@jansplanet.bsky.social:
Our PM & Smith will tell you our production is of the most ethical in the world. Both are lying to you. We can’t let the profitable polluters release the tar sands wastewater into the rivers.
@mark-carney.bsky.social quite the dirty legacy you are pursuing.
@scribblersemporium.bsky.social:
Smith has also told us that getting cancer is a lifestyle-choice.
and sleazily pimps that smoking can be good for us!![]()

Brian Jean is the ultra sleazy lying Minister of Energy, a filthy fucking pollution and rape of Alberta enabler.![]()

@tryangregory.bsky.social:
Carney fans, rationalize away!
“Though high rates of the disease persist among the nearby Indigenous communities, the Canadian government is weighing rules that may allow energy giants to release treated mining waste into the river system.”
Those fucking polluters raping out $billions annually (that promised way back when to deal appropriately and responsibly with their lakes of waste, but never did), are not going to “treat” their toxic waste they dump into the Athabasca watershed, they’ll promise to do so, then, soon as Nazi Carney says OK, they’ll whine whine whine, until he says, “OK, dump the deadly shit as it is. Your serving Nazi kid raping America, and in my eyes, are heros.”![]()

Health Canada Weighs Releasing Oil Sands Wastewater as Cancer Haunts Indigenous Communities, Indigenous communities near Alberta’s oil sands report persistently high cancer rates as Ottawa considers rules permitting energy companies to discharge treated mining waste into local rivers. by Dr. Elena Rodriguez, 2026-03-10, Prism News
i hate hate hate that Prism News used AI for the second image in this article, serving the Nazis and polluting. I didn’t include it because it’s gross and terribly disrespectful to the poisoned Indigenous communities. AI is also water devouring, polluting, and air polluting and health harming to communities impacted. On top of the many Albertans, mostly Indigenous, and workers, being poisoned to death by mostly American oil companies, the last thing we need is more pollutions and harms by fucking stupid stolen racist error laden American Nazi AI. IRK!![]()

