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Displaying 10 videos of 14 matching videos

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Fashion Fish - Plastics

A luxury boutique bringing you fish infused with fashionable microplastic fibres from the hottest brands.  Produced by Just One Ocean. 

Date 2/17/2022 Format Instructional
Length unknown Keywords SustainabilityMember of Special Collection Plastic in Our Oceans More Details
Keystone XL: Why Pipelines Spark Controversy

A quick climate change video essay that looks at why oil and gas pipelines like the Keystone XL expansion and the Dakota Access Pipeline are so contentious. I specifically look at how building new pipelines will just lock us into a system reliant on fossil fuels for decades to come.

Help me make more videos like this via Patreon
Twitter, and Facebook.
___________

Resources:
1. How Safe Are Pipelines
2. Keystone XL timeline.
3. An Analysis of the 100% renewable goal.
4. Keystone XL explained.
__________


Date 12/15/2017 Format Instructional
Length unknown Keywords SustainabilityMember of Special Collection Alberta Canada Tar Sands More Details
Portland, Oregon: Train Tankers and Tar Sands Oil

A look at what crosses the Steel Bridge (built in 1910) here in Portland, Oregon a few miles from my home. Is that crude oil in those tankers? As citizens we need to start asking questions that will make our leaders uncomfortable as they may not even be aware of where and when crude oil is moved through urban areas. Produced and written by Ruth Ann Barrett for her YouTube Channel, PDXDowntownerPublished on Apr 2, 2015

Please note:
The New York Times documentary, A Danger on the Rails, addresses the issue in terms of Albany, New York and is in the EarthSayers.tv collection, High Risk Energy Alternatives here. Published on April 22, 2015. 
EarthSayer Ruth Ann Barrett
Date unknown Format Documentary
Length unknown Keywords SustainabilityMember of Special Collection High Risk Energy Sources More Details
Contamination of Ecuador's Rainforest: The Chevron Tapes
Published on April 8, 2015
In 2011 Amazon Watch receiveda mysterious package from a Chevron whistleblower. Chevron which bought Texaco in 2001, has just been found guility of one of othe worst environmental disasters in Ecuador's Rainforest.
These are video tapes of Chevron consultants trying to find uncontaminated soil and water with not much success. 

Ver en español aquí: https://youtu.be/8VKX2yD2slM

Date unknown Format Corporate
Length unknown Keywords SustainabilityMember of Special Collection High Risk Energy Sources More Details
Hindsight and Foresight: 20 Years After the Exxon Valdez Spill
Learn about the Exxon Valdez oil spill of 1989, and where we stand 20 years later. What have we learned? And how are we better prepared to deal with such disasters down the road? Uploaded on Aug 29, 2011 NOAAOceanMediaCenter
EarthSayers David Kennedy; Jacqueline Michel
Date unknown Format Documentary
Length unknown Keywords SustainabilityMember of Special Collection High Risk Energy Sources More Details
How The Exxon Valdez Disaster Still Affects Victims Today

The Legacy of The Exxon Valdez (2008): Oil is still polluting the shores and bankrupted fishermen are still waiting for the $5 billion payout granted in 1994.

For downloads and more information visit: http://www.journeyman.tv/?lid=58958&a...

Exxon Valdez leaked more than 40 million litres of crude oil into Alaska's pristine waterways nineteen years ago. Today, oil is still polluting the shores and bankrupted fishermen are still waiting for the $5 billion payout granted in 1994.

After a series of appeals by the company, $5 billion became $2.5. Now that the case has reached the increasingly pro-business US Supreme Court, fishermen fear they could end up with nothing. While ExxonMobil claims the area has returned to robust health, locals tell of vastly depleted fish stocks, which almost disappeared after the spill. ExxonMobil claims the fish fell victim to a virus, a theory disputed by the fishermen, who are backed by scientific evidence: "The fish can't disappear like they're telling the public. [Exxon's]] explanation just isn't practical," says an expert. As the legal case drags on, a fifth of the plaintiffs have died and the rest have lost hope. For them, Exxon has already won no matter what. Yet the oil giant keeps repeating that the spill was a tragic accident and that the company has acted responsibly towards the local communities. Fishermen whose livelihoods were ruined feel cheated: "Exxon says that everything's coming back and everything's fine - it's a lie."

ABC Australia - Ref 4066 Published on Mar 24, 2014

EarthSayer Steve Smith
Date unknown Format Documentary
Length unknown Keywords SustainabilityMember of Special Collection High Risk Energy Sources More Details
Coast Guard Overflight of Shell's Kulluk Platform Aground

A Coast Guard MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter crew overfly the conical drilling unit Kulluk Shell's Kulluk platform aground on the southeast shore of Sitkalidak Island about 40 miles southwest of Kodiak City, Alaska, Tuesday, Jan. 1, 2013. The on scene weather conditions were 40 mph winds with 20-foot seas. U.S. Coast Guard video by Petty Officer 1st Class Sara Francis.

Read the Ocean Doctor blog post, Lessons of BP Deepwater Horizon: Unlearned and Now Unleashed in Alaska, here.

Published on Jan 2, 2013

EarthSayer David Guggenheim
Date unknown Format Instructional
Length unknown Keywords SustainabilityMember of Special Collection Oceans More Details
Spill by photograper Daniel Beltra
Static Preview

Daniel Beltra gives us insight to his experience documenting the Gulf oil spill and his motivation for continuing his efforts to capture our changing environment. Uploaded on Aug 4, 2010. His interview on "ICE" is here.

Short listed for the Prix Pictet, The global award in photography and sustainability for his series, Spill.

 

EarthSayer Daniel Beltra
Date unknown Format Interview
Length unknown Keywords SustainabilityMember of Special Collection Artists and Musicians More Details
Tar Sands Oil Extraction - The Dirty Truth
Static Preview

Environmental devastation of the land, water, and air - the largest industrial energy project in the world is extracting crude oil from bitumen found beneath the pristine boreal forest of Alberta, Canada. Effecting a land mass equivalent in size to Florida or England, Both industry and government are putting money before the health and security of its people and the environment.

Uploaded on Apr 27, 2011

EarthSayer Andrew Nikiforuk
Date unknown Format Length unknown Keywords SustainabilityMember of Special Collection Alberta Canada Tar Sands More Details
Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill: 35 days from Space: NASA
Static PreviewThe MODIS instrument, on board NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites, is capturing images of the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. The spill began on April 20, 2010 with the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig. This short video reveals a space-based view of the burning oil rig and, later, the ensuing oil spill through May 24, 2010. The oil slick appears grayish-beige in the images and changes due to changing weather, ocean currents, and the use of oil dispersing chemicals. Images in the video time series were selected that show the spill most clearly. The full image archive is available on the MODIS Rapid Response Web site at http://rapidfire.sci.gsfc.nasa.gov/

credit: http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/goto?10562
Date unknown Format Documentary
Length unknown Keywords SustainabilityMember of Special Collection Oceans More Details
 

Displaying 10 videos of 14 matching videos

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