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Comment: We need to refine our oil sands ambition

August 29, 2014 by Rob Hislop Leave a Comment

In June, a ship carrying about 600,000 barrels of crude from Alberta’s oil sands arrived in Bilbao, Spain, by way of Houston, Tex. The circuitous journey by rail and tanker to Spanish oil giant Repsol’s Bilbao refinery made economic sense, given the price discount on Canadian crude. Despite European hostility toward “dirty” oil from Canada, […]

Filed Under: Editorial Tagged With: Alberta, Alberta's oil sands, Big Oil multinationals, bitumen, Canada, Canadian crude, refining, Spain, upgrading, Western Canadian Select oil

Amnesty International takes aim at the Nigerian government and Shell

August 29, 2014 by Rob Hislop Leave a Comment

Amnesty International and other groups are accusing Shell Oil and the Nigerian government of doing little to clean up pollution caused by oil production in the Niger Delta . Oil production has contaminated the drinking water of at least 10 communities, but neither the Nigerian government nor Royal Dutch Shell‘s Nigeria subsidiary have taken effective […]

Filed Under: Environment, International, News Tagged With: Amnesty International, Center for Environment, Environmental Rights Action, Friends of The Earth Europe, Human Rights and Development, Nigeria, oil spill, Platform, Royal Dutch Shell, Shell, United Nations Environment Program, vandalism

Learning how to save oiled birds

August 29, 2014 by Rob Hislop Leave a Comment

Oil spills at sea can be devastating for seabirds, but a team of freshly trained Illawarra Australia wildlife rescuers are ready to help save and clean our feathered friends. The country’s first modified shipping container to clean oiled sea birds was in Port Kembla to help train volunteers. The shipping container is one of only […]

Filed Under: Environment, Innovation, International, News Tagged With: Australia, birds, Environment, marine life, oil, wildlife

Living in Oil: the Microorganisms that Ruin our Fuel

August 29, 2014 by Rob Hislop Leave a Comment

Oil might not seem like it could be home to anything. However, researchers have discovered tiny organisms do indeed make their home there, and they are an essential part of the reason oil degrades over time. According to Rainer Meckenstock from the Helmholtz Zentrum München (HMGU), the microorganisms are not living in the oil itself, […]

Filed Under: Environment, Innovation, News Tagged With: fuel, German Research Center for Environmental Health, Helmholtz Zentrum München, microbiology, oil, Rainer Meckenstock, research

Understanding the immediate consequences of an oil spill

August 29, 2014 by Rob Hislop Leave a Comment

The fate of oil during the first day after an accidental oil spill is still poorly understood, with researchers often arriving on the scene only after several days. New findings from a field experiment carried out in the North Sea could help shape the emergency response in the immediate wake of disasters. It is well […]

Filed Under: Environment, Innovation, News, Safety Tagged With: catastrophe, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, emergency response team, Exxon Valdez, North Sea, oil spill, Samuel Arey, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, underwater life

Comment: Canadian crude is an attractive alternative to imported oil

August 29, 2014 by Rob Hislop Leave a Comment

Canada has the third-largest oil reserves in the world, but we import large volumes of oil from foreign sources into Eastern Canada, including Quebec, every day. Oil refineries in Quebec and Atlantic Canada import more than 600,000 barrels per day from foreign sources. But with Canadian oil production growing, using Canadian crude oil in Quebec, […]

Filed Under: Editorial Tagged With: Alberta, Canada, Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers, Canadians, crude oil, Environment, Greg Stringham, oil, oil companies, oil industry, oil sands, Philippe Reicher, pipeline, Quebec, refinery, Safety

Oil companies dump plans to explore the Arctic

August 29, 2014 by Rob Hislop Leave a Comment

After years of mishaps and false starts, some oil companies are giving up on , in the Arctic. Many companies have allowed their leases on offshore Arctic acreage to expire. Since 2003, the rights to an estimated 584,000 acres in the Beaufort Sea have been allowed to lapse. The oil industry was once optimistic about […]

Filed Under: Canada, Environment, News, Safety Tagged With: Arctic, drilling, giving up, oil companies, Shell Oil, Statoil, Total

Chilling report on the Arctic

August 29, 2014 by Rob Hislop Leave a Comment

The Arctic appear to be the next target for the oil and gas industry. With up to a fifth of the world’s remaining reserves, it’s the single largest untapped region. There is a concern though, can the oil be extracted safely? The industry likes to remind us there are hundreds of deepwater wells that have […]

Filed Under: Canada, Environment, News, Safety Tagged With: Arctic, BP's Deepwater Horizon spill, deepwater wells, dispersants, Exxon Valdez, oil and gas industry, World Wildlife Fund, WWF Canada president David Miller

Insurance may not be enough to cover potential disasters

August 29, 2014 by Rob Hislop Leave a Comment

U.S. Transportation Department (DOT) regulators are concerned most freight railroad insurance policies are barely sufficient to cover even average oil train accidents, Politico reports. In an analysis published in early August, DOT reported most large railroads are insured at about $25 million for accidents, with others insuring up to $50 million for certain hazardous cargo. […]

Filed Under: International, News, Safety Tagged With: accident. Transportation Department, BP spill, derailment, Enbridge, insurance, Lac-Megantic, Montreal Maine & Atlantic Railway, National Energy Board, pipeline, Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, Quebec, Robyn Allan, spill, train, U.S.

Comment: Oil industry taking on well-funded environmental groups

August 20, 2014 by Rob Hislop Leave a Comment

Back in 2004, Wilburforce Foundation stipulated that the purpose of funding the Yellowstone to Yukon (Y2Y)  was to protect the region “from oil and gas development, through an advocacy campaign that focuses on grizzly bears and critical wildlife habitat,” tax returns say. Since then, the Wilburforce foundation has granted more than US$25 million to environmental […]

Filed Under: Editorial Tagged With: Asia, Canada, Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society, environmental, environmental activism, Europe, First Nations, foreign funded campaign, Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Great Bear Rainforest, Hewlett Foundation, oil, oil sands, Packard Foundation, Rockefeller Brothers, tar sands, U.S., Y2Y, Yellowstone to Yukon

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