Lethbridge locals protest fracking
Protesters band together in southern Alberta to ask for a province-wide ban on the drilling practice.
CBC News
Posted: Sep 27, 2011 11:11 AM MT
Last Updated: Sep 27, 2011 1:11 PM MT
Related
External Links
- YouTube: Blood Tribe members arrested at fracking blockade
- Facebook: Photos from the Kainai fracking protest Sept. 9, 2011
- YouTube: Cathy Brewer and Elle-Maija Tailfeathers explain the blockade
(Note:CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)
A group of more than 150 citizens came together in Lethbridge Monday evening to protest fracking in southern Alberta.
One of the rally’s organizers said people are concerned that fracking is going to contaminate their drinking water and affect their health.
“People really care about their drinking water,” said Sheila Rogers, chair of the Council of Canadians' Lethbridge chapter. “People are really, really upset that this is going on without their consultation and without the oil and gas companies being held responsible for proving that it’s safe.”
The controversial drilling process consists of injecting water and a mixture of mud and chemicals under high pressure into a well.
The pressure fractures the shale and props open fissures that enable natural gas or oil to flow more freely out of the well, letting energy companies reach resources that were previously deemed too expensive to access by conventional drilling.
“Even though our federal government has called for a review on the scientific knowledge about fracking, which shows that they don’t know a lot about it, they’re still allowing it to go ahead,” said Rogers.
A petition was circulated among the protesters calling for a province-wide ban on fracking until the effects on environment and health are fully understood.
“We have to say no once and for all,” Lois Frank told the crowd.
She was one of three Kai-nai women arrested and put in jail for blockading a fracking well near her home earlier this month near Stand Off, Alta., roughly 200 kilometres south of Calgary.
Protest organizers say they will continue the fight and have planned for a bigger event at the Alberta legislature in the coming weeks.
Environmental concerns
Another speaker at the protest was James Byrne, a professor and researcher at the University of Lethbridge in the geography department.
His research areas include atmospheric science, environmental science, surface and groundwater issues and climate change.
“Fracking is bad for our water, it’s bad for our atmosphere and we really need to stop it,” he said.
“We don’t need the energy; we don’t need to supply all of North America with energy.”
Byrne said up to half of the fracking chemicals injected into the wells are not recovered, and there are hundreds of thousands of wells planned all over North America.
“We are putting thousands and thousands of gallons per well of toxic chemicals into the earth ... and they are going to be there for a long time,” he said. “Even though they line these wells with concrete, about one well in a 100, maybe one in 150, has major leakage problems so we get those chemicals leaking back in to our environment.”
Share Tools
Latest Calgary News Headlines
- European Union to vote on oilsands ranking
- European Union officials are set to vote on draft legislation that would classify oilsands crude as more harmful to the environment than other fuels — a proposal that Canada plans to fight. more »
- Graham James apologizes to sex-abuse victims
- Graham James, the former junior hockey coach and convicted sexual abuser whose victims included ex-NHLers Theoren Fleury and Sheldon Kennedy, has told a courtroom: "For my behaviour, I am deeply sorry.… Parents expected sons to be safe; not all were." more »
- Missing man might be crime victim, police say
- Calgary police say a 24-year-old man who has been missing for more than two weeks could be the victim of foul play. more »
- Calgary's green cart project to launch next month
- Starting on March 5, roughly 7,500 homes in the four communities of Abbeydale, Brentwood, Cougar Ridge and Southwood will be able to use green carts for organic household and yard waste. more »
Top News Headlines
- Graham James apologizes to sex-abuse victims
- Graham James, the former junior hockey coach and convicted sexual abuser whose victims included ex-NHLers Theoren Fleury and Sheldon Kennedy, has told a courtroom: "For my behaviour, I am deeply sorry.… Parents expected sons to be safe; not all were."
more »
- Target set to alter Canadian retail landscape
- The buzz surrounding Target Corporation's move into Canada could quickly turn into a backlash if the U.S. retailing giant can't deliver quality goods at prices similar to what it charges south of the border, experts say. more »
- U.S. base in Afghanistan attacked over Qur'an burning
- Afghan police are firing shots into the air to disperse hundreds of protesters who are trying to break into an American military base to vent their anger over the Qur'an burning incident. more »
- European Union to vote on oilsands ranking
- European Union officials are set to vote on draft legislation that would classify oilsands crude as more harmful to the environment than other fuels — a proposal that Canada plans to fight. more »
- Brian Stewart: A national security strategy for dangerous times
- With the world in so much turmoil, Ottawa needs to become more creative in assessing what really counts for Canada's security and economic well-being, writes Brian Stewart. more »
- Garbage blamed as 145 bears shot in Alberta's north
- Missing man might be crime victim, police say
- Meteor's fireball lights up Prairie skies
- Changes coming for Calgary LRT parking
- Alberta doctors bullied by bosses, panel finds
- Calgary's green cart project to launch next month
- Mexican beating victim released from Calgary hospital
- Border services seize 75 guns in Alberta
- Calgary musician Chris Reimer dies in sleep

