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The Peace River war: A B.C. hydroproject may be the next environmental battleground


Author(s): Kubish, G.

Year: 1990

Abstract:
The British Columbia Hydro and Power Authority are planning to dam the Peace River just downstream of Fort St. John, 31 miles west of the B.C.-Alberta border. The $3.5?illion dam, known as the Site C project, is now in its planning stages. B.C. Hydro justifies the dam by arguing that demand for electricity is growing at 4.6% per year, up substantially from the forecast level of 2.8%. Environmentalists warn the dam could mean lower downstream water flow, which could pose a threat to the water and wildlife of the Peace's Alberta basin. The dam will flood 4,600 hectares of land and water flow will stop for a short time as a 56 mile-long reservoir forms behind the dam. B.C. Hydro claims that there will be negligible downstream impacts. The northern Alberta native community of Métis wants public hearings into the effects of the Site C Dam. If the dam prejudices the capacity of the river to carry life, then federal involvement may be warranted. 2 figs.

The resistance 2014, a watershed year


Author(s): Anonymous

Year: 2015

Abstract:
The article discusses several movements against tar sands project in Canada during 2014-2015. In January 2015, Canadian singers Neil Young and Diana Krall held a tour across Canada to draw attention towards the social and environmental impact of tar sands development, and to raise money for the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation's legal defence fund. In April 2014, residents of the town of Kitimat, British Columbia, voted against energy company Enbridge Inc.'s Northern Gateway pipeline proposal.

Citation:

The role of sulphur in the carbon balance of boreal peatlands


Author(s): Vile, M. A.

Year: 2001

Abstract:
With the exception of photosynthesis, carbon dioxide (CO2 ) emissions from soils exceed all other terrestrial-atmospheric carbon fluxes. Due to the magnitude of this soil-to-atmosphere CO2 flux, and the great mineralization capabilities associated with this large soil carbon pool, any increases in soil carbon fluxes have the potential to provide a large positive feedback to global warming. This dissertation examines the role of atmospheric sulfur deposition on anaerobic carbon fluxes from peatland soils, which contain one-third of the world's soil carbon pool. The first objective of this dissertation was to determine the contribution of sulfate reduction to anaerobic carbon mineralization in peatlands across a regional atmospheric sulfur deposition gradient. The second objective was to determine the fate of currently retained sulfur in peatlands under changing atmospheric sulfur depositional regimes, using stable sulfur isotopes as a tool. We determined the relationship between rates of sulfate reduction, and CO2 and CH4 production in peatlands spanning a wide atmospheric sulfur gradient in central Alberta, Canada and Cervené Blato and Oceán bog, The Czech Republic. Results from this study suggest that although peatlands are important global sources of CH4 , methanogenesis is responsible for a small proportion of anaerobic carbon cycling in these ecosystems. We further tested the hypothesis that in peatlands receiving low sulfate inputs, methane production will predominate during anaerobic carbon mineralization. We hypothesized that with sulfate amendments, anaerobic carbon mineralization at Bleak Lake Bog would be governed by sulfate reduction. In opposition to our hypotheses, sulfate amendments did not increase rates of sulfate reduction, increase CO 2 production, or decrease CH4 production. We conducted a peat transplant experiment to evaluate the impact of atmospheric sulfur deposition on sulfur cycling processes in soil under alternate scenarios of increasing and decreasing atmospheric sulfur deposition. We found that a substantial fraction of the sulfur that enters a peatland via atmospheric deposition is retained in the peat, and this fraction increases with a concomitant increase in rates of atmospheric sulfur deposition. Implications for total sulfur pools, extrapolated to the long term, may be a gain of total sulfur under a scenario of both increasing and decreasing rates of sulfate reduction.

The status of biodiversity in the oil sands region of Alberta


Year: 2014

Abstract:
The Oil Sands Region (OSR) of Alberta consists of three provincially recognized oil sands administrative units called oil sands areas—the Athabasca, Peace River, and Cold Lake Oil Sands Areas. In this busy landscape where agriculture, forestry, along with energy extraction, are important land-use activities, managing the cumulative effects of these activities is challenge. In this report we describe the status of species, habitat, and human footprint in the OSR, circa 2014.

