pollution

Climate activists push PM for swift action

Jen Skerritt
December 17, 2009

Local environmental activists protested in south Winnipeg on Wednesday afternoon to demand the federal government take swift action on climate change.

About 20 people picketed outside Winnipeg South MP Rod Bruinooge's office to push the Harper government to commit to serious emission reductions at the Copenhagen climate change summit. Some carried signs depicting the Canadian flag dripping in black oil, while other signs urged the government to set responsible emission targets at Copenhagen.

One man played the national anthem on a trombone next to a sign that read "Oil Canada."

"This is a crucial time in our history when we can take action to get the Conservative government to commit to significant actions on climate change," said Sean Goertzen, coordinator for University of Manitoba's Campus Greens.

Goertzen said Winnipeggers want to see the Harper government commit to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 20 to 30 per cent from 1990 levels by 2020. He and other activists said they feel Canada's international reputation has been tarnished by its weak support of large emission reductions, and for defending the intersets of the oil industry.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper is heading to Copenhagen where hopes for a deal to replace the Kyoto Protocol are fading. Canada has been criticized for not doing enough to help reach a deal.

"They have a one-man party and its name is Oilberta," said Alon Weinberg, one of the event organizers. While the group of local activists shouted chants amid frigid temperatures, about 20 activists protested in Harper's Calgary constituency office. The group said Harper should resign as prime minister if he won't change his position on emissions that affect global warming.

The sit-in at Harper's office is the eighth to target Tory cabinet ministers in an attempt to raise awareness about climate change.

No one was inside Bruinooge's office at the time of the Winnipeg picket, but three members of the U of M's Campus Conservatives stood by the door in support of the Harper government.

The three university students were heckled by environmental activists, as they voiced their support for the government's slow approach to tackling climate change.

Kyle Mirecki said he believes the federal government is taking precautions to protect the environment while being cautious that doing so doesn't hurt the economic recovery plan.

 

-- With files from Canadian Press

jen.skerritt@freepress.mb.ca

Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition December 17, 2009 A10

Local environmental activists protested in south Winnipeg on Wednesday afternoon to demand the federal government take swift action on climate change.

About 20 people picketed outside Winnipeg South MP Rod Bruinooge's office to push the Harper government to commit to serious emission reductions at the Copenhagen climate change summit. Some carried signs depicting the Canadian flag dripping in black oil, while other signs urged the government to set responsible emission targets at Copenhagen.


An environmental hot potato for would-be premiers

Dan Lett
September 11, 2009

What happens when you find yourself stuck between a strand board and a hard place?The future leader of the NDP is certainly going to find out. For it is going to be left up to whomever replaces outgoing Premier Gary Doer to settle a simmering battle that could very well change the economy of the far west of the province.


Cottagers upset by sewage spill

Whiteshell lagoon overflowed
Mary Agnes Welch
September 9, 2009

The province says it was just a trickle, but cottagers in the Whiteshell say a sewage lagoon has overflowed onto a popular beach and into the Winnipeg River.

"It's just totally unacceptable," said Doug Petrick, a cottager near Dorothy Lake.

Petrick says the lagoon started overflowing at the end of July and leached under the highway, creating a small creek of untreated waste water flowing down to the beach and into the lake.


Canada’s sickest lake

Living, toxic goo is killing lakes the world over. It may be too late for Lake Winnipeg
September 8, 2009

Cisco! Walleye! Whitefish! From the foredeck of the MV Namao, a scientific research vessel on Lake Winnipeg, student-scientists in rubber boots and banana-yellow hard hats are calling out the catch. They’ve also landed trout, perch and emerald shiners, whose weight, stomach contents, skin tissues and isotopic concentrations will help gauge the health of the huge prairie lake. The trawl net—which looks like a bright blue tube sock with a nine-metre hole—was hauled aboard by a yellow crane just before the skies went suddenly dark, unleashing a heavy wall of rain like only the prairies can. Walloped by wind and rain, even the Namao —at 34 m, the biggest ship on the lake—is rocking and rolling on Lake Winnipeg’s dangerous, ocean-sized waves.

Perfect storm conditions are also brewing below the surface. Ironically, the isolated prairie lake, ringed by pristine Boreal forest, tucked far away from industry and major population centres, has become the sickest big lake in the country. What was once a small patch of algae, first noted in the 1990s, now grows to smother more than half of the massive 24,500-sq.-km lake most summers. In 2006, the pea soup blanket covered almost the entire lake, home to 10,000 cottagers, a $100-million tourism and recreation industry, and a $25-million commercial fishery. It’s “like sailing through a sea of green paint,” says Namao head biologist Alex Salki, one of a handful of concerned local lake scientists who founded the Lake Winnipeg Research Consortium. The putrid green mat, twice the size of P.E.I. and clearly visible from space, is jaw-dropping evidence of an ecosystem in deep trouble. Already, Lake Winnipeg, the world’s tenth-biggest lake, is in worse shape than notorious Lake Erie, says David Schindler, one of the world’s top water authorities, based at the University of Alberta.

