Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
International

Protesters Target Oilsands Mine In Utah Under Construction By Calgary Firm

The Canadian Press, 11 Aug, 2015 10:46 AM
    CALGARY — Dozens of protesters have disrupted work on an oilsands mine a Calgary-based company is building in Utah.
     
    Melanie Martin, with a group called Peaceful Uprising, said four people were arrested Monday as they aimed to stop equipment from moving around the site.
     
    Around 40 protesters were targeting a road that junior oilsands firm US Oil Sands (TSXV:US) is building, about a four and a half-hour drive southeast of Salt Lake City.  
     
    Demonstrators sought to block access by erecting two tripod-like structures. Police used cherry-pickers to remove the activists from the top of the blockades, said Martin.
     
    Martin said she's been watching the environmental impacts of Alberta's much larger oilsands resource.  
     
    "Many people in Utah are very afraid of that happening here and of the impacts it would have on the Colorado river," she said.
     
    "Looking at what's happening downstream to the indigenous people in the Athabasca region of Canada has had a major impact on propelling this campaign forward."
     
    Martin lives in Salt Lake City, but in recent years has spent her summers in the Book Cliffs of eastern Utah, around where US Oil Sands is building its mine.
     
    "It's beautiful high desert with forest canyons. It's a really amazing area."
     
    Martin said she feels she's given the company a fair hearing, taking in presentations at industry conferences.
     
    "Nothing has reassured us whatsoever that their project would be anything but a toxic mess for the Colorado Plateau region, or the southwest U.S.," she said.
     
    The US Oil Sands project is tiny compared with those operating in northern Alberta.
     
    With a capital cost of $60 million, US Oil Sands is aiming to produce 2,000 barrels in its first phase. The first oil is expected some time in the last three months of this year.  
     
    CEO Cameron Todd called Monday's protest a "minor disturbance" and not the first the company has seen.
     
    "There's been a very small but very vocal group of anti-development activists that's had various protests over the past few years and they occasionally trot out their banners and look for a media spectacle and try to make something happen and make a nuisance of themselves," he said.
     
    Todd said safety is his biggest concern.
     
    "I don't think they realize how hard it is for a big piece of equipment to stop or the fact that just because you can see the truck doesn't mean he can see you. An active construction and mine site is actually a very dangerous place for people to be."
     
    US Oil Sands is planning to extract oil from its mine with a biodegradable solvent made from citrus fruit. The technology means there's no need for tailings ponds, the large wastewater pools that have been a major focal point of environmental campaigns against Alberta's oilsands.
     
    Todd said he doubts opponents of the Utah mine have the environment at heart.
     
    "We're the environmentalists. We're the people that are here looking for a sustainable future."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    US apex court temporarily halts gay marriages in Idaho

    US apex court temporarily halts gay marriages in Idaho
    The US Supreme Court has temporarily halted same-sex marriages in Idaho, a day after a federal appellate court revoked the prohibition in the states...

    US apex court temporarily halts gay marriages in Idaho

    MH17 victim found wearing oxygen mask: Dutch minister

    MH17 victim found wearing oxygen mask: Dutch minister
    Dutch Foreign Minister Frans Timmermans has said that one of the passengers on the crashed Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 had an oxygen....

    MH17 victim found wearing oxygen mask: Dutch minister

    Imran Khan asks Sharif to speak up against border firing

    Imran Khan asks Sharif to speak up against border firing
     Pakistani cricketer turned politician Imran Khan has asked Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif why he is not speaking up against Indian "aggression" along the frontier...

    Imran Khan asks Sharif to speak up against border firing

    WHO: Spain's Ebola case won't be last in Europe

    WHO: Spain's Ebola case won't be last in Europe
    MADRID - A Spanish nursing assistant may be the first person in the ongoing epidemic to catch Ebola outside of Africa, but she probably won't be the last, experts warn.

    WHO: Spain's Ebola case won't be last in Europe

    Pakistan again raises Kashmir in UN

    Pakistan again raises Kashmir in UN
    Raising the Kashmir issue yet again at the UN, Pakistan dragged the UN Military Observer Group (UNMOGIP) into the current situation along the Line of Control where cross-border shelling has flared up....

    Pakistan again raises Kashmir in UN

    Twitter sues US government over surveillance rights

    Twitter sues US government over surveillance rights
    Twitter has sued the US government for restricting the microblogging site from sharing online government surveillance reports with its users....

    Twitter sues US government over surveillance rights