There’s nothing quite so pathetic as the richest industry in history feeling sorry for itself – and there’s been a lot of that going on lately. Under the strain of coordinated opposition to the expansion of Alberta’s Tar Sands on multiple fronts, Big Oil and its government cheerleaders is increasingly sounding like a bunch of sniveling crybabies – complaining amongst themselves and to the public of being unfairly out-messaged by radical tree-huggers or, alternately, well-funded non-profit groups.
At a recent Tar Sands strategy session – titled “Oilsands: What’s Really Going On” – hosted in Edmonton by the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers (CAPP) and the Edmonton Economic Development Corp., Alberta Energy Minister Ron Liepert blamed “environmental extremists” for unfairly plugging up the free flow of Alberta bitumen, threatening the future expansion of the industry. “We cannot stand by and let commerce and job creation become secondary to the sensational images used by environmental groups to solicit emotional responses, especially because those images do not portray the reality of our industry,” Liepert implored his audience. Kind of makes you feel sorry for those poor, misunderstood oilmen, now doesn’t it?
Apparently, the efforts of aboriginal and environmental groups, photographers and filmmakers, and diverse citizens opposing key pipelines in Canada and the US are having some effect. Judging by the pep talks flying around industry gatherings and the op-ed pages of conservative media outlets, the industry is seriously worried about the Tar Sands’ future. Even a recent article in the industry publication Alberta Oil Magazine about several major proposed pipeline routes from the Tar Sands (more on these in a moment) refers to them as “radically different but equally controversial.”
What’s at stake is three (potentially four) major new pipelines or expansions designed to amp up the export capacity for the Tar Sands to both the US and Asia. Together they could justify a doubling of total Tar Sands output.
- Enbridge’s Northern Gateway Pipeline from Bruderheim, Alberta to Kitimat on BC’s North Coast (525,000 barrels/day)
- TransCanada Corp.’s Keystone XL Pipeline from Hadistry, Alberta to refineries in Illinois, Oklahoma and the Gulf Coast (would add 510,000 barrels/day to existing Keystone Pipeline)
- Kinder-Morgan’s Trans-Mountain Pipeline from Alberta to the Westridge Terminal in the Burrard Inlet in Burnaby, BC (would raise existing line from 300,000 to 700,000 barrels/day)
- Recent documents show Kinder-Morgan is considering a spur splitting off its Trans-Mountain Pipeline east of Prince George, heading to Kitimat – which could become the default if the Enbridge line doesn’t go through. (450,000 barrels/day)
The latter is becoming a more realistic prospect as Enbridge faces increasingly fierce opposition to its Northern Gateway Project. And the company isn’t doing itself any favours – with three major pipeline leaks in the US last year and a recent one in the Northwest Territories (on top of the dozens of smaller leaks it averages every year). But it’s the First Nations opposition to the project that presents its greatest challenge – one that may well prove insurmountable. Over 60 nations have lined up together against the Northern Gateway – many of them situated along the pipeline or tanker corridor, thus holding considerable constitutional and legal power over the project through their ancestral title and rights.
TransCanada is also facing an uphill battle for its Keystone XL expansion to refineries in the US. The 590,000 barrel/day existing Keystone line is currently shut down under presidential order, following a pair of recent leaks in North Dakota and Kansas. The associate pipeline safety administrator with the U.S.
Department of Transportation, Jeffrey
Wiese, recently wrote to TransCanada
executives: “After evaluating the foregoing preliminary findings of fact, I find
that the continued operation of the pipeline without corrective action
would be hazardous to life, property and the environment.”
These troubles couldn’t come at a worse time for TransCanada, as they are in the midst of seeking approval from regulators to build the expansion Keystone XL line. The Environmental Protection Agency has been highly critical of the proposal to the US State Department, which is charged with making the final decision on the project. According to a recent article in the Globe and Mail, “For the oil patch, the possibility that the XL project will falter is so
outside expectations that many haven’t even considered it. Indeed,
companies have already signed up for the majority of its capacity.” And yet, to the industry’s incredulous horror, failure is now a distinct possibility for the Keystone XL.
