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New Pipeline Book Is Signpost At A Crossroads

is an explosive, shocking warning that if the Northern Gateway pipeline goes ahead, it's checkmate for climate change as Earth's icecaps melt, oceans rise, and ultimately people and animals die as billions of tons of greenhouse gases are pumped into the sky.
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Book Review: Extract: The Pipeline Wars Vol. 1: Enbridge

Written by: Carrie Saxifrage, Tzeporah Berman, Alexis Stoymenoff, Jenny Uechi, David P. Ball, and Beth Hong.

Photography by Andrew S. Wright.

Edited by: Linda Solomon

As we approach the end of 2012 Planet Earth is a condemned prisoner, sentenced to death and strapped into an electric chair, gasping its last, terrified breath as it awaits a final throw of the switch to burn it alive.

The execution switch is none other than oil sands development, which companies like Enbridge want to export to markets in Asia by building pipelines through B.C. to tanker terminals, from where oil can be shipped to markets in China and other countries.

Most notable is Enbridge's Northern Gateway pipeline, which if built, would pass through B.C's Great Bear Rainforest, and is now ground zero in a battle whose outcome could mean life or death for planet Earth, according to experts like climatologist James Hansen and 350.org founder Bill McKibben.

That's all according to the Vancouver Observer's new release, Extract: The Pipeline Wars, an explosive, shocking warning that if the pipeline goes ahead, it's checkmate for climate change as Earth's icecaps melt, oceans rise, and ultimately people and animals die as billions of tons of greenhouse gases are pumped into the sky.

Extract is the final result of one year's in-depth reporting by a team of Observer reporters, and is written in an easy to read, engaging, and fluid style that grips a reader from the first lines. Its opening chapters flash between people living in Northern Gateway's proposed path and big oil executives planning it out, like a recurring, terrifying nightmare that makes you wake up screaming every time.

It then builds up like a deafening staccato rhythm to its dark finale, spelling out in no uncertain terms what this pipeline, and others in the works, will do to both B.C.'s environment and Earth's climate. All in all, it slams you like a left hook from an MMA fighter.

Extract is not meant simply to terrify, but forces people to ask: at what price is development? Is it worth bulldozing and digging up one of the world's last remaining temperate rainforests for the sake of a few jobs?

Not only that, B.C. is home to powerful environmental groups including North America's only Green Party seat, alongside First Nations bands who've lived on the land for centuries. Any struggle between Big Oil and Big Environment could yet turn ugly if the pipeline is built, something that Extract only touches on briefly but is well worth exploring in much more detail.

Peaceful protests against Northern Gateway could possibly escalate into violent clashes. Don't forget B.C.'s forested mountains are perfect for guerrilla warfare. Such a result would be a political and social disaster for Canada.

Extract needn't be a prophecy set in stone of destroyed forests, polluted seas, and rising temperatures. Rather it's a signpost at a crossroads giving us two choices for the future: continued reliance on fossil fuels that could well destroy human civilization and trigger a mass extinction not seen since the dinosaurs; or weaning ourselves off oil to more eco-friendly energy sources, which can preserve both B.C.'s beauty and our planet for future generations.

Canada's economy could be developed by scrapping Northern Gateway and instead investing our millions in "green collar" jobs, such as solar, geothermal, or wind energy. This will create thousands of new, sustainable, long-term jobs. Good news indeed for a global economy still struggling with recession, not to mention preserving Canada's values of Peace, Order, and Good Government.

A timely reminder for us to think outside the box in stopping climate change, Extract's message could be made even stronger by adding some more pictures of the Great Bear Forest and its unique wildlife, contrasting them with oil wells, pipelines, and shots of tar sand oil extraction.

For now, apocalyptic visions of a burning planet will have to do. Buy this book. Strap yourself in. Best keep those beta-blockers handy. For it will set your heart racing, and you'll sweat bullets as if you yourself are strapped down on that electric chair. But there's still time to grant both our planet and ourselves one final reprieve from the death sentence of global warming.

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