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Syncrude iPhone App Teaches Kids To Stop Worrying And Love The Oil Sands

iPhone App Teaches Kids To Love The Oilsands
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Syncrude

Forget angry birds, the future of smartphone games is an oil-loving buffalo.

Syncrude, one of Canada’s largest producers of oil from Alberta’s oilsands, has launched Trail Blazer, a Mario Brothers-type side-scrolling video game app for the iPhone in which the main character, a buffalo, bikes, snowboards and hang-glides his way past northern Alberta landmarks.

In between the action, which involves jumping up and down to catch floating coins while avoiding obstacles in the road, the little buffalo character pops up on screen to give you good news about the company.

“Syncrude is donating $6 million to community projects each year,” one message declares, while another claims that Syncrude “has planted more than 5.8 million shrubs and trees,” and a third boasts the company “monitors air quality 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.”

The game is a fun and challenging way for children of all ages to learn about the community in which Syncrude operates,” the company said in a press release. “While taking the journey, participants learn simple facts about Syncrude’s operation and reclamation efforts as well as programs that are assisting the community.”

The cartoonishly drawn game is likely part of the company’s effort to rehabilitate its public image after a 2010 incident in which more than 500 ducks died or had to be euthanized after landing near a Syncrude tailings pond. That followed a 2008 incident in which more than 1,600 ducks died.

Tailings ponds are pools where byproducts from oilsands extraction are collected. They contain water and sand, as well as contaminants and uncollected oil.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW SLIDESHOW

8 Facts About Tailings Ponds
(01 of08)
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Tailings are a waste byproduct from the oilsands extraction processes used in mining operations.Tailings consist of a mix of water, sand, silt, clay, contaminants and unrecovered hydrocarbons and are toxic.Source: Pembina Institute (credit:David Dodge, The Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society )
(02 of08)
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Syncrude's Tailings Dam near Fort McMurray, Alberta is one of the largest dam in the world. (credit:David Dodge, The Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society )
Duck Deaths(03 of08)
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There have been at least 2,150 deaths of ducks related to tailings ponds in Alberta. (credit:ALAMY)
(04 of08)
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There are currently more than 170 square kilometres of tailings ponds in Alberta. Even when tailings ponds covered 50 square kilometers they were big enough to be seen from space.Source: http://oilsands.alberta.ca/tailings.html and Pembina Institute (credit:AP)
(05 of08)
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Tailings management remains one of the most difficult environmental challenges for the oil sands mining sector. Source: http://oilsands.alberta.ca/tailings.html (credit:David Dodge, The Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society )
(06 of08)
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Tailings are stored indefinitely in open lakes that cover an area approximately 50 per cent larger than the city of Vancouver.Source: Pembina Institute (credit:David Dodge, The Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society )
(07 of08)
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Tailings lakes increase in volume at a rate that would fill the Toronto Skydome on a daily basis.Source: Pembina Institute (credit:Shutterstock)
(08 of08)
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Tailings lakes seep. The exact amount of seepage is either not known or has not been made public.Source: Pembina Institute (credit:AP)

The Alberta government recently announced it would not be pursuing charges against Syncrude over the 2010 duck deaths, after a report from the University of Alberta argued there was nothing Syncrude could have done to prevent the deaths.

Comments on the company's app at the iTunes store were mixed.

Pretty cool to see local landmarks from Fort McMurray, Alberta,” said one commenter, referring to the northern Alberta boomtown at the centre of the oilsands.

“As a game this is pretty pathetic and as propaganda it is worse,” another commenter wrote. “How gullible do they think people are? At least make the game worthwhile if we are going to endure the petro-garbage.”

Syncrude is the third-largest emitter of greenhouse gases in Canada. The company has been running a $1.6-billion emissions reduction project which it says will reduce air pollution from its operations by 60 per cent.

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Alberta Oil Spills
(01 of11)
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(credit:AFP/Getty Images)
June 18, 2012 -- Elk Point(02 of11)
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Enbridge Inc.'s Athabasca pipeline leaked an estimated 230,000 litres of oil about 24 kilometres southeast of Elk Point, Alberta.

A member of Greenpeace cleans up a mock oil spill outside the Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline office in downtown Vancouver, Wednesday, June 13, 2012. The mock spill was set up by Greenpeace to show the risks of spills similar to the recent one outside of Red Deer, Alberta. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward
(credit:CP)
June 18, 2012 -- Elk Point(03 of11)
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Although the spill didn't leak into any waterways, Energy Resources Conservation Board's Darin Barter said the spill was considered "significant" in size.

"Any amount of crude oil out of a pipeline is significant to us. Obviously we've had a number of pipeline incidents in the past short while and we're monitoring cleanup on them and we have a number of investigations underway."
(credit:Alamy)
June 7, 2012 -- Red Deer River(04 of11)
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An estimated 475,000 litres of oil spilled from a Plains Midstream Canada pipeline and proceeded to leak into the Red Deer River.

Oil from a pipeline leak coats a pond near Sundre, Alta., Friday, June 8, 2012. Plains Midstream Canada says one of their non-functioning pipeline leaked between 1,000-3,000 barrels of oil. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh
(credit:CP)
June 7, 2012 -- Red Deer River(05 of11)
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Some of the oil seeped into the Gleniffer reservoir, which some Albertans rely on for drinking water. Plains Midstream Canada trucked in drinking water for those residing near the area. (credit:CP)
May 19, 2012 -- Northwest Alberta(06 of11)
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Pace Oil and Gas's waste disposal line leaked about 22,000 barrels of a mixture of oil and water 20 kilometres southeast of Rainbow Lake. The spill was discovered on May 19 by another oil and gas company. (credit:Alamy)
May 19, 2012 -- Northwest Alberta(07 of11)
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The oil spill "ranks among the largest in North America in recent years," the Globe and Mail wrote. (credit:Alamy)
June 26, 2011 -- Swan Hills(08 of11)
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A pipeline explosion and oil leak at a Pengrowth Energy facility caused a pipeline to leak 500 barrels of light, sweet crude oil into Judy Creek near Swan Hills, Alberta. (credit:Shutterstock)
June 26, 2011 -- Swan Hills(09 of11)
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Energy Resources Conservation Board spokesman Darin Barter said the leak was relatively small.

"It's what we would consider a minor spill with 95 per cent of the product coming out of the pipeline being water and five per cent oil," he told CBC. "However, we're taking it very seriously, as is the company."
(credit:Alamy)
April 29, 2011 -- Little Buffalo First Nation(10 of11)
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Plains Midstream Canada's 45-year-old Rainbow pipeline spilled roughly 28,000 barrels of light crude oil near Little Buffalo First Nation. (credit:Shutterstock)
April 29, 2011 -- Little Buffalo First Nation(11 of11)
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Residents, including children, reported incidents of burning eyes, stomach pains, disorientation, nausea and headaches, according to the Assembly of First Nations. (credit:Shutterstock)

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