Support the “Moose Sex Project” to Save Canadian Wildlife

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action alert!
The Chignecto Isthmus is a vital breeding area for species in Canada. Unless we take action to conserve it, the moose of New Brunswick will be in danger of dying out.

Please sign the petition today!  

Support the “Moose Sex Project” and Save the Chignecto

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The phrase “Moose Sex Project” might seem silly. But the actions behind the campaign, to save the Chignecto Isthmus between New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, are part of an incredibly serious conservation effort.

There are only about 1,000 moose in mainland Nova Scotia total; the animal has been endangered in the province for more than a decade. Meanwhile, the 29,000 moose next door in New Brunswick are thriving. By saving the Chignecto Isthmus, Canada can ensure that these moose have a chance to find mates in their respective neighbouring provinces.

Without legal protection, the Chignecto Isthmus — and the animals who live there — face threats like clear-cutting and extensive road building.

The recent donation of 316 hectares of private land in the Isthmus to the Nature Conservancy of Canada is a huge step towards the conservation of this area and the preservation of moose and other wildlife, but we can’t stop there.

Urge the government to protect the Chignecto Isthmus and the wildlife that depends on it!

care2 Thank you for taking action,

Kathleen
Care2 and ThePetitionSite Team

 

Do you want to shape the vision for Canada’s parks?

What we do  |  Take action  |  Donate  
CPAWS

Dear Axcella,

In last week’s State of Canada’s Parks Report, we alerted you to a number of negative trends in our parks, and we told you about some recent conservation wins CPAWS helped achieve, and some great opportunities coming up for new parks in the near future.
The report made news across Canada!


Negative trends we need your help to reverse:

Immediate threat to Gros Morne
Exploratory drilling, “fracking” for oil and industrialization is being proposed metres from the park. If allowed to proceed, it will present a serious risk to park ecosystems, jeopardize a thriving local tourism economy, and could put Gros Morne’s designation as a UNESCO World Heritage Site at risk. CPAWS is already working with concerned local citizens in an effort to prevent this.

Inappropriate developments in our parks
Inappropriate developments are underway already in some of our national parks, including plans for heavy summer use of sensitive grizzly habitat on Banff’s Mount Norquay and building the massive, concrete Glacier Discovery Walk in Jasper National Park.

Governments failing to keep their commitments
Some provinces and territories are backing away from promises to create new parks and protected areas, notably in New Brunswick and the Yukon.

Please help us to protect our parks! Donate today to support our essential and ongoing work to speak out for Canada’s parks.


Conservation wins CPAWS helped achieve with your support:

Nova Scotia: leadership in wilderness protection

We have seen major progress by Nova Scotia towards expanding its parks and protect areas system by 250,000 hectares, meaning that province will move  into 2nd place nationally in protecting its lands and freshwater.


Saskatchewan & Manitoba: good news for parks

CPAWS also welcomed Saskatchewan’s announcement to create a new provincial park earlier this year and committed to create more – noting them as a cornerstone of the tourism industry. And Manitoba has announced a new strategy to strengthen protection of many of its existing parks and create or expand up to 10 more. 

Your contribution today is an investment in an organization that gets results!


Opportunities lie ahead… with your help:

 

As our report noted, we’re actively working on many exciting plans and proposals for new parks in areas including: 

• NWT’s Thaidene Nene, 

• Metro Toronto’s Rouge Valley, 

• BC’s highly threatened South Okanagan-Similkameen, 

• southern Alberta’s Castle Special Place,

• Quebec’s Dumoine River.

With your support, CPAWS can build upon the substantial work already done in these areas. We’ll continue to work diligently to ensure each becomes a success story for wilderness conservation!


Please consider making a donation today. You can feel good knowing that your contribution will help protect the nature you love.

Thank you for your generous support.