Elevated cancer rates continue to plague Indigenous communities living downstream from Alberta’s oil sands operations, even as the Canadian government moves toward regulations that could allow energy giants to release treated mining wastewater directly into the Athabasca River system.
The convergence of persistent illness and potential new contamination pathways has drawn fierce criticism from environmental advocates and Indigenous leaders, who argue that decades of industrial expansion have already compromised the health of communities that depend on the river for drinking water, fishing, and cultural practices.
Alberta’s oil sands region holds one of the largest petroleum reserves on the planet, but extracting that oil generates vast quantities of toxic tailings pond
waste lake
water, a mixture of residual bitumen, heavy metals, and chemical solvents accumulated across roughly 1,400 square kilometers of containment
LAKES, NOT PONDS! CALLING THEM PONDS IS PROPAGANDA![]()
ponds. The industry has long faced pressure to address the growing volume of that waste, which currently cannot legally be discharged into waterways.
Companies promised in the beginning of their rape and pillage in NE Alberta, that of course they would appropriately and responsibly clean up their waste water, and pollution. None of the fuckers have and now we have Nazi Carney, serving Nazi USA and the Epstein Class as PM, willing to sell his fucking soul to let the raping companies, mostly American, dump their deadly waste into the watershed. Just disgusting. But, all I’ve seen from Carney is evil, Nazi Zionist Harper Hell, vile racist, so I expect he can’t wait to ill more Indigenous via tarsands-caused cancers![]()
The proposed federal framework would establish treatment thresholds that, if met, would permit companies to release processed effluent into the watershed. Proponents
Polluting companies, mostly American
argue the technology has advanced sufficiently to render the treated water safe
what these companies know best, is how to lie and bully gov’ts into letting them poison the air, land, water, communities and fish and wildlife
.
Critics
Humane humans living in reality with critical thinking skills
counter that no treatment process reliably removes all carcinogenic compounds, and that regulatory standards often lag behind independent toxicological research.
Even if standards were up to date, which companies would never allow, companies always ignore them, and our non regulating “regulators” and politicos would let them. Not one authority took responsible action after Encana illegally frac’d Rosebud’s drinking water aquifers, contaminating them, and frac’d and contaminated other drinking water supplies elsewhere. No fucking way, they or Harper Carney will do the right by the lands and communities poisoned by the tarshitters.![]()
For the Athabasca Chipewyan and Mikisew Cree First Nations, the debate is not abstract. Community members and physicians working in the region have documented rates of rare bile duct cancers, renal cancers, and other malignancies that exceed provincial and national averages. Residents have long connected that burden to upstream industrial activity, a link the energy sector and some government-commissioned studies have disputed while independent researchers have found reason to investigate further.
The disparity in findings reflects a broader pattern in environmental health science: industry-aligned assessments and government studies have repeatedly reached more conservative conclusions than peer-reviewed academic research examining the same communities.
That gap has eroded trust among residents who feel their concerns are systematically minimized to protect economic interests.
Alberta’s oil sands generate tens of billions of dollars annually and represent a cornerstone of Canada’s export economy
mostly to very wasteful greedy USA!
, which creates structural pressure on regulators to accommodate industry timelines.
Energy companies have argued that resolving the tailings pond
waste lakes
backlog is itself an environmental priority, and that controlled, monitored
uncontrolled, unmonitored, hurried dumping to get rid of it before Canadians realize it’s a terribly harmful idea by greedy fucking American corps and politicos
release of
barely, if at all, treated water is preferable to indefinite storage in earthen containment structures that carry their own Alberta’s oil sands generate tens of billions of dollars annually and represent a cornerstone of Canada’s export economy
mostly to very wasteful greedy USA!
, which creates structural pressure on regulators to accommodate industry timelines.
Energy companies have argued that resolving the tailings pond backlog is itself an environmental priority, and that controlled, monitored
uncontrolled, unmonitored, hurried dumping to get rid of it before Canadians realize it’s a terribly harmful idea by greedy fucking American corps and politicos
release of
barely, if at all,
treated water is preferable to indefinite storage in earthen containment structures that carry their own
intentionally set up
failure risks.
The fucking companies were given their permits to rape NE Alberta to toxic hell under condition of cleaning up their fucking poisonous by product of profiting billions upon billions of dollars. They never had any intention of cleaning up, and still don’t, while endless corrupt fucking asshat politicians like drunk bigot Ralph Klein, Jason also bigot Kenney, Nazi Separatist Danielle Smith, Herr Hideous Canada-hating Republican USA serving Harper, Herr Hideous also Canada-hating Republican-serving Mark Carney, etc. etc. etc.![]()
Indigenous leaders have called for full consultation rights over any regulatory changes, invoking treaty obligations and the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which Canada formally adopted into law in 2021. That legislation requires the government to seek free, prior, and informed consent from Indigenous peoples before approving projects that affect their lands and waters.
And which, sleazily, deeply racist Mark Hideous Carney appears to be destroying via his new deal with vile fucker more racist as all hell Danielle Smith, whose new agreement states Alberta views UNDRIP as non binding!
…
These bits are listed like this in one document; They contradict and are vile and I bet Carney and Smith will use to kill UNDRIP Canada-wide….:
AND WHEREAS Canada maintains its commitment to the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP);
AND WHEREAS Alberta continues to act in a manner that is consistent with treaties, the Canadian Constitution, and Alberta law, and views UNDRIP as non-binding;
…
FFS
Whether the consent standard will apply to wastewater discharge rules, or whether the government will interpret it more narrowly as a consultation requirement, is now a central legal and political question. The outcome will determine not only the fate of billions of liters of toxic pond
waste lakes
water, but also whether
most importantly the billion dollar profit raping companies, mostly American, adhere to their fucking decades long promises to clean up much more so than
Canada’s environmental justice commitments extend meaningfully to the communities absorbing the heaviest costs of its energy economy.
Solastalgia:
the grief felt when one’s home environment changes beyond recognition
Cancer Haunts Neighbors of Canada’s Oil Sands Wastelands by Emily Baumgaertner Nunn reporting from Fort Chipewyan, Fort McKay and Fort McMurray, Alberta, March 10, 2026, NYT
Though high rates of the disease persist among the nearby Indigenous communities, the Canadian government is weighing rules that may allow energy giants to release treated mining waste into the river system.
In a tiny hamlet of the Canadian subarctic, something was wrong with the fish.
Indigenous elders and university scientists stood over a tarp of dissected walleye on the banks of a channel near Fort Chipewyan, Alberta. The scientists clutched clipboards as they analyzed humpbacks, lesions, discolored scales and outsize livers. An elder, who had long relied on the waterway’s marine life for sustenance, knew simply by first glance: “No good.”
It was five days into their investigation on the freshwater Chenal des Quatre Fourches, in a place everyone just called Cutfish. They had pitched tents among the diamond willow and settled in for a week of dissections — their best chance at understanding the contaminants they believed were plaguing the food supply from one of the largest industrial operations on Earth.
That operation was more than 100 miles upstream, where energy companies, including a subsidiary of Exxon Mobil, were drilling for a viscous form of petroleum called bitumen, using water from the Athabasca River to extract it from deposits that stretch out beneath some 140,000 square kilometers of boreal forest. Massive pools of toxic waste with known carcinogens — their collective volumes estimated at more than half a million Olympic-size swimming pools — sit near the river, and an analysis suggests they are leaking around 11 million liters per day into the groundwater.
As oil-company operations have increased, so have bouts of unexplained illness among residents of Fort Chipewyan.

