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Actress Pamela Anderson holds Bardot, left, and Gina Lollobrigida, Monday, Aug. 2, 2010, in New Orleans. Anderson was on hand to walk and help send off about 50 dogs that are being moved from Louisiana to Virginia who've been orphaned by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Anderson, PETA's honorary director, paid all the expenses and costs to relocate the dogs. She later chose Bardot and Gina Lollobrigida to adopt and take home.Chuck Cook/The Associated Press

Baywatch star Pamela Anderson got famous guarding people from the seas, now she's aiming to guard the seas from people.

The Canadian actress, who grew up on Vancouver Island, has returned to the beach in a short online video supporting a ban on oil tankers cruising through West Coast waters.

The segment was posted by the Nanaimo, B.C. chapter of the Council of Canadians on Monday.

It came a day before the House of Commons approved a non-binding motion calling for a permanent ban.

In the video, the vegetarian and PETA advocate says she thinks Vancouver Island would be devastated by even just a 30-second navigational error, which could cause a massive oil spill.

Footage of ducks covered in sludge flash by as Anderson, dressed in snugly sweater and Ugg boots, saunters over stones and urges viewers to join the coalition to keep freighters at bay.

A moratorium on oil tankers has already stood since 1972, but critics fear the Tory government will be pressured into allowing tanker traffic to transport crude from Alberta's oil sands.

"I've been all over the world and this is definitely by far the most beautiful part of the world and we need to protect the environment, protect the sea life, protect the birds, the animals," Anderson says in the video.

"Oil on the beaches where I grew up? No tanks!"

23:02ET 10-12-10

Story ID: G5520 (Via Satellite Feed)

Oil_Gas, Environment, National, Politics

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