Yours in conservation,

Éric Hébert-Daly
National Executive Director

 

Science Matters – Rail, pipeline and climate disasters are symptoms of fossil fuel addiction

David Suzuki Foundation

Rail, pipeline and climate disasters are symptoms of fossil fuel addiction

pipeline
Photo Credit: rickz via Flickr

Like smokers who put off quitting until their health starts to suffer, we’re learning what happens when bad habits catch up with us. We’re witnessing the terrible effects of fossil fuel addiction every day: frequent, intense storms and floods, extended droughts, rapidly melting Arctic ice, disappearing glaciers, deadly smog and pollution, contaminated waterways and destroyed habitats. Transport accidents are also increasing as governments and industry scramble to get fuels out of the ground and to market as quickly as possible.

Throughout it all, we’re asking the wrong questions. Take the recent horrific disaster in Lac-Mégantic, Quebec. A train carrying fracked crude oil from North Dakota to a refinery in Saint John, New Brunswick, derailed, caught fire and caused explosions that destroyed much of the town and killed dozens of people, sending millions of litres of oil into the ground, air, sewers and Chaudière River. It’s a senseless tragedy that has everyone in Canada and beyond grieving for the community’s citizens and their families.

Governments and the railway company must answer numerous questions about safety regulations and practices, to prevent a similar catastrophe from ever occurring. The larger questions, though, are about the dramatic increases in fossil fuel use and transport. Sadly, industry proponents quickly exploited the situation to argue for expanding pipelines.

As growing human populations and increasing industrialization drive up the worldwide demand for fossil fuels, and as oil, gas and coal companies rush to extract, sell and burn as much as possible while markets remain strong, we’re seeing ever-increasing exploitation from difficult sources – fracking, oil sands, deepsea drilling and more.

The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers expects oil production in Western Canada to double from three-million barrels a day to more than six-million by 2030. This means a huge increase in the amount of fuels transported around the country and the world in pipelines, rail cars, trucks and ocean tankers. According to the Railway Association of Canada, rail shipment of oil has already increased dramatically in Canada, from 500 carloads in 2009 to 140,000 this year.

It’s true that rail accidents can be more devastating to human life than pipeline accidents – although when it comes to oil, pipeline breaks usually spill greater quantities and cause more environmental damage than train derailments. But shipping massive volumes of oil and gas is unsafe by either method. As we transport ever-increasing volumes of fossil fuels over greater distances to broader networks, we can expect more spills and accidents. Wastefully and rapidly burning them is also driving climate change, which experts say may even affect rail safety, as extreme heat and sudden temperature shifts can cause rails to buckle, increasing the potential for derailments.

Massive pipeline spills and devastating rail accidents are among the immediate and frightening consequences of our growing appetite for fossil fuels, but our bad habits are really starting to hit back with climate change. The homes and lives lost around the world, numerous plant and animal species facing extinction, rising health-care costs from pollution-related illness and massive clean-up efforts after flooding show that failing to address climate change is far more costly than doing something about it. Much of what we’re seeing now – from increased intense rainfall and flooding in some parts of the world to extended droughts in others – is what climate scientists have been predicting for decades.

We’re not going to stop using oil overnight, and we will continue to transport it, so we must improve standards and regulations for pipelines, rail, trucks and tankers. This should include safer rail cars for moving dangerous goods. Also, many environmental groups are calling for “a comprehensive, independent safety review of all hydrocarbon transportation – pipelines, rail, tanker and truck.” But in the long run, we have to find ways to slow down. By conserving energy and switching to cleaner sources, we can start to move away from fossil fuels – and to use remaining reserves less wastefully.

That’s the discussion we need to have, rather then getting mired in debates about transport methods. As energy writer Russ Blinch noted in a Huffington Post article, “Looking at pipelines versus rail tankers is really like asking, ‘Should I drive the car with bad brakes or the one with bad tires?’”

We need to look at the big picture.

Written with contributions from David Suzuki Foundation Communications Manager Ian Hanington.

Donate Today

Support the David Suzuki Foundation! Our dedicated team ensures that even the smallest contributions go a long way towards protecting nature in Canada.

 

Science Matters – Rail, pipeline and climate disasters are symptoms of fossil fuel addiction

David Suzuki Foundation

Rail, pipeline and climate disasters are symptoms of fossil fuel addiction

pipeline
Photo Credit: rickz via Flickr

Like smokers who put off quitting until their health starts to suffer, we’re learning what happens when bad habits catch up with us. We’re witnessing the terrible effects of fossil fuel addiction every day: frequent, intense storms and floods, extended droughts, rapidly melting Arctic ice, disappearing glaciers, deadly smog and pollution, contaminated waterways and destroyed habitats. Transport accidents are also increasing as governments and industry scramble to get fuels out of the ground and to market as quickly as possible.

