World of Tar

Garth Lenz's Image

As the sun set, the light faded across the vast tar mine. This land’s formerly rich forest was razed to extract the underlying ‘oil sands’ – a shallow layer of sand and clay that contains a dense form of petroleum. Garth captured an aerial view of the desolate landscape, conveying the scale of the destruction.

Creating this type of mine involves the felling of boreal forest –an ecosystem that can store twice as much carbon per hectare as tropical rainforest. Continuing to exploit large oil reserves would be catastrophic for the environment. A growing focus on climate change has led to the abandonment of new oil sands mining projects, though this has left local workers unemployed.


Behind the lens

Garth Lenz

Garth Lenz

Canada

Garth is an editorial and fine art photographer based on the west coast of Canada. Though originally trained as a classical pianist, Lenz turned to his other lifelong passion, photography, shortly after completing a Bachelors degree with honours in Piano Performance. In recent years Garth’s photography has centred around the world of fossil fuel production, climate change, the massive scale of extractive industries and their associated impacts on the natural environment and Indigenous populations.

Image details

  • Nikon D3
  • 24–70mm lens
  • 1/250 sec at f2.8  •   ISO 1250
  • Alberta Oil Sands, Alberta, Canada
Copyright in WPY competition photographs remains the property of the respective photographers. You may not copy, share, reproduce or republish the photographs except as expressly permitted by copyright law. For media image usage enquiries, please contact us.

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Oil spoils
Humanity’s Biggest Hole

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