National Post (National Edition)

‘Toxic’ abuse A SCIENTIST OVERUSING THE WORD TOXIC IN THE MEDIA IS DOING NOTHING MORE THAN ATTEMPTING TO SCARE THE PUBLIC ABOUT UNPROVEN IMPACTS.

- WARREN KINDZIERSK­I Warren Kindziersk­i is an associate professor in the School of Public Health at the University of Alberta.

Three recent University of Alberta studies by Professor Bill Shotyk reported in the Edmonton Journal suggest that chemical contaminan­ts in the Athabasca River around oilsands “may be overstated, with levels of metals vanishingl­y small.” That conclusion lit up the world of toxicchemi­cal alarmism.

Five Canadian scientists led by David Schindler, also from the University of Alberta, promptly fired back. Not true, they said. “Athabasca River contaminat­ion isn’t ‘overstated.’” Shotyk then countered with his own counter-counterpoi­nt. “Trace elements in Athabasca need more study.”

Three articles, one after the other, seemed a bit fishy.

To get to the bottom of it all, I waded through the Athabasca River studies and read the journal articles to find out what was being “overstated.” Turns out there were lots of overstatem­ents — about exposure, toxicity and public health impacts made by Schindler and his colleagues. Some of their exaggerati­ons really need clearing up.

Firstly, they love the word “toxic.” The Athabasca River is a cocktail of toxic elements, toxic contaminan­ts, toxic to fish embryos, toxic in sunlight. But they were not very clear on the time frame in which these toxic conditions are apparently occurring in the river. Is it “before” or “after” the oil sands were developed? Bitumen and all of its supposedly harmful chemicals have been naturally leaking into the Athabasca River for hundreds of years in the region, well before any oil sands developmen­t began.

Secondly, what exactly do they mean by toxic? Using their word, one of the most toxic chemicals known to man is one that is essential to human life, oxygen in air we breathe. By the time we are adults, we are internally exposed to about 500 grams of oxygen each day — a known relentless destroyer of our DNA. A mammalian cell undergoes, on average, about 10,000 measurable DNA modificati­on events in each cell each hour. DNA modificati­on events and cancer mutation go hand in hand. By contrast, a person exposed to a “toxic chemical” (using their word) in the oil sands region would see this chemical being internally present in only microgram amounts — a million times less.

Schindler and colleagues allege that people drink directly from the river and the cocktail of toxic contaminan­ts may enter their bloodstrea­m. Drinking untreated river water directly? Full of disease-causing pathogens and all? Good luck with that! Other than for chemical toxins produced from cyanobacte­ria, drinking a gallon a day of river water containing only microgram amounts of a metal or organic chemical may not be enough to cause any serious problems. On the other hand, one teaspoon is more than enough to cause a disease from a pathogen in river water. Hopefully common sense would prevail here.

Schindler and colleagues assert that Shotyk’s studies overlooked potential interactiv­e toxicity from elements and organics. But human toxicologi­sts long ago sorted out realities of potential interactiv­e toxicity among chemicals. The dose makes the poison. At human exposure doses well below effect levels — which is what would happen here — chemical mixtures have no additivity and no potentiati­ng interactio­ns. Nothing happens.

A scientist overusing the word toxic in the media is doing nothing more than attempting to scare the public about unproven impacts. The more the word is used the scarier the message is supposed to be. This tactic only undermines the credibilit­y of the scientific messenger. A seasoned geologist recently asked the question: Does hydraulic fracking cause earthquake­s or do scientists and their seismomete­rs cause them? It’s a worthy question. Whether it is oil sands developmen­t, hydraulic fracking or any other type of oil and gas activity in Alberta, there is no shortage of scary messages offered by scientists in the media. They make dramatic claims about pollution, toxic chemicals and impacts, but these are mostly overstated. As to the state of Alberta’s environmen­t and in particular the oil sands region, the only things certain are death, carbon taxes and pollution scares. And not necessaril­y in that order.

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