The U.S. Department of State seems likely to approve a huge pipeline, known as Keystone XL to carry tar sands oil (about 830,000 barrels per day) to Texas refineries unless sufficient objections are raised.
The scientific community needs to get involved in this fray now. If this project gains approval, it will become exceedingly difficult to control the tar sands monster.
The environmental impacts of tar sands development include: irreversible effects on biodiversity and the natural environment, reduced water quality, destruction of fragile pristine Boreal Forest and associated wetlands, aquatic and watershed mismanagement, habitat fragmentation, habitat loss, disruption to life cycles of endemic wildlife -- particularly bird and caribou migration -- fish deformities and negative impacts on the human health in downstream communities.
Although there are multiple objections to tar sands development and the pipeline, including destruction of the environment in Canada and the likelihood of spills along the pipeline's pathway, such objections, by themselves, are very unlikely to stop the project.
An overwhelming objection is that exploitation of tar sands would make it implausible to stabilize the climate and avoid disastrous global climate impacts. The tar sands are estimated (e.g., see IPCC Fourth Assessment Report) to contain at least 400 GtC (equivalent to about 200 ppm CO2).
Easily available reserves of conventional oil and gas are enough to take atmospheric CO2 well above 400 ppm, which is unsafe for life on earth. However, if emissions from coal are phased out over the next few decades and if unconventional fossil fuels including tar sands are left in the ground, it is conceivable to stabilize earth's climate.
Phasing out emissions from coal is itself an enormous challenge. However, if the tar sands are thrown into the mix, it is essentially game over. There is no practical way to capture the CO2 emitted while burning oil, which is used principally in vehicles.
Governments are acting as if they are oblivious to the fact that there is a limit on how much fossil fuel carbon we can put into the air. Fossil fuel carbon injected into the atmosphere will stay in surface reservoirs for millennia. We can extract a fraction of the excess CO2 via improved agricultural and forestry practices, but we cannot get back to a safe CO2 level if all coal is used without carbon capture or if unconventional fossil fuels, like tar sands are exploited.
A document describing the pipeline project is available here. Comments, due by June 6, can be submitted here, or by e-mail to keystonexl@cardno.com or mail to Keystone XL EIS Project, P.O. Box 96503-98500, Washington, DC 20090-6503 or fax to 202-269-0098.
I am submitting a comment that the analysis is flawed and insufficient, failing to account for important information regarding human-made climate change that is now available. I note that prior government targets for limiting human-made global warming are now known to be inadequate. Specifically, the target to limit global warming to 2oC, rather than being a safe 'guardrail,' is actually a recipe for global climate disasters. I will include drafts of the following papers that I recently co-authored:
Paleoclimate Implications for Human-Made Climate Change that can be found here,
Earth's Energy Imbalance that can be found here, and
The Case for Young People and Nature that can be found here.
I will also comment that the tar sands pipeline project does not serve the national interest, because it will result in large adverse impacts, on the public and wildlife, by contributing substantially to climate change. These impacts must be evaluated before the project is considered further.
It is my impression and understanding that a large number of objections could have an effect and help achieve a more careful evaluation, possibly averting a huge mistake.
Crossposted with ClimateStoryTellers.org
Brendan Smith: Pipeline Climate Disaster: The Keystone XL Pipeline and Labour
In 2211 - looking back 200 years - it'll be hard for anyone to imagine how a human being could have supported treating our life-giving atmosphere as a toxic waste dump. Yet many do.
Okay, how do we do that without riots in the streets?
There is likely to be an ice free arctic in late summer within a few years. The incidences of extreme weather are increasing everyday. Also, Fires, floods, droughts, crop failures, food shortages.
Ia anyone listening? or is their intent to supply energy to an economy that cannot be sustained without destructive fossil fuels.
Sadly the US
A resource as large, as rich as and as strategic a resource as the oilsands will be exploited. If you the US have misgivings about its environmental impact its your decision to make. There is no lack of customers, especially from Asia, for the oil. And when your oil prices go through the roof and you have to ration your oil because your imported oil supplies are unreliable you can always come back to us.
Q. What percentage of the GLOBAL GHG is the tarsands responsible ?
Q. What percentage of the GLOBAL GHG is the U.S. responsible for ?
Q. What percentage of GLOBAL GHG is China responsible for ?
Q. What percentage of GLOBAL GHG are the OPEC countries responsible for ?
"I will also comment that the tar sands pipeline project does not serve the national interest,..."
Compare this statement with how purchasing 480 million barrels of oil annually from Saudi Arabia ( who hate you and everything you stand for ) is in the national interest ?
Anybody ?
Also counting the burning of the produced oil, it's less than 1% of the world's GHG emissions. But of course shutting down the oil sands would mean that production elsewhere (Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, and so on) would increase to partially -- and perhaps fully -- offset this, so we wouldn't even achieve these savings.
GHG emissions are increasing at a rate exceeding 1% per year globally.
In other words, shutting the oil sands would make virtually no difference to global CO2 emissions.