Tarsands Videos
What's wrong with BP?
from recent posts tagged corporate - blip.tv (beta) on November 05, 2009
Duration: 71
Duration: 71
Come to their student recruitment fair and find out! Thames Valley Climate Action kindly helped to inform the public at this BP event in Oxford. http://visionon.tv http://tvca.ox4.org
also in: Alberta Britishpetroleum Colombia Corporate Corporatewatch Environment Gas Grassroots Iraq Marinawatsonpelaez Oil Students Tarsands Thamesvalleyclimateaction The Mainstream Media Tvca Visionontv
Shell recruitment fair protest
from recent posts tagged corporate - blip.tv (beta) on November 05, 2009
Duration: 98
Duration: 98
After successfully disrupting the BP recruitment fair in Oxford, Thames Valley Climate Action return to do the same to environmental criminals Shell. http://visionon.tv http://tvca.ox4.org
also in: Grassroots Climatechange Oil Visionontv Tvca Thamesvalleyclimateaction Corporatewatch Corporate Shell Shelluk Environment Ogoni Nigeria Tarsands The Mainstream Media
Report Back From Powershift - Flash Mobs in the Commons and Corpses at the RBC
from rabble.ca - News for the rest of us on November 02, 2009
Duration: 3954
Duration: 3954
WLU student organizer Emily Slofstra gives first hand accounts of the Powershift conference in Ottawa and the (un)associated direct actions including the Flash Mob Dance which "filled the hill," a morning wake-up call at 24 Sussex, a die-in to highlight tar sands financing by the Royal Bank of Canada, disruptions of question period, and meetings with MPs focusing on environmental issues. We also discuss the 350.org campaign. This is an edit of AW@L's weekly 2 hour radio show on CKMS 100.3 SoundFM in Waterloo. More AW@L at peaceculture.org
also in: Alex Hundert Aw@l Climate Change COP 15 Dan Kellar Emily Slofstra Powershift Tar Sands
H2Oil Viff Panel
from - blip.tv (beta) on October 15, 2009
Duration: 3860
Duration: 3860
H2Oil, a challenge to the unregulated development of Alberta?s oil sands, will have its West Coast premiere on Sunday, October 11th and Monday October 12thth as part of the Vancouver International Film Festival?s The Way of Nature section. The environmental battle over the oil sands is going global. The news of H2Oil?s Vancouver premiere comes on the heels of major mounting international opposition from Norway to Washington. Just this month, a delegation from Fort Chipewyan stirred up headlines at the Climate Camp in London as they targeted the "corporate climate criminals", such as British Petroleum, and the banks that back the oil sands. All this in the wake of China's $1.9-billion investment into Alberta means that bitumen ? its lucrative and its destructive sides ? seems to be on everyone's minds. THE FILM: Thanks to Alberta?s Athabasca oil sands, Canada is now the biggest oil supplier to the United States. A controversial billion-dollar industry is heavily invested in extracting crude from the tar sands through a process so toxic it has become an international cause for concern. Four barrels of glacier-fed spring water are used to process each barrel of oil. The water is then dumped, laden with carcinogens, into leaky tailings ponds so huge they can be seen from space. Downstream, the people of Fort Chipewyan are already paying the price for what will be one of the largest industrial projects in history. When a local doctor raises the alarm about clusters of rare cancers, evidence mounts for industry and government cover-ups. In a time when wars are fought over oil and a crisis looms over access to clean fresh water, which resource is more precious? And what price are we willing to pay? THE PANEL: The film will be followed by a panel discussion where the audience will hear from people directly involved in community level resistance to tar sands projects as well as learn what the public can do to support these communities and hold governments and the industry responsible. We are honored to have two speakers from downstream communities (Athabasca Chipewyan and Mikisew Cree First Nations) as well as from Wet?suwet?en territories in northern BC along a tar sands pipeline route. Local organizers will also be highlighting the links between the Olympics and tar sands industries. Shannon Walsh the director of documentary H2Oil. George Poitras - B.Admin., Consultation Coordinator Government & Industry Relations, Mikisew Cree First Nation. Eriel Tchekwie Deranger - Rainforest Action Network Tar Sands Campaigner, Member of Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation Speakers from Wet'suwet'en territories in northern BC will be speaking about grassroots opposition to the proposed Enbridge pipeline from tar sands to the pacific coast. Local organizers to talk about the links between the 2010 Winter Olympic Games and the tar sands industry. The event is organized, supported and endorsed by the Council of Canadians, Indigenous Environmental Network, Loaded Pictures, No One Is Illegal - Vancouver, OilSandsTruth.org, Rainforest Action Network, Western Canada Wilderness Committee, W2 Community Media Arts.
also in: Tar sands H2oil Oil The Environment