Throughout it all, we’re asking the wrong questions. Take the recent horrific disaster in Lac-Mégantic, Quebec. A train carrying fracked crude oil from North Dakota to a refinery in Saint John, New Brunswick, derailed, caught fire and caused explosions that destroyed much of the town and killed dozens of people, sending millions of litres of oil into the ground, air, sewers and Chaudière River. It’s a senseless tragedy that has everyone in Canada and beyond grieving for the community’s citizens and their families.

Governments and the railway company must answer numerous questions about safety regulations and practices, to prevent a similar catastrophe from ever occurring. The larger questions, though, are about the dramatic increases in fossil fuel use and transport. Sadly, industry proponents quickly exploited the situation to argue for expanding pipelines.

As growing human populations and increasing industrialization drive up the worldwide demand for fossil fuels, and as oil, gas and coal companies rush to extract, sell and burn as much as possible while markets remain strong, we’re seeing ever-increasing exploitation from difficult sources – fracking, oil sands, deepsea drilling and more.

The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers expects oil production in Western Canada to double from three-million barrels a day to more than six-million by 2030. This means a huge increase in the amount of fuels transported around the country and the world in pipelines, rail cars, trucks and ocean tankers. According to the Railway Association of Canada, rail shipment of oil has already increased dramatically in Canada, from 500 carloads in 2009 to 140,000 this year.

It’s true that rail accidents can be more devastating to human life than pipeline accidents – although when it comes to oil, pipeline breaks usually spill greater quantities and cause more environmental damage than train derailments. But shipping massive volumes of oil and gas is unsafe by either method. As we transport ever-increasing volumes of fossil fuels over greater distances to broader networks, we can expect more spills and accidents. Wastefully and rapidly burning them is also driving climate change, which experts say may even affect rail safety, as extreme heat and sudden temperature shifts can cause rails to buckle, increasing the potential for derailments.

Massive pipeline spills and devastating rail accidents are among the immediate and frightening consequences of our growing appetite for fossil fuels, but our bad habits are really starting to hit back with climate change. The homes and lives lost around the world, numerous plant and animal species facing extinction, rising health-care costs from pollution-related illness and massive clean-up efforts after flooding show that failing to address climate change is far more costly than doing something about it. Much of what we’re seeing now – from increased intense rainfall and flooding in some parts of the world to extended droughts in others – is what climate scientists have been predicting for decades.

We’re not going to stop using oil overnight, and we will continue to transport it, so we must improve standards and regulations for pipelines, rail, trucks and tankers. This should include safer rail cars for moving dangerous goods. Also, many environmental groups are calling for “a comprehensive, independent safety review of all hydrocarbon transportation – pipelines, rail, tanker and truck.” But in the long run, we have to find ways to slow down. By conserving energy and switching to cleaner sources, we can start to move away from fossil fuels – and to use remaining reserves less wastefully.

That’s the discussion we need to have, rather then getting mired in debates about transport methods. As energy writer Russ Blinch noted in a Huffington Post article, “Looking at pipelines versus rail tankers is really like asking, ‘Should I drive the car with bad brakes or the one with bad tires?’”

We need to look at the big picture.

Written with contributions from David Suzuki Foundation Communications Manager Ian Hanington.

Donate Today

Support the David Suzuki Foundation! Our dedicated team ensures that even the smallest contributions go a long way towards protecting nature in Canada.

 

So it is Canada Day 2013

Yes it is Canada Day our 146 years old. A little bit of Canadian Trivia.

