 |
magazine / jf08
 |
January/February 2008 issue |
|
|
 |
EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK
Polar photographer
In our May/June 1995 issue, we published
a back-page photo of a set of caribou
antlers lying in the shallows of the Hood
River in Nunavut, with three birds feeding
in the foreground. It was an unforgettable
image that signalled, to us, the arrival of a
major new talent.
The photo was taken by Paul Nicklen, who grew up on Baffin Island,
completed a degree in marine biology at the
University of Victoria and was employed as a
wildlife biologist in the Northwest Territories
until shortly before we published that image.
His work as a scientist, he says, left him feeling
frustrated and he embarked on a career
as a photographer to help bridge the gap
between what he was learning as a biologist
and what he believes the public needs to
know about habitat loss and other threats to wildlife. The antler
photo was, he says, "one of my first published images ever."
Since then, Nicklen has done so well and his skills are in such
demand that we don’t often have the pleasure of showcasing his
work. His last major feature for us, on salmon farming, appeared
in our September/October
2004 issue. In the past five years, he
has had seven photo features published in National Geographic,
arguably the biggest and best photo magazine in the world, and
his images have appeared in many other publications.
His photo essay in this issue, part of our International Polar
Year series, is a selection of his shooting around the polar
regions (one of his specialties is underwater photography) over
the past decade. He still lives in the North — his home base is
Whitehorse — and he remains passionately committed to the
protection of the wildlife that he once studied and whose lives
he now chronicles from the viewfinder of his cameras.
Here’s an example of a great free-trade arrangement: the
United States sends us tonnes of its most damaging greenhouse
gas, CO2, and we use it to help save the world from the perils
of climate change and make a buck at the same time. That’s
the deal struck between Great Plains Synfuels, which operates
a coal-gasification plant in Beulah, North Dakota, and the
EnCana Corporation, owner of an aging oil field in Weyburn,
Sask. Great Plains captures the CO2 its plant generates and
pipes it north to EnCana, which pumps it into its nearly
depleted wells to enhance the flow of oil. Although both parties
were motivated to initiate the exchange by business considerations,
scientists and government agencies have stepped in to
study whether CO2 injected into deep geological formations
will remain there indefinitely. So far, their studies suggest it is
likely to remain stable and in place, but what remains to be seen
is whether carbon capture and storage will become a critical part
of the global effort to mitigate climate change. Writer Allan
Casey visited the facilities
in Weyburn and Beulah and reports
on the project. His story offers a clear explanation of how
carbon sequestration works and assesses its promise as a technological
contribution to the problem of global warming.
What is a Canadian definition for the word "remote?"
How about this: a community that you can’t get to by road.
Last winter, writer Christopher Frey visited Quebec’s Lower
North Shore, on the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and its string of
about a dozen historic villages that are not linked by road to the
rest of the province. They are connected to the outside world by
snowmobile in winter and cargo/passenger ship in summer.
The Quebec government recently promised to construct a road
along the coast and has pledged $100 million to get it started.
The highway might well save many of the villages from disappearing,
but it will also profoundly and irrevocably transform the
character of life in them. Some residents can’t wait, Frey tells us,
while others fear they will lose the benefits of a life apart. Most,
however, are not at all convinced that the province will fulfill its
promise. Building and maintaining the road may prove too
expensive and the gains too marginal for politicians in Quebec
who have often enough in the past conveniently overlooked the
needs of such an isolated and small group of voters so distant
from the television cameras that nourish the evening news.
— Rick Boychuk
top
|
 |
| ADVERTISEMENT |
|
|
 |
|