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White Water, Black Gold (Lifetime Access)

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PLEASE NOTE: THIS PRODUCT IS ONLY AVAILABLE TO CUSTOMERS RESIDING IN AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND. ANY ORDERS FOR THIS PRODUCT THAT ARE PLACED FROM OUTSIDE AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND WILL BE CANCELLED AND REFUNDED.

PLEASE NOTE: You will receive an email (separate to your tax invoice) with a link to watch this video once your credit card or PayPal payment is received, or when we approve your purchase order. (Approvals are usually processed regularly during trading hours, but please allow up to two business days.)

You will receive an email (separate to your tax invoice) with a link to watch this video once your payment is received (or when we approve your purchase order).

White Water, Black Gold is a riveting, multi-award-winning Canadian documentary by indie filmmaker, David Lavellee, about the controversies surrounding the Alberta Tar Sands in western Canada. Martin Lukacs recently wrote in The Guardian: the Tar Sands of Alberta are “a source of oil so dirty that renowned ex-NASA climatologist James Hansen has described it as a ‘carbon bomb’ whose full exploitation would spell ‘game over’ for the climate”.

The film includes much detail about the often over-looked effect of the Tar Sands’ exploitation on the Canadian Indigenous peoples of the area.

The film follows David Lavallee on his three-year journey across western Canada in search of the truth about the impact of the world’s thirstiest oil industry. This is a journey of jarring contrasts, from the pristine mountain ice fields that are the source of the industry’s water, to the Tar Sands tailing ponds, where thousands of migrating birds have unwittingly landed and died.

Both government and industry spokespeople deny any cause for concern, but in the course of his journey Lavallee, backed by university scientists, makes a number of discoveries that challenge that assessment and raise serious concerns for Canada and the United States.

Native peoples living downstream are contracting unusual cancers; new science shows that water resources in an era of climate change will be increasingly scarce; the proposed upgrading of the oilfields could endanger multiple river systems across Canada that make up about half of its water supply; and a planned oil pipeline across British Columbia brings fresh threats to rivers, salmon and the Pacific Ocean.

White Water, Black Gold is a sober look at the untold costs associated with developing this major oil deposit, and raises important questions about how much environmental damage we’re willing to tolerate to feed our oil appetite.

Classification Exempt: Ronin Films recommends G

Running time: 83 mins

White Water, Black Gold is also available to purchase on DVD here.

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