1003-10-09 Leif Erikson lands in L’Anse aux Meadows, Canada, becoming the first European to reach America.
1497-06-24 John Cabot claims eastern Canada for England (believes he found Asia in Nova Scotia)
1534-06-29 Jacques Cartier discovers Prince Edward Islands Canada
1534-07-24 Jacques Cartier, lands in Canada, claims it for France
1536-07-09 French navigator Jacques Cartier returns to Saint-Malo from Canada
1541-08-23 French explorer Jacques Cartier lands near Quebec City in his third voyage to Canada.
1578-05-31 Martin Frobisher sails from Harwich, England to Frobisher Bay, Canada, eventually to mine fool’s gold, used to pave streets in London.
1613-03-27 The first English child born in Canada at Cuper’s Cove, Newfoundland to Nicholas Guy.
1620-06-03 Construction of the oldest stone church in French North America, Notre-Dame-des-Anges, begins at Quebec City, Quebec, Canada.
1621-09-21 King James of England gives Canada to Sir Alexander Sterling
1634-07-04 The city of Trois-Rivières is founded in New France, later to become the Canadian province of Quebec.
1642-05-18 Montreal Canada founded
1663-02-05 Earthquake in Canada
1672-05-17 Frontenac becomes governor of New France (Canada)
1713-06-23 The French residents of Acadia are given one year to declare allegiance to Britain or leave Nova Scotia, Canada.
1733-05-29 The right of Canadians to keep Indian slaves is upheld at Quebec City.
1760-06-04 Great Upheaval: New England planters arrive to claim land in Nova Scotia, Canada taken from the Acadians.
1763-02-10 Treaty of Paris ends French-Indian War, surrendering Canada to England
1771-05-07 Samuel Hearne explores Copper Mine River of Canada
1773-07-20 Scottish settlers arrive at Pictou, Nova Scotia (Canada)
1775-05-17 American Revolutionary War: the Continental Congress bans trade with Canada.
1783-05-18 First United Empire Loyalists reach Parrtown, Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada after leaving the United States.
1789-06-03 Alex Mackenzie explores Mackenzie River (Canada)
1792-12-17 Opening of 1st legislative assembly of Lower Canada in Quebec city
1793-07-22 Alexander Mackenzie reaches the Pacific Ocean becoming the first Euro-American to complete a transcontinental crossing of Canada.
1796-02-01 The capital of Upper Canada is moved from Newark to York.
1812-07-11 US invades Canada (Detroit frontier)
1812-07-12 US forces led by Gen Hull invade Canada (War of 1812)
1812-10-13 Battle of Queenstown Heights, Brit beats US attempt to invade Canada
1813-01-22 Americans capture Frenchtown, Michigan Territory
1813-05-27 Americans capture Ft George, Canada
1813-06-06 US invasion of Canada halted at Stoney Creek (Ont)
1813-10-05 Battle of Thames in Canada; Americans defeat British
1814-07-03 Americans capture Fort Erie Canada
1814-07-05 Americans defeat British & Canadians at Chippewa, Ontario
1816-06-19 Battle of Seven Oaks between North West Company and Hudson’s Bay Company, near Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
1818-04-16 Senate ratifies Rush-Bagot amendment (unarmed US-Canada border)
1818-10-20 49th parallel forms as border between US & Canada
1822-06-18 Part of US-Canadian boundary determined
1825-02-22 Russia & Britain establish Alaska-Canada boundary
1826-08-19 Canada Co chartered to colonize Upper Canada (Ontario)
1827-08-10 Race riots in Cincinnati (1,000 blacks leave for Canada)
1832-06-07 Asian cholera reaches Quebec, brought by Irish immigrants, and kills about 6,000 people in Lower Canada.
1836-07-21 1st Canadian RR opens, between Laprairie & St John, Quebec
1837-03-24 Canada gives black citizens the right to vote
1837-05-25 The Patriots of Lower Canada (Quebec) rebel against the British for freedom.
1837-12-05 Uprising under William Lyon Mackenzie in Canada
1837-12-29 Canadian militia destroy Caroline, a US steamboat docked at Buffalo
1838-02-28 Robert Nelson, leader of the Patriotes, proclaims the independence of Lower Canada (today Québec)
1838-03-03 Rebellion at Pelee Island, Ontario Canada
