This documentary is not an unbiased one, but it's a documentation of a serious environmental as well as health crime against people living in Alberta, Canada, where they are entwining crude oil from oil sand. This is dud to wast resources of this dirty oil in this Canadian region.
Oils and and sin crude is a very polluting both due to carbon emissions as well as the cleansing process to wash the oil out of the muddy sand. There is to be used 4 liters if fresh water to wash out 1 liter of oil.
The film asks the question if oil is more important than water. Is the government more keen on getting crude oil than preserving the water resources?
We meet a lot of seriously concerned people in the communities, watching the glaciers melting away, and the pollution which is growing. Canada hasn't been bald to meet their own goals in reducing carbon emission for the last 15 years.
This film is tragic to watch, and it makes me mad that even the Norwegian Statoil company is one of the investors in this dirty business.
Oils and and sin crude is a very polluting both due to carbon emissions as well as the cleansing process to wash the oil out of the muddy sand. There is to be used 4 liters if fresh water to wash out 1 liter of oil.
The film asks the question if oil is more important than water. Is the government more keen on getting crude oil than preserving the water resources?
We meet a lot of seriously concerned people in the communities, watching the glaciers melting away, and the pollution which is growing. Canada hasn't been bald to meet their own goals in reducing carbon emission for the last 15 years.
This film is tragic to watch, and it makes me mad that even the Norwegian Statoil company is one of the investors in this dirty business.