Oil Sands Truth: Shut Down the Tar Sands

Economics

Economics

Economics drive tar sands operations. Record highs in oil prices, though still fluctuating, will make tar sand oil ‘economical’ (read: profitable) well into the future. Government subsidies to this environmentally disastrous process remain in place from a time when the federal government was sponsoring research into the possibility of recovering this oil. Stock prices of tar sands developers grow the more conventional oil is scarce.

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Economics drive tar sands operations. Record highs in oil prices, though still fluctuating, will make tar sand oil ‘economical’ (read: profitable) well into the future. Government subsidies to this environmentally disastrous process remain in place from a time when the federal government was sponsoring research into the possibility of recovering this oil. Stock prices of tar sands developers grow the more conventional oil is scarce.

Keystone pipeline: Gold mine or environmental disaster?

Keystone pipeline: Gold mine or environmental disaster?

By WESLEY P. JAMES
The governor wants the pipeline for the jobs, county commissioners want the pipeline for the property taxes and local businesses want the pipeline for the economic activity generated by the construction and operation of the pipeline.

Sonic, Shell team for tar sands patent

Sonic, Shell team for oilsands patent

Details of 'innovation' not disclosed

By Shaun Polczer, Calgary Herald
June 24, 2009

CALGARY - A small startup has teamed up with one of the world's largest oil majors to develop a patent for processing heavy oil and oilsands.

Vancouver-based Sonic Technology Solutions on Tuesday said it has partnered with Shell Canada to jointly file a patent application for the recovery of bitumen from oilsands.

Which Matters Most? The Size of the Tap or the Tank?

Which Matters Most? The Size of the Tap or the Tank?
Scitizen // Kurt Cobb
22 Jun, 2009

Energy optimists are fond of citing very large numbers for worldwide fossil fuel resources such as oil and natural gas. But they conveniently leave out the critical variable. How fast can we actually produce these resources?

Investment not worth the spills

Investment not worth the spills
Smithers Interior News
June 24, 2009

Editor:

Christine Ogryzlo, from the Smithers Exploration Group, suggests in her letter that we should allow Enbridge to bring tar sands pipelines and super crude oil tankers to our coast to show that we support development in this region, acknowledging that it won’t bring about many jobs. That’s a pretty high-risk way to send a message.

"Alaska pipeline steals the show"

Alaska pipeline steals the show

Guy Quenneville
Northern News Services
Published Monday, June 22, 2009

INUVIK - The ninth Inuvik Petroleum Show just couldn't catch a break.

Last year, attendees of the annual oil and gas trade show - though high on news that BP Energy had bid more than $1 billion for a parcel of offshore land in the Beaufort Sea - operated under the shadow of the Joint Review Panel, whose report on the environmental and socio-economic impacts of the $16.2 billion Mackenzie Gas Project (MGP) was still nowhere to be seen.

Enbridge to Develop Pipeline System for Kearl Project

Enbridge to Develop Pipeline System for Kearl Project
By Joe Carroll

June 22 (Bloomberg) -- Enbridge Inc., the biggest transporter of oil from Canada’s tar sands, plans to build a pipeline to haul crude from Exxon Mobil Corp.’s C$8 billion ($7 billion) Kearl project in northern Alberta to Edmonton.

The first phase will connect the Kearl oil-sands site north of Fort McMurray, Alberta, to Enbridge’s Cheecham terminal near Nexen Inc.’s Long Lake development, Paula Leslie, an Enbridge spokeswoman, said today in a telephone interview.

Alberta's tar sands show signs of life

Alberta's oil sands show signs of life
Katherine O'Neill, and Dawn Walton
Globe and Mail, Monday, Jun. 22, 2009

Unlimited overtime pay was just one of the many perks John Halbauer enjoyed as a welder during Alberta's super-sized energy boom.

That's disappeared, along with 11 of the 25-year-old's 13 co-workers who got laid-off in January. “I was worried. I didn't know if I was going to have to move back home or what,” the Kimberley, B.C., native said.

Enbridge Gateway Pipeline proposal raises vexing questions

Pipeline proposal raises vexing questions
Written by Jeannette Paterson
Prince George
Thursday, 18 June 2009

Wanting to get a better sense of how or if the Enbridge pipeline would benefit the majority of British Columbians, I looked back at the Thomas Berger Inquiry held in the 1970s regarding the Mackenzie Delta natural gas pipeline.

It was, of course, recommended that a 10-year moratorium be put in place until the aboriginal people living in the area had completed their land claims and then, from a position of ownership and power, the project could be revisited.

What’s the Real Story Behind the Alaska Pipeline?

What’s the Real Story Behind the Alaska Pipeline?
Written by Ruedigar Matthes
Published on June 18th, 2009
Posted in Climate Change, Editor's Choice, Natural Resources

With the spotlight shining on clean energy, the stage has been set for the U.S. to rid itself of a harmful addiction to foreign oil. The stars are aligned and the cards have been dealt. Soon we’ll have kicked the dirty habit, right?

"Exxon-TransCan Alaska gas line push sends tremor through Mackenzie ranks"

It should be noted that this article posits that the MGP and Alaska Highway gas lines are competing-- more blather aimed at garnering concessions and subsidies from governments, etc. The reality is that the goal of five million barrels a day of tar sands bitumen extraction-- now said to be in line to happen by 2035-- cannot take place without all the MGP gas and most of the Alaskan. Math is not a debatable point.

--M

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Who’s on first?

Exxon-TransCan Alaska gas line push sends tremor through Mackenzie ranks

By Gary Park
Week of June 21, 2009
For Petroleum News

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