Green Party candidate David
Orton:
We need to
fundamentally change Canada's energy policy!
Press Release
January 5, 2006, Saltsprings,
Pictou County
David Orton, Green Party candidate for Central Nova
says, "We need
to rapidly
wean ourselves off fossil fuels, because the oil that
underpins industrial society is now in decline
worldwide, and
present
use of fossil fuels are causing climate change and
global warming."
Orton expressed concern about Canada's oil and gas
energy policy,
as
it seems
to be only an extension of the American energy policy.
Orton
said: "This is just shameful and totally
against our national
interests. Two-thirds of the oil and gas production
goes south of
the
border. Moreover, because of NAFTA, our country is
REQUIRED to
supply
the U.S., even if we have a critical shortage in our
country. Some
Canadian sovereignty!"
Orton said: "The
world-wide decline of oil production has enormous
implications for our industrial society, for how
food is produced
and
transported around the world, and for manufacturing.
Population
increase has been one of the consequences of the
fossil fuel age.
The
globalized economy is going to drastically shrink,
as cheap oil
becomes increasingly expensive and fought over by
the rising
industrial giants like China and India competing
with the United
States for whatever oil and natural gas supplies
remain in the
world."
Orton advocates
"We should treat our own remaining oil and gas with
reverence, to be used extremely circumspectly, as we
seek a new
local
economy within Nature's balance."
Orton expressed concern about climate change: "We must heed the
warnings - climate change is happening. This can be
seen in the
increasing and unusual weather disturbances, such as
hurricanes
which
feed off warmer ocean temperatures, melting of
arctic sea ice,
permafrost and glaciers, etc. The UN
Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change says that greenhouse gas emissions
must be cut 50-70
percent if the atmosphere of the planet is to remain
hospitable."
"Our fossil fuel extraction for export to
the U.S. is wrong. It
goes
to a country which uses up to twenty five percent of
the world's
daily oil production for about five percent of the
world's
population, and produces about twenty-five percent
of the world's
greenhouse gases. Isn't this economic and ecological
madness on
Canada's part?" said
Green Party candidate David Orton.
"Here in the Maritimes, we
also have to be concerned about liquid
natural gas (LNG) terminals and
tankers", said Orton. "In
Canada,
natural gas production has had its own 'peak' and is
probably
declining. Now we see a promotion of LNG terminals
in our region,
after having vastly overstated the extent of the
Sable Gas
Project."
"Yet, we are
opening up our region to potentially highly dangerous
LNG tankers (think 1917 Halifax explosion!).
Maritimers have little
knowledge of the dangers involved with shipping of
liquified
natural
gas, which will be coming our way from countries
such as Russia,
Algeria, Quatar, and Trinidad. For LNG tanker
transport, natural
gas
is cooled and greatly reduced in volume, making it
liquid. At the
LNG
terminal, the liquid is warmed and becomes a gas
again as it enter
the pipeline system. With this additional gas, there
will be more
compressor stations and 'pipeline looping'. Thus the
pipeline
expansion will further disrupt the ecology and the
lives of Nova
Scotians and New Brunswickers on the pipeline route."
Orton pointed out that the LNG terminals are
proposed for
Bear Head
on Cape
Breton Island, Goldboro in Guysborough County, and Canaport
in New
Brunswick. There is also a proposal for building a huge
petrochemical complex in Goldboro using imported natural gas.
According to documents obtained from US anti-LNG
activists, LNG
tankers
entering Boston Harbour are said to be almost 1000 feet
long
and
holding up to 33 million gallons of product. There are 500 and
1000 yard
security perimeters around the ship carrying the
liquified
gas with
the guard boats authorized to shoot, helicopter overhead
and
adjacent
roads and wharfs shut down during docking time. The
policing
costs are
enormous. If the hull is breached, and the gas ignites,
it
would
burn at a very high temperature causing the hull of the ship
to
melt.
There is extensive electronic surveillance around the LNG
terminals. Orton concluded by stressing that "All this is coming
our
way, if we don't organize to stop it!"
-30-
Authorized by the Official Agent for David
Orton
Contacts:
Mark A. Brennan
Campaign
Manager for The Green Party Candidate for Central Nova, David Orton
GREEN PARTY OF
CANADA www.greenparty.ca
Phone Central
Nova Campaign Manager (902) 396 4397
Green Party
Candidate, David Orton (925) 925 2514
Email David
Orton: dorton@greenparty.ca
"Make Peace With Nature, Vote Green"
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Last updated: January 29, 2006