BREAKING – activists drop 70′ banner off of NIAGARA FALLS to tell Canadian PM: NO TAR SANDS oil!

Rainforest Action Network drops Seventy-Foot Banner Over Niagara Falls to Welcome Prime Minister Harper to the U.S.
Canadian Tar Sands Oil Undermines North America’s Clean Energy Future
See more photos here.
update: video below, and climber interview here.

Before dawn this morning, a small team of climate and Native Rights activists rappelled from the US observation deck at Niagara Falls. Dangling hundreds of feet above the ground, they sent a special welcome message to Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper ahead of his first official visit to the White House to push dirty Tar Sands oil.

Not that he’s feeling so welcome anyway. Obama limited the meeting to just one hour. While some have called it a slap in the face, Aides say Harper will turn the other cheek. “The economy, and the clean-energy dialogue,” one aide told the Globe and Mail, “will dominate the discussions.” Obama needed to dodge controversy over oil imports from Canada’s tar sands in the midst of the Climate Legislation debate. Harper needed a story to go with his photo-op.

During Harper’s first official trip to meet Obama in the U.S., the two leaders are expected to discuss climate change and energy policy ahead of the upcoming G20 Summit. Canada supplies 19% of U.S. oil imports, more than half of which now comes from the tar sands, making the region the largest single source of U.S. oil imports. The expansion of the tar sands will strip mine an area the size of Florida. Complete with skyrocketing rates of cancer (by 400%!) for First Nations communities living downstream, broken treaties, toxic belching lakes so large you can see them from outer space, churning up ancient boreal forest, destroyed air and water quality, the tar sands have been called the most destructive project on Earth.

Tomorrow’s visit to the U.S. by Prime Minister Harper is the latest attempt by Canadian Federal and Provincial officials to lock in subsidies for 22 new and expanded refinery projects and oil pipelines crisscrossing 28 states, which would transport and process the dirty tar sands oil. Many are concerned that Prime Minister Harper wants to protect the tar sands oil industry from climate regulation, even though it is one of the fastest growing sources of greenhouse gas emissions in Canada.

“Climate change, one of the biggest security threats of our time, is something Canada and the United States face together. Extracting tar sands oil, which sends three times more climate-changing greenhouse gases into the atmosphere than conventional oil, puts us all at risk,” said Eriel Deranger a member of the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation and Rainforest Action Network’s Tar Sands Campaigner in Alberta.

As this oil spills into the U.S., communities living near oil refineries face increased air and water pollution, which contains 11 times more sulfur and nickel and five times more lead than conventional oil.

Opposition to tar sands oil has been rising on both sides of the border. Just last month, four Native American and environmental groups sued Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Deputy Secretary James Steinberg and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers over Enbridge Energy’s Alberta Clipper pipeline. If built, the 1,375 mile pipeline would pump 800,000 barrels of tar sands oil per day from Northern Alberta to Midwestern refineries. On the Canadian, Native activists escalated pressure on the Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) for their funding of the tar sands a few weeks ago.

Canada has no regulations to reduce greenhouse gas pollution, and the federal government’s climate change plan would allow total pollution from the tar sands to increase almost 70 percent by 2020. Tar sands oil production is the fastest growing source of greenhouse gas emissions in Canada and was recently cited as one of the most important reasons Canada will miss its Kyoto targets by over 30%.

Carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) used to be the centerpiece of Harper’s pitch. Global warming pollution from coal and tar sands “can be solved by technology,” declared Obama. Not to be outdone, Harper’s office announced that “A strengthened U.S.-Canada partnership on carbon sequestration will help accelerate private sector investment in commercial scale, near-zero-carbon coal facilities to promote climate and energy security.”

Screen shot 2009-09-15 at 5.30.07 AM

Half a year and billions of wasted tax dollars later, though, CCS is still a pipe dream. FutureGen, North America’s supposed proving ground for the unproven technology, can’t keep private investors to save it’s life. Two of its biggest private backers, Southern Co. and AEP, jumped ship last June. Around the same time, sponsors lowered the goal-post on the project to just 60% less carbon. So much for near-zero-carbon facility. Projects promised in the tar sands are fairing even worse.

No matter. Harper is back, hat in hand, looking for legislative handouts to an industry destined to ruin the climate.

So here’s our welcome to you, Prime Minister Harper. Now, please, go home.

And take your dirty tar sands with you.

19 Responses to “BREAKING – activists drop 70′ banner off of NIAGARA FALLS to tell Canadian PM: NO TAR SANDS oil!”


  1. 1 Morgan Sep 15th, 2009 at 10:06 am

    bad-ass. I hope Canada gets the message – Harper looks pretty stupid blindly pursuing more tarsands. They should vote him out of office.

