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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(108,182 posts)
Fri Jan 17, 2020, 02:53 PM Jan 2020

A big oil pipeline heads our way: Canada's high court rebuffs B.C.

The Supreme Court of Canada has rebuffed a bid by British Columbia to block construction of an 890,000-barrel-a-day oil pipeline that will send as many as 400 oil tankers a year through the Salish Sea and Strait of Juan de Fuca, waters shared by the United States and Canada.

The high court quickly rejected the province's claim of authority to require that "heavy" oil, such as bitumen crude from the Alberta tar sands, and other "hazardous substances," get provincial approval before passing through the province by pipeline. B.C. Premier John Horgan, in his 2017 campaign, promised to use "every tool in our tool box" to block expansion of the Trans-Mountain Pipeline.

"Clearly we are disappointed by the decision, but this does not reduce our concerns regarding the potential of a catastrophic oil spill on our coast," Horgan said in a statement.

The expanded pipeline will travel more than 600 miles, from Edmonton, Alberta, south to an oilport located in Burnaby, just east of Vancouver. It would then be loaded on tankers for export to Asia.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/a-big-oil-pipeline-heads-our-way-canada-s-high-court-rebuffs-b-c/ar-BBZ2suB?ocid=hplocalnews

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A big oil pipeline heads our way: Canada's high court rebuffs B.C. (Original Post) Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Jan 2020 OP
If it can't be stopped Ferryboat Jan 2020 #1

Ferryboat

(923 posts)
1. If it can't be stopped
Fri Jan 17, 2020, 03:53 PM
Jan 2020

Make the oil companies fund and stage equipment to deal with a spill. Far beyond what is currently in place. Tug escorts, response teams on both sides of the border.

Bitumen sinks. Not sure how it reacts in salt water. Rapid response only works if you can call out everyone from merchant Mariners, enviros, veterinarians suspension of environmental laws.

Other wise its game over for the southern resident orcas.

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