The vertical wind profile at Mildred Lake, Alberta


Year: 1977

Abstract:
A study of the winds of the Alberta Tar Sands region was performed by the MEP Company from 1974 to 1976. The objectives of this study were to establish the wind climatology of the region in order to predict the dispersion of emissions from the Syncrude plant. Detailed studies of the vertical, horizontal and diurnal variation of the wind velocity were performed. The raw data consisted of pibal and minisonde soundings taken at least twice daily during the period of the field experiment. In addition, three periods of intensive studies, one during the winter and two during the summer, were performed. The field results were transformed into vertical profiles of the temperature, potential temperature, and wind velocity. Two models of the vertical profile of the wind, a power law model and a geostrophic model, were evaluated. The power law model was generally the better model in that it produced smaller RMS errors more often than the geostrophic model. The geostrophic model was more successful during winter limited mixing. Several levels were tested as a reference height for the power law. The best height was found to be 183 metres. The exponent of the power law varied considerably with the stability, while the actual reference height used made relatively little difference, considering the entire data set. The diurnal variation of the wind was found to have typical characteristics. Surface winds had maximum values at the time of maximum heating and minimum values during mid-morning.

Toxicity of saline groundwater from Syncrude's lease 17 to fish and benthic macroinvertebrates


Author(s): McMahon, B.

Year: 1977

Abstract:
The mining of the tar sands which are included in the area to be developed by Syncrude Canada Ltd. will require the dewatering of the mine pits. This will involve the pumping of large volumes of saline groundwater. Present plans call for its eventual disposal through Ruth Lake, the Poplar River and, finally, the Athabasca River. This study was designed to determine whether groundwater from the mine area is toxic to aquatic organisms and, if so, the concentrations at which this toxicity is expressed. A variety of species, including both fish and aquatic insects, was tested to determine the range of sensitivity among aquatic animals. The resultant data can, with some qualifications, be used to estimate the maximum safe concentrations of groundwater which can be added to natural waters with minimal risk of toxic effects.

Traditional fisheries of the Fort McKay First Nation


Author(s): Stanislawski, S.

Year: 1998

Abstract:
This study documents traditional fisheries and their uses within the aboriginal community of Fort McKay, located about 50 km north of Fort McMurray in north-eastern Alberta. Fourteen current and past fishermen in the community of Fort MacKay were interviewed between March 22, 1997 to March 22, 1998 for this study. The purpose of this study was to identify and describe the distribution of traditional fishing locations of the Fort McKay First Nation; to determine the relative importance and use of these fisheries; to determine all uses for the fisheries resource in the community; and to initiate a way of monitoring the Namur/Gardiner lakes system in particular, since this system is still relatively undisturbed and relied upon to provide quality fish to the Fort McKay community.Eighty-eight sites in forty-one different locations were identified as traditional fishing grounds for the Fort McKay First Nation, which concentrate on the Athabasca River corridor, Namur/Gardiner Lakes system and the Firebag River drainage. The author describes how fishing camps were set up along these traditional locations to smoke and dry fish for human consumption, provide stores of dog food and bait for trapping fur bearers. This study goes on to document some particulars regarding traditional fishing such as the various species caught, number of lines set, fishing methods, type of bait, and the angling gear used.

Traditional knowledge of surface water - groundwater interactions in the Lower Athabasca Region


Author(s): Strand, J., & Light J.

Year: 2013

Abstract:
This report describes the study undertaken by SNC-Lavalin Environment (SLE) c to identify locations where there are potential interactions between surface water and groundwater. The study was done in the late summer and fall of 2012 and included interviews with 62 participants from First Nations and Metis groups located throughout the LAR. The interviews were conducted by two researchers from SLE with the assistance of community based researchers employed by CEMA. Interviews were conducted in Fort Chipewyan, Fort McKay, Fort McMurray (at the CEMA offices and at the Nistawoyou Friendship Centre, at Anzac, and at Lac La Biche.

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