Lake Winnipeg is “just the tip of the iceberg,” says UBC water expert Hans Schreir. Globally, the problem—known as “eutrophication”—is the “No. 1” water quality issue we face, says Salki. The culprit isn’t oil spills, toxic waste or even pesticides, but nutrient overloading from fertilizers, human and animal waste. Nitrogen and phosphorus do precisely in water what they do on land: cause plant life to run wild and multiply like crazy. The process is accelerated by the channelization of waterways to allow rapid runoff from farmer’s fields, and the destruction of wetlands and riverbank areas. Wetlands, “nature’s kidneys,” which act as natural filters and nutrient traps, have been reduced by 70 per cent in Canada. In the Red River Valley, which contributes 66 per cent of Lake Winnipeg’s phosphorus load, wetlands have seen a hundredfold reduction. Manitoba’s so-called “hog boom,” meanwhile, has seen the number of hogs on the watershed swell to 8.2 million, dumping an annual excrement load equivalent to at least 30 million humans. Alberta, the western limit of the lake’s catchment area, has another eight million head of hogs and cattle.

Globally, toxic algal blooms—in both lakes and coastal systems—have been increasing in number, frequency and size. A toxic bloom in the Yellow Sea at Qingdao nearly halted the sailing events at last summer’s Beijing Olympics. A year earlier, a rank toxic bloom choked legendary Lake Tai, China’s third-largest freshwater lake, leaving more than two million people without drinking water and killing fish. Meanwhile, a 7,770-sq.-km oxygen-starved “dead zone” has spread in the Gulf of Mexico where the Mississippi—chock full of fertilizers after draining the U.S. Midwest—spills into the ocean, causing an explosion of toxic algae and bacteria, killing fish and threatening the Gulf’s $2.8-billion fishery. Scientists say such zones are spreading, and could one day make up one-fifth of the world’s oceans.

Already, the problem is very common in western Canadian lakes: at least one-quarter of those studied by University of Regina biologist Peter Leavitt are showing early warning signs. Some, like Saskatchewan’s Qu’Appelle lakes, Alberta’s Lac La Biche, and Ontario’s Lake Simcoe, are showing “serious signs of eutrophication,” says Schindler. In 2007, 122 Quebec lakes sprouted massive algal blooms, and last summer an algal bloom sprouted on the St. Lawrence River, killing fish, birds and mammals. Even Lake Erie, back from the biological brink, has begun sprouting algal blooms and low-oxygen dead zones all over again.

But aesthetics aside, are the scums, smells, toxins and cyanobacteria all that bad for the country’s lakes? Strangely, Lake Winnipeg’s pickerel fishery, which recently surpassed Lake Erie’s total catch, has never been better. (Generally, the equation goes: the more algae, the more bugs, the more bugs, the more fish.) In Bangladesh, where 80 per cent of animal protein in the diet comes from fish, some lakes are being purposefully eutrophied to increase fish counts. But there is a tipping point, when all that new life begins to choke the lake, says University of Winnipeg aquatic ecologist Eva Pip. When all that organic material dies, it sinks to the bottom, where bacteria go on an eating binge, using up all the available oxygen. At that point the system “collapses,” she says. Anaerobic bacteria, which do not need oxygen, take over; the water will stink, and the masses of blue-green algae floating on top will cut off all sunlight to whatever is below. “The lake,” says Pip, then “becomes an algal swamp.” And once it tips over the edge, it is “extremely difficult” to return a lake to a healthy state.

Still, there have been successes, notably in Switzerland, which has kept its lakes largely free of algae by reducing agricultural runoff by 50 per cent over the past decade. And then there’s Lake Erie, whose comeback is one of the world’s great environmental success stories. It was declared “dead” in the 1960s, but within a decade the five major cities on the lake’s south shore managed to slash phosphorus loading by half, largely by updating wastewater treatment plants, which almost instantly reduced cyanobacterial blooms.

Getting Lake Winnipeg off death’s doorstep will require similar-scale reductions to the nutrient load. Even Winnipeg’s $1.8-billion wastewater treatment upgrade will only reduce it by two to three per cent. The city is responsible for only six per cent of the load. The rest flows into the lake from diffuse, “non-point sources,” including drainage ditches from farmer’s fields, stormwater from Regina, phosphorus from dishwashers in Fort Frances and yard fertilizers in Calgary. More than half originates in the U.S., notes Schindler.

In six months, the first peer-reviewed science (collected by the Namao) will be published, painting a more complete picture of the crisis. Perhaps more importantly, it will provide policymakers with the scientific backbone to move forward. Already, the government of Manitoba, where 11 per cent of the workforce is involved in agricultural production, has tabled tough draft legislation limiting fertilizer use—in places, right down to zero. The province is also calling for restrictions on hog operations in some regions, despite the protests of enraged farmers.

Some, like Pip, believe it may be too late—that Lake Winnipeg has already passed the point of no return—but others are more optimistic. “We believe we’re in time,” says Bill Barlow, former mayor of Gimli, the saucer-flat Icelandic fishing community of 5,000 on the lake’s south shore. “But just in time. This is one of the world’s great lakes. We can’t let it go down on our watch.”

Cisco! Walleye! Whitefish! From the foredeck of the MV Namao, a scientific research vessel on Lake Winnipeg, student-scientists in rubber boots and banana-yellow hard hats are calling out the catch. They’ve also landed trout, perch and emerald shiners, whose weight, stomach contents, skin tissues and isotopic concentrations will help gauge the health of the huge prairie lake.


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