Undercover at the Tar Sands: What It's Really Like Working for Big Oil [1]
Rolling Stone - 8/28/13
An anonymous worker reveals conditions at ground zero
for Canada's controversial pipelines

Albian Sands oil project. Getty Images
Editor's Note: In recent months, many climate activists have focused their efforts on Canada's tar sands [2] and the companies set on extracting fossil fuels from them. With the debate raging louder than ever, Rolling Stone is in contact with one of the workers helping to build a pipeline to bring oil from the tar sands to the U.S. Read on for that anonymous correspondent's second dispatch from one of the world's most controversial jobs.
On its surface, Fort McMurray, Alberta, looks like any other small Canadian city, with rows of new houses, condo developments and a Wal-Mart. Recycling bins line the streets, and residents schlep cloth bags to the store because the community banned plastic bags. But there's one big difference between Fort Mac and other towns: This is ground zero for Canada's controversial tar sands operations. Like tens of thousands of others, I saw green in the tar-like bitumen-drenched sand, and I came here to cash in. (I'm writing anonymously to protect my colleagues, my friends and myself.)
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