BFF-16 Greenpeace activists rappel from Canadian bridge to protest oil pipeline

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CANADA-OIL-POLICE-DEMONSTRATION

Greenpeace activists rappel from Canadian bridge to protest oil pipeline

MONTREAL, July 5, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Canadian police tried in vain Wednesday
to remove Greenpeace activists who have rappelled from a bridge to protest an
oil pipeline project, blocking marine traffic in the port of Vancouver.

Officers of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police intervened on and below the
Ironworkers Memorial Bridge over Vancouver bay, trying to persuade 12
Greenpeace activists hanging from cables and holding large streamers since
Tuesday morning to pack up and go home.

As of late Wednesday, however, the activists remained in place as part of
their protest against the planned Can$7.4 billion ($5.5 billion) Trans
Mountain expansion pipeline.

The protest prevented at least three oil tankers from passing under the
bridge, the Vancouver Sun reported.

Greenpeace is vehemently opposed to a project that would triple the
capacity of the Trans Mountain pipeline, which runs from the tar sands fields
of Alberta province west to the Pacific port of Vancouver.

“We came here to say no to the Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion, the
seven-fold increase in tar sands tanker traffic it would bring to these
waters, and the devastating expansion of the tar sands it would cause,”
Greenpeace said on its Facebook page, which is providing live coverage of the
bridge protest.

Canada is one of the world’s largest oil producers thanks to the Alberta
tar sands, which produce some of the “dirtiest” crude in the world.

Unlike traditional crude oil which gushes from a well, tar sand oil must
be dug up and essentially melted with steaming hot water before it can be
refined.

Also opposing the project, on grounds of potential environmental risk, are
the British Columbia provincial government, indigenous communities and
advocacy groups.

The expansion is being carried out by the US firm Kinder Morgan.

BSS/AFP/MR/ 1045 hrs