Building So That Tomorrow Never Happens.
In Canada, and in some parts of the United States, newly
minted engineers received an iron ring to wear on their pinky of their working
hand. The was, by tradition a replica made of rings made from an iron beam from
a Quebec bridge construction site that collapsed killing a number of workmen.
The implication was to remind engineers as they progressed in their careers to
be ever careful that their works not cause harm. The McGill Law School in
Montreal has a motto over the entrance "Audite Alteram Partem",
simply asking their aspiring attorneys to listen to the other side and the Hippocratic
oath clearly states that all doctors should "Above all cause no additional
damage". Those codes of professional ethics are based on experience from
life ending mistakes. As we move further into our century and see that we have
and are damaging this planet in serious ways, we should remind ourselves that
we, the people, need to renew those vows.
The environment we are trashing in millions of ways is the
only one we have. We may not suffer the consequences of our arrogance, but our
children already are. From my son who can no longer drink the pure water of the
Georgian Bay to the Nigerian tribes forced out of their ancestral fishing
grounds. Our concern should not be for what is expedient and simple like using
Roundup every week end rather than pulling the weeds and allowing our thin
stream to become a roaring torrent of poison or insisting on our right to strip
mine country-sized parts of the world to allow bigger and bigger cars to
transport solitary commuters on carbon choked highways. Our concerns should
center on asking ourselves in every way how we can actually make a small
difference. Like that roaring river of Roundup headed down our rivers, these
small efforts can also become such a torrent.
We must educate
ourselves about some of the real dangers that we are facing. We must educate
ourselves not to defend our positions but to see if maybe the other side has a
point. When in doubt abstain and the Tar Sands are an area where legitimate
concerns have been expressed and legitimate solutions have been proposed. These
range from advanced monitoring systems to reinforced piping, shorter runs and
immediate cutoff systems at the least hint of trouble.
I have no illusions that my silly little biodiesel facilities will turn the tide, we build 10 million gallon units at a time, and we are also under constant attack for starving the world. But we try to hear the concerns and offer less damaging solutions. In my world I can offer biodiesel plants that process waste water sludge, rendered animal fats, waste vegetable oils, algae, weeds like camelina, penny cress in Alberta, tobacco plants and even, according to an extensive study that I would gladly share, the vast fields of poppy seeds in Afghanistan. We are trying to push the boundaries of what is possible beyond the simple solutions of other industries.
We have discovered that if you bubble CO2 from power plants through cooling ponds, the pond scum becomes saturated with oils that and can produce biodiesel. We have also come up against some vicious vested interests that will do anything to protect their turf. In the US the legislation on biodiesel is complex and changes on an almost daily basis. Funding is promised and then blocked. In Canada vast amounts of promised grants, loan guarantees and support disappear and money flows towards specific areas.
I have no illusions that my silly little biodiesel facilities will turn the tide, we build 10 million gallon units at a time, and we are also under constant attack for starving the world. But we try to hear the concerns and offer less damaging solutions. In my world I can offer biodiesel plants that process waste water sludge, rendered animal fats, waste vegetable oils, algae, weeds like camelina, penny cress in Alberta, tobacco plants and even, according to an extensive study that I would gladly share, the vast fields of poppy seeds in Afghanistan. We are trying to push the boundaries of what is possible beyond the simple solutions of other industries.
We have discovered that if you bubble CO2 from power plants through cooling ponds, the pond scum becomes saturated with oils that and can produce biodiesel. We have also come up against some vicious vested interests that will do anything to protect their turf. In the US the legislation on biodiesel is complex and changes on an almost daily basis. Funding is promised and then blocked. In Canada vast amounts of promised grants, loan guarantees and support disappear and money flows towards specific areas.
Yet we persevere because there is a reason why replacing 10%
of the petroleum diesel with biodiesel is a good thing. It is good for the planet;
it is also amazingly good for the engine because the higher lubricity keeps the
engine running longer and cleaner and mitigates the evil effects of ULSD. I can
hear it now,” who cares, I drive a 300HP gas guzzling Escalade”. Well, that's
OK, but in Europe the vast majority of cars are diesel powered, up to 60% of
the fleet in France is diesel and all the diesel pumps in France have 5%
biodiesel in them. Those little animals are routinely getting 40 to 60MPG with
no loss in performance. They have a rail infrastructure that allows anyone to
get on a train and get off within a public transportation ride from their
destination. Here we have destroyed our rail system so everything has to move
by truck. The port of Oakland is the focal point for incredibly high levels of
childhood asthma, the West Oakland coalition is fighting it as hard as they can
and our proposal to install a biodiesel facility there is gaining traction.
