11 charged in Greenpeace oilsands protest
Last Updated: Thursday, July 24, 2008 | 2:08 PM MT
CBC News
Related
Fort McMurray RCMP arrested 11 Greenpeace activists for trespassing at the Syncrude Canada Ltd. Aurora oilsands site at around 12:30 p.m. MT Thursday.
The RCMP were called after Syncrude employees found the activists at the tailings pond, Const. Ali Fayad said.
The Greenpeace activists were trying to block a pipeline dumping tailings waste into one of Syncrude’s giant tailings ponds.
Organization spokeswoman Jessica Wilson said the activists were detained, handed trespassing tickets carrying a $287 fine and released.
"The action was successful in bringing our message directly to the perpetrators of these environmental crimes," Wilson said.
The environmental group said the action is aimed at stopping the pond, located at the Aurora North Site mine, from growing any larger. It is now about six square km, with 1.8 billion litres of toxic waste added daily, according to Wilson.
Greenpeace activists said they entered the site around 11 a.m. Thursday, and easily got past Syncrude security and made it to the lake of waste water. Wilson said the activists were on site for over an hour before they were noticed.
Dave Martin, who also speaks for the organization, talked to CBC News from the side of the tailings pond.
"It's the pond where 500 ducks were killed in April, and we have another team putting up a banner on another major outflow pipe of tailings. We've got about a 60-foot large-scale banner we are putting up on the sides of the berm,” Martin said.
The banner is a giant skull and crossbones, he said, with 'World's Dirtiest Oil: Stop the Tar Sands' on it.
"We're hoping this really sends a message, not only to Syncrude, but to the Stelmach government and the Harper government, to say enough is enough and this has to stop and we have to start caring about our water, climate and about the health of the people that live around here," Martin said.
A Syncrude spokesperson said the Greenpeace action hasn't affected production.
On April 28, about 500 ducks landed on a tailings pond filled with waste from Syncrude's oilsands operation, north of Fort McMurray. Only a handful of birds survived the dip in the toxic water. Most of the ducks were too heavily coated with oil and waste to survive.
Following an investigation, Alberta is still considering whether to charge Syncrude under the province's environmental laws.
Share Tools
Latest Edmonton News Headlines
- Museum founder Stan Reynolds dies at 88
- Stanley George Reynolds, the founder of the Reynolds-Alberta Museum in Wetaskiwin and a life-long resident of the central Alberta city, died on Thursday at the age of 88. more »
- Mother in court to see man charged in daughter's death
- A Stettler mother was in court Monday to see the teen charged in the crash that killed her 17-year-old daughter early Saturday morning. more »
- Judge admits confession as evidence in LRT shooting
- A judge ruled Monday that the videotaped confession of an accused killer in the fatal shooting at the Stadium LRT station in 2010 is admissable as evidence. more »
- Committee finds high-voltage lines needed in Alberta
- A government-appointed panel of experts has found that Alberta needs to build two controversial high-voltage transmission lines between Edmonton and Calgary as soon as possible. more »
Top News Headlines
- HMCS Corner Brook collision damage extensive
- The damage done to HMCS Corner Brook when it hit the ocean floor off B.C.'s coast last summer was more extensive than first reported, CBC News has learned by obtaining exclusive pictures of the submarine. more »
- Mandatory gun sentence struck down by Ontario judge
- An Ontario Superior Court judge has struck down a mandatory minimum sentence for a first offence of possessing a loaded firearm. more »
- UN raises fears of civil war in Syria
- Syrian government forces renewed their assault on the rebellious city of Homs on Tuesday, activists said, as the UN human rights chief raised fears of civil war. more »
- U.S. gets 1st hard look at future China leader
- Washington gets its first hard look Tuesday at Xi Jinping, the man destined to lead China in the coming decade, during which the global powers probably will see their economic ties grow. more »
- Pedestrian struck and killed by train in Leduc
- Mother in court to see man charged in daughter's death
- Museum founder Stan Reynolds dies at 88
- Committee finds high-voltage lines needed in Alberta
- Alberta pharmacists to renew prescriptions
- Judge admits confession as evidence in LRT shooting
- RCMP shooting of teen in Fort McMurray investigated
- Albertans feel politics has shifted, poll finds
- Two passengers still in hospital after Alberta bus crash

