Maude Barlow, National Chairperson of the organzation, added, “It is no small irony that Alberta is experiencing one of Canada’s biggest pipeline spills while premiers have finalized a Canadian Energy Strategy that gives spaces for massive tar sands pipelines like Kinder Morgan and Energy East.”

Mike Hudema with Greenpeace’s Climate and Energy team stated Thursday that the Nexen spill offers “a stark reminder of how dangerous [tar sands pipelines] can be.”

“This leak is also a good reminder that Alberta has a long way to go to address its pipeline problems, and that communities have good reasons to fear having more built. New pipelines would also facilitate the expansion of the tar sands—Canada’s fastest growing source of carbon emissions—and accelerate the climate crisis even more.

“We need to stop new pipeline projects before they’re built and focus on building renewable sources of energy that are sustainable and won’t threaten communities, our environment, and the planet,” Hudema continued.

That’s a perspective not shared by Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall, who defended the proposed controversial Energy East pipeline, and said Thursday: “I hope we can be a little bolder in the energy strategy, to say that oil and gas is a good thing.”

CBC News adds: “[Alberta’s Rachel] Notley said growing energy infrastructure in Canada is not ‘incompatible’ with protecting the environment.”

But a sound national energy policy is about more than the environment, and it should go beyond banning tar sands, Barlow stated.

“Halting extreme energy expansion, including tar sands infrastructure by pipeline and rail, fracking and offshore drilling, is essential, as is respecting Indigenous rights, better regulating the oil and gas industry, shifting subsidies to climate solutions and supporting good jobs that reduce our climate footprint,” she stated.  “This should be the bedrock of a Canadian Energy Strategy, and there are plenty of ways premiers can achieve this.”

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