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Show your LOVE for BC’s coast. Keep it oil-free.


Notes from the Field - A conservation update from the Great Bear Rainforest


On Valentines Day, show your LOVE for BC’s coast.  

Keep it oil-free.

Proposals to transit tar sands crude through the BC coast raise serious concerns at local, regional and global scales. Whether from Enbridge’s Northern Gateway project or Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion, both propose to transform our coastal waters into an energy corridor for the shipment of the world’s dirtiest and costliest oil.

Locally, oil tankers threaten regions that host rare, endangered, vulnerable, and ecologically valuable species and ecosystems. Globally, these routes provide outlets for the export of tar sands oil, exacerbating their staggering impact in Alberta and accelerating Canada’s contribution to atmospheric carbon.

Raincoast is addressing this issue through several fronts.  We have made lengthy submissions to the National Energy Board as formal interveners in the Northern Gateway federal review, we are producing a film with Patagonia that explores the threats to the Great Bear Rainforest from the potential imposition of oil tankers, we have two books in the pipeline, and a series of reports and scientific papers being published on ecological and economic values at risk and we continue to speak out publicly about these issues.

Recently, Raincoast reviewed Enbridge’s Environmental Impact Assessment. In a nutshell, the EIA is a critically flawed document that contains faulty models, cursory assessments, ommisions, oversights, superficial analysis and misrepresentations of studies and facts, all of which undermine its credibility as a basis for decision-making.

Loaded dice and slick assessments: 

Join Raincoast and Captain Brian Falconer for a discussion of this Environmental Impact Assessment.  Hear a professional mariner with over 30 years experience on the BC coast review the Northern Gateway tanker proposal.

Feb 29 and March 1 See the sidebar for details

Your financial support remains vital in allowing us to continue this work on behalf of wild salmon, bears, wolves, whales and other wildlife who call this coast home.

For the coast,

The Raincoast team

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 LOADED DICE AND SLICK ASSESSMENTSRaincoast is hosting public presentationson the Northern Gateway Project. Hear a professional mariner with over 30 years experience discuss Enbridge’s submission to the NEB and Raincoast’s response.Venue: Hemp & Co. stores in Victoria and Sidney.February 29 6 PM  Hemp & Co  1102 Government St VictoriaMarch 1 7 PM Hemp & Co.   2348 Beacon Ave, Sidney BCAdditional presentations on Saltspring, Pender and Gabriola to be announced.
 VICTORY FOR WHALES  !Last week, the Court of Appeal upheld the ruling that food supply for killer whales and other aspects of critical habitat must be protected.  Read more
Raincoast Conservation Foundation PO Box 2429 Sidney, BC, Canada V8L 3Y3 Tel: (250) 655-1229
Web: raincoast.orgPhoto Credits:Gregory Franklin, Eric Sambol, Jamen Rhodes

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Support our mobile lab, Tracker!

Our new mobile lab will enable the Healthy Waters Program to deliver capacity, learning, and training to watershed-based communities. We need your support to convert the vehicle and equip it with lab instrumentation. This will allow us to deliver insight into pollutants of concern in local watersheds, and contribute to solution-oriented practices that protect and restore fish habitat.

Sam Scott and Peter Ross standing in front of the future mobile lab, which is a grey sprinter van.