Now, the Canadian government is weighing regulations that could allow the companies to release the oil sands wastewater directly into the river system, so long as they first use filtration systems, microorganisms or other methods to reduce contaminants to safe levels.
But scientists say there are no safe levels of exposure to some carcinogenic components — and no proven methods for fully eliminating them.
of course there aren’t, one need not be a scientist to know that .. one just needs a tiny bit of humanity and courage not to believe corrupt politicians like Carney, Smith et. al., more corrupt companies and even more corrupt regulators![]()
Environmental experts are worried about implications well beyond Fort Chipewyan, since the Athabasca River runs north through Alberta and the Northwest Territories, ultimately joining a vast river system that empties into the Arctic Ocean. They say pollution from the oil sands could threaten biodiversity and the waterway’s climate-stabilizing properties — and could share contaminants from the mining waste, known as tailings, with the rest of the world.
When the last walleye was examined, elders from the three Indigenous groups in Fort Chipewyan gathered in a tent for an emergency meeting. It wasn’t just the fish, they agreed: The muskrat dens had all but disappeared. The wild tern eggs were contaminated with mercury. Petroleum sheens were collecting around the water caves. And the rate of rare cancers in the hamlet was high. There were fewer than a thousand residents, but lately, there seemed to be a funeral every week, sometimes two.
In my view, that what the racists Mark Carney and the companies, even more racist Smith and her evangelical separatists et. al. want. Why else would the deliberately poison you?![]()

The wind rushed in from the marshlands, and the smell of mint tea wafted from a fire nearby. Ron Campbell, an elder who spent six decades in Fort Chipewyan, cleared his throat.
“For thousands of years, we have lived off this delta,” he said, adjusting his Toronto Blue Jays baseball cap. “It’s in our genetic makeup to hunt, trap, fish, gather. Now the food that kept us alive for thousands of years is killing us. Where do they expect us to go?”
Decades of Worry
From above, the oil sands tailings are a study in explosive growth.
Maps of the region, which was once known for its drinkable streams and vast green expanse, now include landmarks like “Bitumount” and “Tar Island.”
From the ground, it is a literal wasteland. Scarecrows in construction hats line the perimeters of the tailings to keep migratory birds away. An oily film coats the mailboxes, the doorknobs and the windshields of trucks that haul across open pits where pine trees used to be.
Environmental experts have worried for decades about the health impact of the oil sands on wildlife and humans. Tailings ponds contain elevated levels of naphthenic acids — considered carcinogenic in some contexts — as well as benzene and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons that have been known to disrupt hormone and immune function. The waste also contains lead, mercury and arsenic, all three of which rank among the World Health Organization’s 10 chemicals of public concern. Thousands of waterfowl, gulls and other animals have been found dead at the sites.
People living near the sites have long reported headaches, congestion, bloody noses, rashes, even fainting. But little research has examined the true health impacts. According to one analysis, only three out of 87 peer-reviewed articles on the health effects of resource extraction in Canada have examined communities exposed to emissions from oil sands.


In the early 2000s, Dr. John O’Connor, a family doctor working downstream in Fort Chipewyan, noticed unusually high rates of certain rare cancers in the hamlet, as well as high numbers of both autoimmune disorders and miscarriages. He consulted doctors in nearby Fort McMurray and, in 2005, alerted federal health authorities, but said he hadn’t received a response.
After a radio journalist heard rumors about health issues in Fort Chipewyan and convinced Dr. O’Connor to participate in a segment, the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Alberta began investigating — not the cause of the sicknesses, but Dr. O’Connor himself. Health Canada had accused him of causing “undue alarm.”
Researchers from the Alberta Cancer Board who followed up on his concerns eventually agreed that the overall cancer rate was higher than expected, but said this might be attributable to increased detection or to chance. Their report suggested “closer monitoring of cancer occurrence in upcoming years.”
In 2014, two First Nations collaborated with scientists to publish their own study, which found elevated levels of contaminants in muskrat, moose and duck. It also found that a fifth of all respondents to a survey in Fort Chipewyan had suffered from cancer. But with a population so small — and cancers with long latency periods — it was difficult to establish any causal relationship.
Last year, a letter from Alberta’s chief medical office of health to Allan Adam, the chief of the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation, acknowledged that “the rates of all cancers combined in the Fort Chipewyan area were statistically significantly higher than those in the rest of Alberta.”
Over three decades, the rate of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma had been more than two and a half times what would be expected for the hamlet.
Cervical cancer had occurred at four times the expected rate.
The rate of a rare bile duct cancer in men had been more than nine times the expectation.
And for other biliary tract cancers, the rate was 13 times what was expected.
But then came the familiar disclaimer: “The small population size of the Fort Chipewyan community limits the ability to interpret results.”

