{"id":4009,"date":"2009-01-07T06:00:29","date_gmt":"2009-01-07T12:00:29","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/wordpress-367309-1145705.cloudwaysapps.com\/?p=4009"},"modified":"2009-01-07T06:00:29","modified_gmt":"2009-01-07T12:00:29","slug":"book-review-andrew-nikiforuks-tar-sands-dirty-oil-and-the-future-of-a-continent","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sustainablog.org\/articles\/book-review-andrew-nikiforuks-tar-sands-dirty-oil-and-the-future-of-a-continent\/","title":{"rendered":"Book Review: Andrew Nikiforuk\u2019s Tar Sands: Dirty Oil and the Future of a Continent"},"content":{"rendered":"
In his recent book Tar Sands: Diry Oil and the Future of a Continent<\/em>, Nikiforuk lands a knockout blow on the kissers of the oil industry, oil-friendly bureaucrats, and petrol-guzzling North Americans. It is obvious that this Canadian is sick and tired of watching his own beloved habitat mutate from a pristine Northern ecosystem to a veritable toxic wasteland.<\/p>\n That said, Nikiforuk is clearly perturbed<\/em> (another \u201cp\u201d word springs to mind\u2026but this is a family-friendly blog). His book combines intensive research with a lively, caustic writing style\u2026sort of enlightened invective. This makes for an astonishingly entertaining read that raises your hackles while raising your awareness about a seriously dangerous issue.<\/p>\n Nikiforuk continuously holds up the oil industry and the all-too-complicit Canadian governments (federal and provincial) for their nonsensical, outright silly approach to the country\u2019s bitumen reserves. The various names given to this resource are themselves telltale signs of the prevailing mindset. Bitumen, which is basically oil-soaked sand, gets called anything but \u201ctar sands\u201d or \u201cdirty oil\u201d by those reaping the benefits and profits from it. No, for them it is oil<\/strong>, plain and simple.<\/p>\n But Nikiforuk is not fooled: \u201cIf that lazy reasoning made sense, Canadians would call every tomato ketchup<\/em> and every tree lumber<\/em>.\u201d1 Luckily, though, some Canucks like Nikiforuk are not lulled by the sound of gurgling oil\u2026as most of it flows right out of Canada and down south to the United States.<\/p>\n Believe it or not, Canada is now a burgeoning player in the global energy market thanks in large part to bitumen. It has become \u201cthe largest single exporter of oil to the United States,\u201d bypassing Saudi Arabia and providing \u201cnearly one-fifth of all U.S. oil imports\u201d (2).<\/p>\n But bitumen is a nasty, truly dirty form of oil–perhaps one of the dirtiest forms of oil or any energy source imaginable. \u201cEach barrel of bitumen,\u201d Nikiforuk states, \u201cproduces three times as much greenhouse gas as one barrel of oil\u201d (3). Getting it out of the ground (think sucking cold maple syrup through a straw) requires immense amounts of water, terribly destructive collection methods, and intensive alterations to the environment (through pollution, infrastructure, etc.). As the author so strikingly puts it, \u201cbitumen is the equivalent of scoring heroin cut with sugar, starg, powdered milk, quinine, and strychnine\u201d (16).<\/p>\n Thus, Nikiforuk argues convincingly, the reckless and desperate turn to bitumen \u201cis a signature of peak oil and a reminder, as every beer drinker knows, that the glass starts full and ends empty\u201d (3). As the world runs out of its precious petrol, desperate measures become required\u2026and just about anything will serve for a quick fix.<\/p>\n Tar Sands<\/em> contains overwhelming evidence in Nikiforuk\u2019s case against pursuing bitumen with such hell-bent abandon. He shows all the ways it has dirtied the environment, worsened peoples\u2019 lives, and actually cost<\/em> Canadians both energy security and money.<\/p>\n Yes, you read me correctly: bitumen has cost taxpayers while providing hefty profits for the industry. And this strange situation arises for two reasons.<\/p>\n Firstly, the governments have been shockingly, indeed criminally lax when it comes to charging fees and collecting royalties for Canadian bitumen. (Otherwise, ever-flighty industry could pack up and move elsewhere!)<\/p>\n Secondly, bitumen is so hard to collect and so dirty at every stage that cleaning up its messes has become expensive. Just dealing with the open-pit mines often created to get it provides a case in point. Nikiforuk explains, \u201cCanadian taxpayers, who made $150 million [Canadian] in royalties from mining activities between 1966 and 2002, have spent more than $4 billion tidying up scores of contaminated sites…\u201d (100).<\/p>\n All this mess and expense for a bottom-of-the-barrel oil source that, even at the maximum estimated production levels (five million barrels per day), \u201cwould barely supply 5 per cent of the world\u2019s oil consumption, a drop in the global bucket\u201d (168).<\/p>\n By the end of Tar Sands<\/em>, Nikiforuk leaves little room for doubt about how problematic bitumen is as an alternative to Middle East oil. He ends with a 12-step plan to \u201cenergy sanity\u201d (think of similarly stepped plans to overcome any number of addictions!), which basically seeks to reverse all of the problems he addressed in the book.<\/p>\n None of these countermeasures is surprising or innovative, nor are any of the other methods he mentions for overcoming our oil addiction–changing lifestyles, reducing consumption, policing industry and government more closely, etc.<\/p>\n But Tar Sands<\/em> does enough without offering grand, visionary solutions for the problem. Those are fairly obvious, relatively speaking, by this point. The problem so far, though, has been a sort of self-induced haze of blindness for all players in the bitumen game.<\/p>\n