Environmental groups seek court ruling against Syncrude Canada
Environmental groups seek to convince a court to charge Syncrude Canada with the deaths of 500 ducks, an incident
that brought worldwide attention to the ecological impact of the huge energy resource.
Ecojustice, the Sierra Club and Forest Ethics want Syncrude Canada charged under the country's migratory birds act
for the incident last April, in which the ducks were killed when they landed on a toxic tailings pond. The green
groups said they initiated the rare legal move after becoming frustrated with delays by the federal and Alberta
governments, which launched investigations in 2008.
"We just think it should be prosecuted in a timely manner, especially given that three months from now we'll be into
migration season and ducks will be flying back," Ecojustice lawyer Barry Robinson said. "If nothing has changed we
could be risking the same thing."
The company, a joint venture of Canadian Oil Sands Trust, Imperial Oil and five other partners, deters birds from the
ponds with noise guns that simulate cannon blasts. Syncrude said a late-winter storm delayed deployment of the sound
cannons last April, and the ducks set down on the poisonous body of water. Deaths of waterfowl at such rates had
never happened in three decades of operations, it said.
Under their legal action, Ecojustice and its allies have advised Alberta's provincial court in Edmonton of the charge
they believe Syncrude should face under the Migratory Birds Convention Act along with some basic evidence. The groups
will present their evidence at a hearing on 19 February, where they hope a judge will lay a charge, Robinson said.
The maximum penalty is C$ 300,000 ($ 250,000), he said.
Syncrude spokesman Alain Moore said, "But this flock of waterfowl landing and drowning on our tailings pond last
spring was an unacceptable incident and everyone in our organisation feels horrible that it happened," Moore said.
"There's tremendous resolve within Syncrude right now to make the appropriate changes to prevent this from happening
again."
Last spring, the company took out full-page newspaper advertisements to apologise to Canadians. But the incident only
served to embolden environmental critics, who had already mounted global campaigns to highlight the impact of massive
oil sands development on land, air, water and communities.
At the time, more than $ 100 bn of oil sands projects were either being constructed or planned, but oil companies
have since delayed numerous plans as oil prices have tumbled. Syncrude partners include Petro-Canada, ConocoPhillips,
Nexen, Nippon Oil unit Mocal Energy and Murphy Oil.
