The environmental 'plot' against Canada over oil sands?
Radical U.S. environmentalists are out to get Canada! And seize the energy, oil, and wood businesses for the U.S.! Or, so a hypocritical government says.
OK, my American friends. Take down these names. You have to do this to help Canada. Call these people and take them to task for funding surreptitious campaigns against the Canadian economy: Paul Brest, CEO of the William & Flora Hewlett Foundation; Carol Larson, CEO of the David & Lucile Packard Foundation; Rebecca Rimel, CEO of the Pew Charitable Trusts; Jim Simons and Nathaniel Simons, the major donors behind the Sea Change Foundation; and Stephen Heintz, president of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund.
That’s what blogger Viviane Krause would like you to do. This list of people and their purported sins come directly from a recent Vancouver Sun article by the now-infamous blogger, a Vancouver freelancer who has been doggedly digging up details on U.S. funding of environmental campaigns in Canada.
Krause became a front-page sensation in Canada earlier this month after Prime Minister Stephen Harper repeated her conspiracy theory about U.S. interference in Canadian domestic affairs. “Growing concern has been expressed to me about the use of foreign money to really overload the public consultation phase of regulatory hearings just for the purpose of slowing down the process,” Harper said this week. Natural Resource Minister Joe Oliver then went over the top in an open letter that set the online and mainstream media afire: "Unfortunately, there are environmental and other radical groups that would seek to block this opportunity to diversify our trade," Oliver said.
He was referring to federal regulatory hearings on whether to approve Enbridge’s Northern Gateway pipeline application to build twin 1,200-km oil pipelines from the Alberta oil sands (or “tar sands” to their detractors) to the head of a small inlet on the B.C. coast at Kitimat for shipment in giant bulk tankers to China. It’s the largest private investment in B.C.’s history. China will pay a premium price for the half-million daily barrels of diluted raw bitumen compared to current U.S. customers, generating a purported $270-billion of GDP over 30 years, which includes an additional $2.6 billion in government tax revenue.
Oliver went on, no doubt cheered by a tweet from a prominent national columnist that “never in history has a Canadian politician so forcefully taken on green ‘radicals.’ ” "Their goal is to stop any major project no matter what the cost to Canadian families in lost jobs and economic growth,” wrote the minister. “No forestry. No mining. No oil. No gas. No more hydro-electric dams."
Oliver says the groups "threaten to hijack our regulatory system to achieve their radical ideological agenda," by stacking the 18-month hearings (4,500 signed up at last count), by attracting "jet-setting" celebrities and using funding from "foreign special interest groups." Those are the people listed above, outed by Krause on her Fair Questions blog. Krause’s research revealed $300-million has been given to Canadian non-profits over the past 10 years by what she describes as activist U.S. charitable foundations with radical agendas aimed at crippling Canadian industry.
Their goal, according to Krause and now the prime minister, is to help Americans take over the international market — for oil, wild salmon, forest products, whatever — by pushing sustainability and environmental concerns, which in the Canadian government’s view are largely obstructionist and irrelevant.
The leading jet-setting celebrity opponent is Robert Redford, who referenced the pipeline in a Globe and Mail opinion piece ("Stand together against the tar-sands scourge") while he was filming in Vancouver in November: "Crossing the territories of more than 50 First Nations groups, slicing through rivers and streams that form one of the most important salmon habitats in the world and putting at risk the coastal ecosystem of British Columbia".
Another American organization, San Francisco-based Forest Ethics, is open, adamant, and unabashedly opposed to the pipeline. Its Canadian arm is run by the Tides Canada Initiative.
While no nation likes foreign interference in its domestic affairs, it doesn’t take a minute to puncture this pipeline of hypocrisy about foreign involvement in these hearings. Foreigners have been having their way with Canadian resources since two French traders approached a group of Boston businessmen to finance a trip to England to set up the Hudson’s Bay Company in 1688. It was only a few months ago that our prime minister was personally weighing in on the U.S. Keystone XL pipeline decision, campaigning for it in the U.S., calling it a “no-brainer.”
Oil sands producers — at least a third owned by foreign companies from the U.S., Thailand, the U.K., Norway, Korea and, notably, China — are spending unaccounted millions lobbying on behalf of the Enbridge pipeline. According to the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers (CAPP), international companies have invested nearly $20 billion in the oil sands in the last three years. The $5.5 billion Northern Gateway Pipeline is being financed in part by the Chinese state-controlled company Sinopec, which can decide where the exported bitumen will be upgraded and refined (hint: it probably won’t be in Canada or the U.S.). Ten oil companies with headquarters outside Canada are among the 216 registered intervenors.
But the meddling American funders, including “billionaire socialists … people like George Soros,” are different, according to Minister Oliver. What the Chinese and other foreigners are doing is characterized as valuable foreign investment in economic development, compared to insidious interference by the radical Americans “trying to block projects which will create hundreds of thousands of jobs and billions of dollars in government revenue and trillions of dollars in economic development,” as Oliver puts it.
The palpable short-term economic benefits from this pipeline are impressive. Proponents are promising 4,100 person-years of direct on-site construction employment in B.C., then 1,150 full-time jobs across Canada, in addition to the government revenues. Opposition is mainly focused on the potential risks of a terrestrial pipeline break, and possible oil spills from massive supertankers plying the narrow, storm-tossed fjords leading into Kitimat. Those costs are less certain, more long-term, and much harder to quantify than the immediate economic returns of the pipeline. Even so, even the Kitimat Chamber of Commerce and B.C. Premier Christy Clark are staying neutral.
