
Telling their stories: The fight to stop the Keystone XL tar sands oil pipeline
Friends of the Earth’s dirty fuels campaign is working to stop the proposed Keystone XL pipeline, which would carry dirty tar sands oil from Canada across six U.S. states to refineries in Texas. We’re fighting this pipeline in solidarity with individuals that are already impacted by tar sands oil extraction and with individuals who would be directly impacted by the Keystone XL pipeline. We have compiled some of their stories to share with you. These interviews speak directly to the environmental and personal impacts the pipeline could have on many communities. They also inspire action to fight back against the Keystone XL pipeline and tar sands oil.
Read on for stories from the front lines of this fight…
Kim Marcel is a long-term resident of Fort Chipewyan, the home of the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nations, a community directly downstream from the tar sands extraction site. She has always been interested in the environment and concerned about what the tar sands oil industry is doing to destroy it. She has been a voice in her community on these issues for many years. Over the last few months, Kim has begun speaking to the wider world about the tar sands. Kim believes her family’s way of life is being jeopardized by the actions of the tar sands industry. She maintains the government has neglected Fort Chipewyan by allowing Suncor and other tar sands oil companies to pollute the water and threaten her community’s livelihood.




Ernie Fellows is life-long resident of Mills, Nebraska, a remote community nestled atop the Ogallala Aquifer along the South Dakota border. When Ernie came of age, he was charged with taking over the family land. “I took that to mean that I need to be a good steward of the land,” Ernie reflected in recounting the years of careful work he put into improving the ranch. However, the fruits of Fellows’ labor are under threat. TransCanada, a Canadian oil corporation, is planning to route the Keystone XL pipeline through his property and with it comes the threat of contaminated water supplies and damage to property and to nearby livestock. Ernie, never before an environmentalist, is speaking out against the tar sands oil pipeline and its potential impacts on his community.
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