PLEASE . . .
SIGN PETITION
AND PASS TO YOUR CONTACTS . . . .
"Trillions of litres of water given away for
shale gas... How can the B.C. Government do this without regard for
those who depend on the river for life?" - FNFN Chief Sharleen
Wildeman
The Fort
Nelson River is the lifeblood of my community - the
Fort Nelson First Nation. It's where we hunt and fish. It connects
our villages. Our burial grounds are on its banks. The river has
given us a cultural and spiritual connection to our land for untold
centuries, but now it's at risk of being drained by
billions of litres.
The executives
at Encana Corporation are pressuring Premier Clark to
give them the right to take 3-billion litres of fresh water every
year from the river to be used for shale gas fracking
-- without consulting my community who depend on the
river, or without any environmental assessment.
Encana's license is
only the beginning. 8 more major oil and gas companies
are now requesting similar licenses amounting to trillions of
litres -- the consequences of this could be
devastating for the river.
PAULSBORO, N.J. (AP) —A freight train derailed Friday on a railroad bridge that has had problems before, toppling tanker cars partially into a creek and causing a leak of hazardous gas (vinyl chloride) that was blamed for sickening dozens of people, authorities said. Details here.
CALGARY — The Canadian government on Friday blocked a seven-year-old plan to drill more than a thousand natural gas wells in an Alberta wildlife reserve...Details here. PLT. Please also read our earlier post, "So, What Will it Be, Prairie Grasslands or Pipelines?" And thanks to Nature Canada for organizing the petition. (I signed! Did you?)
Sprague's pipit, one of the many "species at risk" found in the reserve.
(Reuters) - Permafrost lands across Siberia and Alaska that contain vast stores of carbon are beginning to thaw, bringing with it the threat of a big increase in global warming by 2100, a U.N. report said on Tuesday. Details here.
Chasing Ice is the story of one man’s mission to change
the tide of history by gathering undeniable evidence of climate change.
Using time-lapse cameras, his videos compress years into seconds and
capture ancient mountains of ice in motion as they disappear at a
breathtaking rate.