Describing all opponents of the pipeline as duped radical puppets of American industrial interests is a massive slur on the scores of First Nations people desperate to protect what’s left of their traditional food sources, especially the shellfish and seafood that still form their staple diet. Because B.C. is the only place in Canada without treaties with First Nations, the legal rights of the aboriginal communities along the route are probably the biggest impediment to a speedy approval, or perhaps any approval. Enbridge knows this, and says 40 percent of the First Nations along the route have signed on as partners, with more to come.
The Canadian foundations and NGOs involved, many who see their role as facilitating solutions that respect the environment and the economy rather than outright opposition to all industry, are both outraged and frustrated at Minister Oliver’s accusations.
Ross McMillan, CEO of Tides Canada, one organization getting intense scrutiny from Krause because of the $60 million she says it has received from U.S. foundations, insists, “Tides Canada is not against the oil sands or other resource development projects. The organization does, however, support a comprehensive public policy discussion about the true benefits and costs of these activities, the pace of development, and about alternatives that could create jobs and prosperity for all Canadians."
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Comments:
Posted Fri, Jan 13, 11:06 a.m. Inappropriate
A poll released Monday found "...almost 75 percent of British Columbians are worried about foreign investment in Canadian natural resources. The poll results show that only a small minority of British Columbians (15%) are concerned about charitable funding provided by US philanthropic foundations to Canadian environmental groups."
http://preview.tinyurl.com/898ofr9
Posted Fri, Jan 13, 11:53 a.m. Inappropriate
For a thorough preliminary analysis of the Canadian oil sands project by an actual climate scientist (and a robust dialogue in the comments), see http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2011/11/keystone-xl-game-over/
Posted Fri, Jan 13, 11:57 a.m. Inappropriate
It is all about kill jobs and destruction of the economy.
Posted Fri, Jan 13, 12:41 p.m. Inappropriate
"It is all about kill jobs and destruction of the economy."
Absolutely. The real goal of the fossil fuel profiteers is not to get filthy rich at the expense of everyone else on the planet, but to totally destabilize the climate and destroy jobs and the economy through massive disruption of the agriculture and extreme weather events. You may think that they're only in it for the bucks, but really, they're out to kill us all. Including themselves ultimately. And that is the last word.
Posted Fri, Jan 13, 12:43 p.m. Inappropriate
"It was only a few months ago that our prime minister was personally weighing in on the U.S. Keystone XL pipeline decision, campaigning for it in the U.S., calling it a “no-brainer.”"
And did Harper even bother to register as a lobbyist for a foreign corporation? Talk about interfering in the internal affairs of a foreign country!
Posted Fri, Jan 13, 2:06 p.m. Inappropriate
That is right! It is the end of the world!
Posted Fri, Jan 13, 7:45 p.m. Inappropriate
Much as I hate to see the Keystone pipeline from Alberta to Texas go ahead, I can't help but think that if it is stopped then it absolutely guarantees that the "All Canadian" route to Kitimat will be built. Anyone who has ever been to BC's north coast will know that it will simply be a question of when, not if, for a massive spill in the confined waters of those scenic but treacherous fiords.
Tar sands oil is the most toxic, destructive, and downright frightening enterprise ever to be carried out in North America. Everything else pales in comparison. And it only produces 2 or 3 units of energy for every unit it consumes - not exactly Saudi Arabia, economically. If such awfulness is going to go ahead, and I don't see how it can be stopped, the "fruits" of those labors, such as they are, should at least stay on this continent. Better that than seeing it get shipped to China and guaranteeing destruction of not only northern Alberta but BC's coast too.
Posted Sat, Jan 14, 7:21 a.m. Inappropriate
Great story Peter.
We have worked our way up the recreational stuff and are moving on to the hard, black stuff: TarCrack.
Now Canada wants to sell its crack, and the same 1% that controls the media's tongue controls the government. Their overreaction shows that some of the 99% is just starting to get in their way, and if that happens, they will cut you.
BTW - I agree with Harper and the US Republicans that world troubles are all the fault of the Non-profits, that and the financial collapse was caused by greedy teacher's unions.
Goebbels taught them well the political value of scapegoating.
Posted Sat, Jan 14, 3:31 p.m. Inappropriate
It is tremendously naive to ignore the fact that Canadian politics is dictated by the same transnational corporations that dictate United States politics.
Let's look in detail at Canada's largest oil company, Imperial Oil.
"Imperial Oil Limited (French: Compagnie Pétrolière Impériale Limitée) (TSX: IMO AMEX: IMO) is Canada's largest petroleum company. The company is engaged in the exploration, production and sale of crude oil and natural gas. It is controlled by US based ExxonMobil, which owns 69.6% of its stock. Imperial owns 25% of Syncrude Canada Ltd., the world's largest producer of synthetic crude oil from strip mining of oil sands."
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperial_Oil
Does anyone seriously doubt that the executives at the headquarters of ExxonMobil in Irving, Texas don't spend a significant amount of their time discussing internal Canadian politics and how to influence it to their own benefit?
And let's not forget that Stephen Harper was the son of a long-time Imperial Oil employee and was briefly employed upon graduation by Imperial Oil.
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