  2. 2 maryam Sep 15th, 2009 at 11:10 am

    well done! maybe the tar sands arrow could even point down as in ‘keep that dirty stuff in the ground!!!’

  3. 3 CG Sep 15th, 2009 at 11:14 am

    Nice stunt, great message – Good luck Canada (and the rest of The World)!

  4. 4 FT Sep 15th, 2009 at 11:29 am

    Yes they should vote him out of office, but sadly it seems the small majority of conservative-voting Canadians are as stupid as their republican counterparts in the U.S.

  5. 5 dan fortier Sep 15th, 2009 at 11:57 am

    you have the solutions please apply with honor and dignity

  6. 6 jim Sep 15th, 2009 at 1:01 pm

    You folks certainly love hanging these banners.

    Not to besmirch high-wire acrobatics – which I’d argue are objectively awesome (for supporting evidence see Wayne, Bruce & Parker, Peter) – but do hanging these things accomplish anything but producing a sort of cool photo. Wouldn’t photoshop be cheaper and the time / money / blog ink be better spent supporting candidates or persuading voters to actually vote for clean energy?

    Just a thought. Batman rules.

  7. 7 Dianne Sep 15th, 2009 at 1:17 pm

    This is tragic – and so sad! You know, we are all ready and waiting…if you’ve got the jobs, we’re willing and raring to go!

    We just need LEADERS to point the way to something cleaner!

  8. 8 jessie Sep 15th, 2009 at 1:34 pm

    i just said this to josh on gchat, but: y’all rock the direct action SO incredibly!! way to go.

  9. 9 dan kellar Sep 15th, 2009 at 3:48 pm

    sorry, its fueling the canadian economy and helping to soften the economic explosions felt in the rest of the world (largely caused by a broken economic system in the usa) …and if i have learned anything from stevie happless its that the economy is all that matters. the future is screwed anyways, canadians are getting the most out of life now! eat it! just kidding…huck farper, and tuck the far sands.

    nice shot on the banner by the way!!

  10. 10 GonadTheMad Sep 16th, 2009 at 12:12 am

    Sorry folks, we’re not willing to turn Alberta into a mass ghetto of the likes of Detroit, or other cities in the U.S.A. The tarsands aren’t going anywhere. Perhaps you can take a look at this and understand the situation a bit better. It may not be perfect, but over time as technology develops pollution and environmental impacts will be better controlled. BTW, have you folks made any decisions on the whole “Universal Healthcare” debate? ;)

    environment.gov.ab.ca/info/library/8042.pdf

  11. 11 Memory Mcleod Sep 17th, 2009 at 12:32 am

    I am so proud of everyone who is taking action for the rest of the country and the world, your leadership is a radical example of how just caring and putting yourself out there can make big differences keep it up!

  12. 12 aftertherevolutuon Oct 20th, 2009 at 2:15 pm

    what a great banner .. what was it made of ?

    netting? clear plastic?

  1. 1 Niagara Falls, not just for honeymooners « (hasta la) Victoria Trackback on Sep 15th, 2009 at 7:47 pm
  2. 2 hughstimson.org » Blog Archive » Tar Sands Day Trackback on Sep 16th, 2009 at 2:36 pm
  3. 3 Have You Taken the Climate Pledge of Resistance? « It’s Getting Hot In Here Trackback on Sep 17th, 2009 at 2:21 pm
  4. 4 The Understory » Have You Taken the Climate Pledge of Resistance? Trackback on Sep 17th, 2009 at 3:02 pm
  5. 5 Have You Taken the Climate Pledge of Resistance? | Mobilization for Climate Justice Trackback on Sep 17th, 2009 at 6:25 pm
  6. 6 Activists send message to Canada via a 70-foot banner about tar sands (VIDEO) | Current_Green Trackback on Sep 18th, 2009 at 5:58 pm
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About Joshua Kahn Russell


Joshua Kahn Russell is an organizer serving movements for social justice and ecological balance. He is an action coordinator, facilitator, & trainer with the Ruckus Society, and has trained thousands of activists. He has helped win campaigns against banks, oil companies, logging corporations, and coal barons; worked with a wide variety of groups in a breadth of arenas, from local resiliency projects, to national coalitions, to the United Nations Climate Negotiations. He has authored chapters for numerous books, most recently The Next Eco-Warriors. His articles have appeared in Yes! magazine, Left Turn, PeaceWork magazine, Upping the Anti, and Z Magazine. His blog is www.praxismakesperfect.org and you can follow him on Twitter at @joshkahnrussell For a full bio see: http://www.aidandabet.org/roster/russell-joshua-kahn

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