Imagine clean burning port infrastructures with all the cranes,
lifters, even the ships that now use bunker fuel, as toxic as the tar sands
idling to keep their systems going, imagine the ferries in BC, San Francisco
and LA running on 50% biodiesel mix. It becomes a possibility if we could
divert some of the billions going into mega projects like the tar sands into
millions into a biofuel infrastructure. But that will not happen until we
realize that there are people whose sole concern is the dollar they can make.
There are places in the world where economic necessities
require building and using older and more polluting technologies, I can accept
that. But those places do not include Canada where their strip mining will
cover an area as big as Holland, those areas do not include China, one of the
richest countries in the world and still installing coal fired electricity
generating facilities when they could just as easily install nuclear power
plants. In areas, industries and groups where they have the technology, the
resources and the will to build systems that do not poison our air, our soil
and our minds and yet they persist in doing so for whatever venal reasons,
those people, companies and government are committing crimes against humanity.
Where a simple law would alter the course of planetary degradation, not passing
that law is a dereliction of a sworn duty and should be punished.
I am ashamed to say that my country is the second worst
offender in the policy of buy what you cannot legislate. In case after case,
the lobbyists are destroying our way of life, our environment, our very ethics.
They provide false and misleading information that no science supports, they
have dumbed down our debate to the point that a Sarah Palin can run for Vice
President of the largest economy in the world. They have started wars and
killed hundreds of thousands of innocent people for what are basically oil
interests. I will add with the tacit approval of other nations like Canada, the
UK and others.
Yet, behind those atrocities lie good people who, if
confronted with these accusations, will honestly say that they in no way
support those goals. That their peculiar industry is not responsible for a
Nigerian genocide or a life altering oil spill. In many ways they are right
because very seldom can you point at one person and say you did this and you
should pay. To me that is the reflection of the Citizens United decision that
gave corporations the right to act and be treated like people. BP has the right
under numerous laws that used to apply to citizens, not to answer questions
about the full extent of their depredations in court, the Koch brothers have
the right to lie about their activities.
When supposedly intelligent people like Bachmann are
listened to as seriously as Nobel Peace Prize, winners then you realize that
there is a serious flaw in our psyche. Idiots who nitpick discussions like the
Sandy Hook pundits debating whether the gun used to assassinate those children
was an automatic or semi automatic completely miss the point that children
should not be used as targets. The issues are no longer semantic discussions
over nomenclature; the issues are the survival of the planet. We have seen
species destroyed because just a few things were altered. I am not talking
about the carrier pigeon here where we deliberately went out and massacred
every last one of them, but sea animals, insects, large furry beasts and small
rodents gone because we took away their food or raised the temperature of their
habitat.
The Calaveras County gold rush is an interesting area, the
mines are still there, the Thompson water cannons can still be seen, but the
damage to the area is also still visible many years after the gold diggers
left. The coal hills of West Virginia, the slag heaps in Wales and around
Marcinelle in Belgium are also still there so many years after the first blood
sucking tycoons walked away to plunder other areas.
I can imagine that many years from now our grandchildren
will shake their heads and say what were they thinking? Much as I do when
visiting the battlefields of WWI. Why have we deliberately systematically done
exactly the opposite of what could be a life enhancing moment in the history of
mankind? We have the technology, we can rebuild this planet in a way that will
not ensure our ultimate destruction and yet so many Neanderthals still insist
that the ways of the past are still the only ways into the future and all they
can offer are idiotic statement that whatever you propose is equally damaging
and our need for money and jobs supplants the need for Nigerians to breathe.
So please build that pipeline as economically as possible,
we should not in any way impede the path to destruction. I suggest using
plastic hoses, they are cheap and will not deteriorate over the years.
According to a recent Harris poll conducted by the oil industry 83% of the US
population are in favor of this. That almost exactly corresponds to the number
of people who supported George Bush's attack on Iraq. Because when dealing with
stupidity of such massive scale fed by millions of dollars or PR and the
wonderful situation of the Athabasca River so far away from prying eyes and the
reality of what is being done, you can get away with almost any crime. It is an
absolutely carbon copy of the Niger Delta and Canada is no different than that
corrupt and oil sodden country. Companies like Suncor, Esso/Imperial, BP and
others will never stand up in court to answer for their crimes against humanity
and the world just like Bush, Cheney, Powell and Rice are immune from
prosecution because whole countries and erudite and educated people stood beside
them when the crime was committed.
I wonder how we will answer when our children ask us, Daddy
what did you do in the war against our planet?