After years of pleas, the Canadian government finally announced in August 2024 that it would commission a 10-year study to examine the health impacts of the oil sands on Fort Chipewyan. But the work has not begun, and it has not specified a methodology or suggested any interventions to protect residents in the interim.
With racist Carney in power, I bet the study will be killed to put the funds into child and woman abusing American stupid stolen AI. Bitumen companies will never allow proper study of the many health harms because they already know how deadly their fucking processes and products are. Studies would make it official and the rich fucks would have to pay to make it right which of course they refuse to do. So, no study. And Carney serves the rich, not Canadians, and for sure not anyone harmed by his precious American poisoners.![]()
Oil companies are legally responsible for cleaning up their tailings and restoring the landscape, but even after more than 50 years of mining, those efforts have hardly begun here.
There is little pressure from the province of Alberta — sometimes called the Texas of Canada — a petrostate that relies heavily on energy royalties for its budget. In a recent report, the auditor general of Alberta found the estimated cost to clean up the oil sands to be more than 51 billion Canadian dollars. The funds that regulators have collected from companies thus far amounted to only 1.8 billion Canadian dollars as of September.
In response to an inquiry from The New York Times, the Alberta Energy Regulator sent a long statement describing the regulatory process
which they do not enforce and regularly lie about. AER is industry’s little pet self regulator. It’s job is to lie, a lot, and keep polluters harming environment, wildlife fish and humans, and polluting without annoying interference, and protect polluters no matter what crimes they commit, even intentionally like Encana/Ovintiv frac’ing community drinking water aquifers. Profit raping is the name of the game.![]()
“The Alberta Energy Regulator provides for the efficient, safe, orderly and environmentally responsible development of energy and mineral resources in Alberta, and holds companies accountable through life cycle oversight, compliance and enforcement,” the statement said.

A yearslong probe by an environmental group found “consistent evidence of seepage” from Syncrude and Suncor tailings ponds into groundwater that was near tributaries to the Athabasca River. There are also occasional large-scale spills, such as in 2022, when industrial wastewater escaped from four locations belonging to Imperial, a partly-owned subsidiary of Exxon Mobil. But the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation said they had not been alerted until nine months later, when the government announced it was investigating another “uncontrolled release.”
or was it intentional? I think it was intentional for the company and AER to see just what horrific abuses the harmed will tolerate.
Imperial estimated
or lied about
the second spill to be 2,000 liters. That figure later grew to 5.3 million.
Life in Fort Chip

People like Calvin Waquan are determined not to let anxiety destroy tradition. Mr. Waquan, a member of the Mikisew Cree First Nation, teaches his 8-year-old daughter to braid sweetgrass and takes his 12-year-old son to hunt moose and duck. But whenever an acute tailings spill upstream goes public, they must throw away all the meat in their freezer and replace it with processed foods for the winter.
At the local gas station that Mr. Waquan manages, nicknamed Chief’s Corner, he has begun displaying dozens of the community’s death notices behind his cash register, each with a neighbor’s smiling face.
There is Claire Cardinal, whose husband said she had undergone more than 200 rounds of chemotherapy before her death; her husband is a double lung transplant survivor himself and still wears her ashes in a locket around his neck. And there’s Warren John Simpson, whose aunt said his bile duct cancer had essentially starved him to death; she cooked him a last simple broth and held his hand as he died. There were various relatives of John Henry Marcel, who finally encouraged his children to move their young families away from Fort Chipewyan after his own battle with prostate cancer. Mr. Marcel lives alone and can’t afford to move, so he sits in an armchair near their photographs on the mantel each night. “This is how I see them,” he said.
Mr. Waquan said he had buried five family members, three of whom had cancer, since moving back to the hamlet about 11 years ago and tossing sand onto the graves of too many others for him to count. In private, his fears are growing: Mr. Waquan recently noticed blood in his stool. He is waiting for a colonoscopy to reveal whether he could be next.
“Cancer is a big word — everyone is afraid to say it,” he said. “But we are raising our families in the industry’s toilet bowl.”