1839-09-11 1st Canadian track & field meet held (Caer Howell Grounds)
1840-07-23 Union Act passed by British Parliament, uniting Upper & Lower Canada
1841-06-14 1st Canadian parliament opens in Kingston, Ontario
1842-08-09 US-Canada border defined by Webster-Ashburton Treaty
1844-09-25 Canada defeat USA by 23 runs in the 1st cricket international
1845-05-28 Fire in Quebec Canada, 1,500 houses destroyed
1848-03-11 Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine and Robert Baldwin become the first Prime Ministers of the Province of Canada to be democratically elected under a system of responsible government.
1849-04-25 The Governor General of Canada, Lord Elgin, signs the Rebellion Losses Bill, outraging Montreal’s English population and triggering the Montreal Riots.
1851-04-23 Canada issues its 1st postage stamps
1852-07-09 Fire destroys 1,100 construction sites in Montreal Canada & no one die
1857-06-10 England passes an act putting Canada on the decimal currency system
1857-12-31 Queen Victoria chooses Ottawa as new capital of Canada
1858-01-01 Canada begins using decimal currency system
1858-07-01 1st Canadian coins minted (1, 5, 10 and 20 cent)
1858-12-12 1st Canadian coins circulated (1 cent, 5 cent, 10 cent & 20 cent)
1859-06-15 Pig War: Ambiguity in the Oregon Treaty leads to the “Northwestern Boundary Dispute” between U.S. and British/Canadian settlers.
1861-11-09 1st documented Canadian football game (at U of Toronto)
1866-11-10 Gold coins from the Sydney Mint become legal tender in Canada
1867-03-29 British North America Act (Canadian constitution) passes
1867-07-01 Dominion of Canada forms (New Bruns, Nova Scotia, Ontario & Quebec)
1867-09-16 Ottawa Rough Riders & Senators play Canadian Football game
1867-10-23 72 Senators are summoned by Royal Proclamation to serve as the first members of the Canadian Senate.
1868-04-07 Thomas D’Arcy McGee, one of the Canadian Fathers of Confederation is assassinated by the Irish, in one of the few Canadian political assassinations, and only federal politician.
1868-10-10 1st written account of a Canadian football game
1869-04-09 Hudson Bay Company cedes it’s territory to Canada
1869-10-05 A strong hurricane devastates the Bay of Fundy region of Maritime Canada. The storm had been predicted over a year before by a British naval officer.
1869-11-03 Canada’s Hamilton Foot Ball Club forms
1869-12-08 Timothy Eaton founds T. Eaton Co. Limited in Toronto, Canada.
1869-12-18 Canada’s Hamilton Foot Ball Club plays its 1st game
1870-02-12 Official proclamation sets April 15 as last day of grace for US silver coins to circulate in Canada
1870-04-15 Last day US silver coins allow to circulate in Canada
1870-05-12 Manitoba becomes a province of Canada
1870-07-15 Manitoba becomes 5th Canadian province & NW Territories created
1870-07-15 – Hudson’s Bay & Northwest Territories transferred to Canada
1871-04-14 Canada sets denominations of currency as dollars, cents, & mills
1871-07-01 The decimal currency system is made uniform in Canada
1871-07-20 British Columbia joins the confederation of Canada.
1872-04-14 Dominion Lands Act passed-Canada’s Homestead Act
1872-06-14 Trade unions are legalised in Canada.
1873-05-23 Canada’s North West Mounted Police Force forms
1873-06-22 Prince Edward Island joins Canada
1873-07-01 Prince Edward Island becomes 7th Canadian province
1874-09-12 1874 The District of Maple Ridge, British Columbia, Canada is founded.
1876-06-03 Lacrosse introduced in Britain & Canada
1876-08-10 1st phone call between Brantford & Paris, Canada
1876-08-12 Madeline (US) beats Countess Dufferin (Canada) in 4th America’s Cup
1877-05-05 Indian Wars: Sitting Bull leads his band of Lakota into Canada to avoid harassment by the United States Army under Colonel Nelson Miles.
1878-07-01 Canada joins the Universal Postal Union.
1879-02-08 Sandford Fleming first proposes adoption of Universal Standard Time at a meeting of the Royal Canadian Institute.
1879-11-06 Canada celebrates 1st Thanksgiving Day

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