Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Chris Genovali

GET UPDATES FROM Chris Genovali
 

Groundswell: The Wave of Opposition to Enbridge

Posted: 01/31/2012 9:47 am

Raincoast Conservation Foundation has an exciting project in the works with our friends at Patagonia, a leader among environmentally-minded businesses.

Striving to alert more people about Enbridge's desire to impose tar sands pipelines and super tankers on British Columbia's central and north coast via their proposed Northern Gateway project, how could we inform the people of California, for instance, as they are expected to be one of the primary recipients of the "world's dirtiest oil"?

It came to Raincoast's surfing science director Dr. Chris Darimont while immersed in the water, literally. Why couldn't surfers -- the closest approximation of marine mammals among we humans -- bring voice to this issue on behalf of whales, dolphins, porpoises and other species that would be at risk from a catastrophic oil spill on Canada's Pacific coast? An idea for a documentary film and new outreach campaign was born.

2012-01-30-greatbeardevries.jpg
Peter Devries surfing the coast of B.C.'s Great Bear Rainforest. Photo by Jeremy Koreski


A year later, our research vessel Achiever was equipped with a most unlikely rigging: a surfboard rack. Joining Raincoasters Chris Darimont and Captain Brian Falconer aboard Achiever were members of Patagonia's famous surf team, including highly accomplished film maker Chris Malloy, stellar surfers/creative artists Dan Malloy and Trevor Gordon, and the gifted videographer Scott Soens. Coastal B.C. was proudly represented on Achiever as well, with Canada's top ranked surfer Peter Devries of Tofino, and two fellow Vancouver Islanders who happen to be Canada's premier surf photographers, Jeremy Koreski and Dean Azim.

Chris and company were off to immerse themselves in the waves of stormy October, learn from the Great Bear Rainforest, and tell its story. What they experienced changed Canadian surfing. It also changed each and every one of the expedition participants, strengthening their resolve to protect B.C.'s priceless coast. Groundswell, the film documenting this amazing surfing and wilderness adventure in Canada's Great Bear Rainforest, will be released later this year. The trailer for Groundswell is hot off the press and it is guaranteed to pique your interest and get your blood pumping. View the trailer here.

 

Follow Chris Genovali on Twitter: www.twitter.com/raincoast

 
 
  • Comments
  • 6
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
03:50 PM on 01/31/2012
So what is your point...that the pacific coastline is beautiful ...........we all know that...but you can't eat scenery, people need jobs and energy . If done properly there is no reason that tankers cannot cruse the pacific coast in the same way that they have sailed the far more beautiful mediterranean coast for years, The answer is not to ban things but to regulate and control them so as everyone can benifit from them ....
08:39 PM on 01/31/2012
Jim I guess you feel that heroin and meth shouldn't be illegal - just regulated. Interesting. If everyone can have legal access to them we will be happy without a job or energy. Just really chea heroin and meth.
03:24 PM on 01/31/2012
Sounds to me like you had a real good vacation probably paid for by american "green" lobbyists ( I hope none of my tax money was wasted on this adventure.) So what is your point...that the pacific coastline is beautiful ...........we all know that...but you can't eat scenery, people need jobs and energy . If done properly there is no reason that tankers cannot cruse the pacific coast in the same way that they have sailed the far more beautiful mediterranean coast for years, The answer is not to ban things but to regulate and control them so as everyone can benifit from them not just surfers ....
01:35 PM on 01/31/2012
It is unfortunate that opposition to the pipeline cannot be raised simply by pointing out the fact that we need the forest and we don't need the pipeline. Canadian tax dollars go to support big oil as it destroys the most important forest in the world. IThe tar sands open pit mining also destroys the water and makes people sick with cancer. The smell alone is horrific. Harper worked for the oil industry, is supported by the oil industry and advocates saving money by raising retirement ages. He could save money by just stopping the tax subsidies and adhering to his purported Christian beliefs. The poor shall come first and destroying the earth is rquired. /destroying it is a definite no no.
photo
artleads
Let's have a national retreat.
05:11 PM on 01/31/2012
Thanks!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
CanadaStan
Cogito ergo spud, I think, therefore I yam
12:07 AM on 02/01/2012
The smell was there long before they mined the oil, in fact the diaries from explorers memtioned it all the time.
Cancer?
No, a doctor who lied about cancer, but no real cancer anomalies.
Ask the Alberta College of Physicians and surgeons.
Harper isn't supported by the oil industry, corporate donations to federal political parties are not allowed in Canada.
What forest?
They are mining a very small area, and they replant the forest after they clean up the oil God spilled....
Subsidies?
Try economics 101, or grade two arithmetic..
Canada's tax dollars do not support 'big oil', big oil pumps hundreds of billions of tax dollars into the economy.
If you want to shut down the oil sands, get used to shutting down all the social programs the oil sands pays for.

Grow up, read a book, get a brain...