Is the Alberta province going astray, is it being seduced by the development schemes of greedy multinationals, suckered into shipping unprocessed oil- sands crude south for processing in American refineries, or recklessly developing the oil sands and make uggly pipelines across US - at the expense of prudence and the environment.
Alberta, Canada should be refining the bitumen in Alberta and should make it public policy in the provinces of Canada -
It would make the Canadians to rich, so the U.S. State Department is considering a proposal to extend the pipeline which would carry oil from Alberta's oilsands to Texas.
Environmentalists have been aggressively protesting the line saying - the heavy oil, or bitumen, that would flow through the line is - dirty, toxic and corrosive.
Canadians saying the bitumen should be refined in Alberta or B.C., Canada.
Canadians want process the bitumen from the oilsands in Alberta or B.C., and that would create a lot of jobs and black gold money job activity.
That would be a better thing to do than merely send the raw bitumen down the pipeline and they refine it in Texas and that means thousands of new jobs in Texas nwo elite -
Canadians can not be the richest in the world - nwo would not like to see the western provinces to control the rapid growth in the black gold of Canada.
NWO public hearings about a pipeline that would ship bitumen from Alberta's oilsands to Asian markets refiners they control is a better money maker -
Canadian people should be more sympathetic to the CDN workers federation's concerns that too many - oilsands projects were exporting raw bitumen and robbing Albertans of the benefits they would reap from - upgrading it in the Western provinces - to ensure we have a value-added industry for Canadians.
Oil shipped to Asia would no longer be available to North Americans, which will eventually raise its price.
When nwo take oil out of North America and take it to Asia the price increase is going to affect all markets in the long run and make Canadians to pay more for the black gold - like what happened to the yellow gold - it has very long term negative economics for Canadian people.
These oil sand deposits lie under 141,000 square kilometres (54,000 sq mi) of boreal forest and muskeg (peat bogs) and contain about 1.7 trillion barrels (270×10/9 m3) of bitumen in-place, comparable in magnitude to the world's total proven reserves of conventional petroleum.Although the former CEO of Shell Canada, Clive Mather, estimated Canada's reserves to be 2 trillion barrels (320 km3) or more, the International Energy Agency (IEA) lists Canada's reserves as being 178 billion barrels (2.83×1010 m3).
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