An Uneasy Truce
Far up the river, Chief Adam was donning his headdress beside representatives of the oil industry.
It was the fifth annual cultural festival for the First Nations, but many of its sponsors and organizers were energy companies. Visitors were learning Dene language vocabulary and moose-hide-tanning techniques courtesy of Suncor. A gift shop of local Indigenous art was sponsored by the industry giant Canadian Natural Resources. The event’s main stage was presented by Imperial, the company that had hidden its 2022 spill.
Chief Adam strode past posters that had been plastered throughout the grounds: “We are thankful for these borrowed lands,” they read, “and the lessons of resilience they offer us.”
Indigenous leaders like Chief Adam are in a challenging position. On one hand, they are the drivers behind efforts to protect their land and health. They have filed lawsuits and traveled to Ottawa to protest companies’ plans.

But these same leaders are balancing the realities of a complex economic relationship. Hundreds of members of the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation work in the oil sands, commuting from Fort Chipewyan for weeklong shifts or moving to the burgeoning neighborhoods near the operations, where they earn salaries multiple times that of any job available in their hamlet. And just as worries about the health impacts have grown, so have the number of new youth centers and community projects in the Indigenous communities, each of them branded with an oil company sponsorship.
“As chiefs, we have to think seven generations ahead,” Chief Adam said, watching his 8-year-old grandson practice a traditional tribal hand game. Before he came into office, the First Nation had a more than $300,000 deficit and no way out, he said. Now it has more than a dozen companies that provide contracting services to the industry, including equipment management and catering. Most of his funding now comes from the oil sands, he said.
“How do I walk away from all that?”
The Future of Fort Chip
The formal release of the tailings ponds into the Athabasca River seems, to many, all but imminent. Indigenous groups have met with federal officials through a working group to come up with alternatives to the river-dumping approach, such as drying the waste into stackable pucks, though that option would be costly.
A draft of federal rules that would set standards for wastewater treatment and release is expected later this year, and final recommendations could head to the country’s minister of environment and climate change soon after.
But Alberta is already deep into the planning process. A steering committee in the province recently recommended that the government “expedite” the development of standards, saying that continuing to accumulate the toxic substances where they are now “is not sustainable” and “creates environmental and financial liabilities.” The premier of Alberta also mandated in October that the then minister of environment and protected areas “accelerate” the finalized strategy.


Mike Mercredi, a councilor for the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation, has shouted in the faces of regulators, accused them of “regulated murder” and held up glasses of water from the river, daring them to drink it. But on a recent morning, as he stood at the top of Monument Hill, near Cutfish, he admitted that he felt there was little left to do but wait.
He rolled juniper seeds between his palms, then smoothed his ponytail and the caribou-skin sheath on his waistband. To his right was the Lake Athabasca dock he jumped off as a child — long before it was reported to be contaminated and became off limits to his daughter.
“This view used to be restful for me, you know — a place for thinking,” he said, watching the sun dance across the ripples of the lake. “Now I know too much.”
On his way home, Mr. Mercredi parked his pickup truck outside the town’s jam-packed cemetery and wove carefully between the plots, surveying the names of loved ones on all the headstones.
“We could all move elsewhere and just be funeral operators, for how often we bury,” he said.
He stood for a while, then turned quickly to leave.
“It never gets easier,” he added.
Blacki Migliozzi contributed reporting.
Emily Baumgaertner Nunn is a national health reporter for The Times, focusing on public health issues that primarily affect vulnerable communities.
A version of this article appears in print on March 10, 2026, Section D, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: Along Troubled Waters. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
Refer also to:
2021: Another damning paper by Dominic DiGiulio et al: Chevron oilfield waste “ponds” contaminating groundwater in California. DiGiulio warns the ponds constitute “a potential wide-scale legacy groundwater contamination issue.” Think of Alberta’s toxic tarsands waste lakes, industry’s largest unlined waste “ponds” on earth, leaking into the Athabasca River and groundwater, with AER doing little but deregulate.2021: New book by Dr. Kevin Timoney: Hidden Scourge: Exposing the Truth about Fossil Fuel Industry Spills, Six-year investigation into the impacts in western North America. “The science is clear: the production and use of fossil fuels has caused global-scale ecological and atmospheric damage that presently endangers life on the planet.”



2015: Toxic taint: Tests in Alberta industrial heartland reveal air-quality concerns
2013: Encana aims to dispose of wastewater in Madison aquifer
2012: Dr. David Schindler: Tar Sands Science “Shoddy”, “Must Change”
2012: Ducks Killed In Alberta Oilsands Tailings Ponds Will Result In No Charges Laid