Extraction and refining heavy oil from Canadian tar sands will have increasingly devastating impacts on migratory bird populations, according to a new study. The cumulative impact of developing Canadian tar sands over the next 3050 years could be as high as 166 million birds lost, including future generations.
Written by scientists from the Natural Resources Defense Council,
Boreal Songbird Initiative, and Pembina Institute, the peer-reviewed
paper suggests that avian mortality from continued development of
Canadas tar sands would provide a serious blow to migratory bird
populations in North America.
This report is yet another wake up call to the government in Alberta,
as it confirms that the cumulative impact of oil sands development is
on an unsustainable trajectory, said Pembina Institutes Simon Dyer, a
contributing author to the report.
It is estimated that half of Americas migratory birds nest in the
Boreal forest, and each year 22170 million birds breed in the area
that could eventually be developed for tar sands oil if the rate of
development continues at it is currently planned.
At a time when bird populations are rapidly declining, this report
puts into perspective the far reaching effects of tar sands oil
development on North Americas birds, said the reports lead author
Jeff Wells, Ph.D. of the Boreal Songbird Initiative. The public needs
to understand the real and long-term ecological costs of this
development and determine if this is acceptable, added Wells.
In Alberta, tar sands mining and drilling causes significant habitat
loss and fragmentation. Expansive toxic tailings ponds are protected by
propane cannons that are used to keep ducks from landing in them.
When those cannons fail, we see unfortunate accidents like the one this
past summer in Alberta when some 500 ducks were killed after landing in
a tailings pond. Toxic tailing ponds result in 8,000 to 100,000 oiled
and drowned birds annually.
Authors of the report suggest that an immediate solution to the
unsustainable pace of development and to environmental problems
relating to tar sands oil development is a moratorium on all new
projects, project expansions, and to clean up existing projects.
For Canada to take the kind of substantive action necessary to prevent
the ecological damage suggested by this report, it may require
international pressure; the kind of pressure that could be applied by a
renegotiated NAFTA that strengthens environmental laws, something that
president-elect Obama has suggested he would like to see.
Tags: boreal birds, canadian tar sands, Energy, energy policy,
environmental policy, NAFTA, NRDC, oil, politics, tar sands, wildlife
The original article (with photos) may be found at:
http://redgreenandblue.org/2008/12/06/developing-oil-from-canadian-tar-sands-could-kill-160-million-migratory-birds-by-2038/