Albertans may experience a sense of déjà vu while watching H2Oil, Shannon Walsh’s documentary about our province’s tarsands development. Most of the material in the film has been well covered in the Calgary media, from the high incidents of cancer in Fort Chipewyan to the death of hundreds of ducks in a Syncrude tailings pond. Still, in covering familiar ground, the film provides a valuable refresher on just what’s happening in Alberta’s north.
As its name implies, H2Oil is primarily concerned with two things, oil and water, and the two are inextricably linked. Extracting the oil from the sands requires massive amounts of fresh water, and the toxic chemicals that are inevitable byproducts of the process are seeping back into the rivers that supply Fort Chip. According to locals like Dr. John O’Connor, those chemicals have led to a massive increase in the town’s cancer rates — a claim that goes against the studies commissioned by the province and by industry, but that is still quite compelling on a circumstantial level.
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