of this post…or click on Take action now link…  

 / ©: Natalie Bowes / WWF-Canada

© Natalie Bowes / WWF-Canada

Deciding the future of a Canadian ecological treasure

At the heart of the hearings to decide the future of the Great Bear Sea and Rainforest is whether, and under what conditions, we should permit super tankers and a bitumen pipeline in one of the last intact temperate coastal rainforests on Earth.

The hearings to decide the future of the Great Bear Sea and Rainforest got off to quite a start this week. Big oil, foreign intrigue, a grassroots uprising, dueling polls, angry Ministers; this one has all the makings of a blockbuster. No wonder the media interest has been so strong. But all this fervor has obscured the heart of the matter, which is whether and under what conditions we should permit super tankers and a bitumen pipeline in one of the last intact temperate coastal rainforests on Earth.

I suspect most Canadians would be surprised that the proposed route of the Enbridge pipeline bisects this ecological treasure. Pipeline proponents would rather frame this issue around developing an Asian market for oil sands bitumen – and the allegedly nefarious U.S.-based interests who would prevent U.S. from doing so – than have a science-based debate about the very real risks associated with getting it there via this route.

It is the peculiar Canadian paradox that we are blessed with such natural beauty and abundance that we often fail to value it appropriately. Even by our standards, however, the Great Bear is a special place. It is the only habitat in the world for the Spirit Bear, which is rarer than the Giant Panda. Humpbacks, orcas and many other species of cetaceans take advantage of this uniquely quiet cold ocean to prosper. Eagles are as plentiful as sparrows are in Canada’s urban parks. January 11, 2012  Posted by Gerald Butts

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All five species of Pacific salmon are present, providing the basis for a prosperous fishery. When spawned out or dragged into the forest by grizzlies and bald eagles, these fish deliver the nitrogen needed to grow trees to a size they have no business reaching at this latitude. This in turn allows for healthy and sustainable forestry.

Mercifully, the communities that have been sustained by this wondrous ecosystem for millennia do not share our paradoxical undervaluing of nature. B.C.’s Coastal First Nations know well that Great Bear’s value as a functioning ecosystem dwarfs the tantalizing but fleeting promise of short-term cash from oil revenues.

And they know from history what we know from traditional science: that this meticulously interconnected ecosystem is very vulnerable to disruption. A toxic event, even in Enbridge’s own estimation, cannot be ruled out. The 1,170-kilometre pipeline would divide the rainforest, crossing countless salmon rivers. At Kitimat, toxic diluted bitumen would be loaded onto supersized tankers. Each year, more than 200 would travel through narrow fjords out into some of the world’s most treacherous seas.

This isn’t the first time the Great Bear has been threatened. Just 25 years ago, it was slated to be clear-cut. After 15 years of conflict, a group of unlikely allies found a solution. First Nations, forestry companies, NGOs, the Harper and Campbell governments and both Canadian and U.S.-based philanthropists came together to create a world-leading model of ecosystem management and economic development. By combining conservation with better logging practices, and using a public-private funding model to finance new economic development, we found a way to protect the environment and the economy of the Great Bear.

The current question of whether foreign interests can participate in the NEB hearings is curious in this context. Should we prohibit oil sands companies, the majority of which are foreign-owned and operated? It also hypocritical, given that the industry and government has spent untold millions to lobby foreign governments, air PR campaigns in foreign markets and solicit foreign direct investment in the oil sands. The message we are sending the world is that you are free to come to Canada to exploit nature, but not to protect it.

In the interests of full disclosure, less than two per cent of our revenue came from U.S. foundations that have been targeted by smear campaigns recently. We are proud to add that support to the larger contributions we receive from almost 150,000 like-minded Canadians. We are also proud to provide a platform for Canadians who care deeply about conserving nature around the world, from the Amazon to tiger habitats of Russia and south Asia. Most important, we are transparent about our sources and uses of revenue (see wwf.ca), which cannot be said for those leading this spurious campaign.

Ultimately, this debate is a red herring designed to distract. The Great Bear is globally significant. If this development were proposed for the Amazon or the Great Barrier Reef, people around the world would engage. These are irreplaceable sites and input from global citizens who care about nature should be welcome. This expectation ought to be second nature in an open-society such as ours.

A version of this opinion piece ran in The Globe and Mail on January 11, 2012.

http://blog.wwf.ca/blog/2012/01/11/deciding-the-future-of-a-canadian-ecological-treasure/#.UDOdx-ik6X0.facebook

 Great Bear Sea

No place for a pipeline

The Great Bear region of British Columbia’s north coast is one of Canada’s ecological treasures. Here one of the world’s last intact temperate rainforest meets some of the planet’s last large wild rivers and most productive coldwater seas. This is no place for an oil pipeline.

 

All five species of Pacific salmon are found here. It’s home to humpback and orca whales, as well as dolphins and porpoises. Extraordinary animals like Pacific coastal wolves and the rare white Spirit Bears live nowhere else on Earth. 

This is one of the richest and most spectacular ecosystems on our planet. And its future is in our hands.

Raise your voice to protect the Great Bear Sea

The Northern Gateway Project proposes to build twin pipelines from the Alberta tar sands through the Great Bear, to the BC coast. The 1,170-kilometre route would bisect the rainforest. The pipelines would transport toxic oil sands bitumen across hundreds of salmon streams. The pipeline would bring as many as 220 supersized oil tankers into B.C’s sensitive coastal waters every year. 

The Enbridge Northern Gateway Project Joint Review Panel (JRP) is accepting letters of comment from all Canadians as part of this democratic process until August 31. Take action to make your own views and concerns about the project known. 

Find out what’s at stake in the Great Bear Sea

 

  1. Use the form on the Panel website at
    www.gatewaypanel.review.gc.ca
     
  2. Send it by fax to 403-292-5503
    or toll free fax at 1-877-288-8803
    Attention: Secretary to the Joint Review Panel.
     
  3. Mail it to:
    Secretary to the Joint Review Panel
    Enbridge Northern Gateway Project
    444 Seventh Avenue S.W.
    Calgary Alberta
    T2P 0X8

Don’t know what to say?

The Panel wants to hear from the public and can only consider information that people put on the record in writing before August 31, 2012. Let the Panel know what you think. Does this Project fit your vision for Canada? What do you think the environmental effects will be? And ultimately, do you think this Project is in Canadian public interest?

Source: World Wildlife Federation: Please Click Here to go to their site… 

 

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