Campaigners, industry and media have started discussing the battle over these pipelines in terms of “choke points”. The idea is that Tar Sands expansion could be curbed indirectly by choking off its avenues for growth – and it has real strategic merit, enough to cause the industry to lose some sleep. Without these new corridors to move diluted bitumen, Tar Sands expansion is unnecessary, as the Financial Post remarked recently in a piece about the “Oilsands: What’s Really Going On” conference in Edmonton.
Andrew Leach, environmental economist and assistant professor at the University of Alberta School of Business, said Alberta faces a future bottleneck as oilsands production is forecast to ramp up while North American consumption wanes. “There’s not enough domestic demand to soak up what the production potential is and not enough pipeline capacity to move it, so you’ll be running up against a wall pretty quickly in the next eight or 10 years,” Leach said.
This is because the real growth in demand for Alberta bitumen lies not in North America, where economic conditions have seen oil demand plateau, but in new markets in Asia – which would be difficult to access without new supply lines carved through BC.
Alberta’s energy minister is far from the only one whining about the rough ride the Tar Sands are getting of late. Premier Ed Stelmach shot back angrily at a provocative billboard campaign in the US last year, which asked Americans to cancel their Banff vacations in protest of the Tar Sands. Stelmach responded with a series of his own taxpayer-funded ads south of the border, bearing the rebuttal: “A good neighbour lends you a cup of sugar. A great neighbour supplies you with 1.4 million barrels of oil per day.” Consider yourself told, America.
Industry nabobs have also been busy rallying the troops and doing their version of image control. Most notable has been the multi-million dollar PR campaign by the industry’s official lobby, CAPP. You know, the one with the happy employees extolling the improvements of an industry recently found to produce (surprise!) among the dirtiest oil in the world.
Then there’s Christy Clark’s advisor and former Encana CEO Gwyn Morgan. In an op-ed published in September of last year in a number of Alberta papers, Morgan wrote:
Environmental zealots are pulling out all the stops to promote a U.S. ban on fuel made from oil sands crude…One thing I learned from my many years as a CEO is that corporations must ensure what they say will stand up as the truth in the face of intense scrutiny, while the innuendo and deliberate distortions of their critics are seldom questioned. But I also learned that you don’t win games back on your heels playing defence. Industry leaders need do more than sitting behind the blue line trying to block shots. They need to take their oil sands story and skate hard up the ice.
Morgan’s message wasn’t directed at the general public. This is the godfather of the Canadian fossil fuels industry sending out the bat signal from his humble $7.5 million abode in Saanich, BC – admonishing his lieutenants and successors for not doing a better job protecting the industry’s image.
Finally, there’s Enbridge CEO Pat Daniel, who addressed a gathering at the Empire Club in Toronto in the lead-up to our recent federal election – urging his fellow captains of industry to get behind the Harper campaign and the oil patch, lest they face a set-back from a Tory loss or another minority government.
According to the Canadian Press, in his speech, “Daniel criticized ‘hard-line’ activists for being hypocritical in ‘saying no’ to the project outright while accepting the benefits that oil brings — ranging from heating their homes to bringing fresh produce to supermarkets.”
Daniel would write an op-ed several weeks later, dismissing voters’ concerns with the Tar Sands and his company’s proposed bitumen pipeline to Kitimat: “Opponents of energy development go so far as to suggest that Canada should be ashamed of our country’s abundant energy resources – the oilsands, in particular. I think this is nonsense. Canada is a leader in the world energy industry in safety, reliability, environmental performance, respect for human rights, regulatory oversight and technological innovation.”
In this time of unprecedented challenge, all the Tar Sands players appear to be reading from the same PR script – particularly several key talking points:
- Play up First Nations interest in pipelines and tankers (even, and especially, when it’s not actually there)
- Exaggerate job benefits, while downplaying the risks and economic impacts of a spill (Enbridge is particularly good at this one, considering all the high-profile spills it keeps racking up and the paltry jobs it would actually yield in BC)
- Dismiss opposition as one of two (seemingly mutually exclusive) things: a) incredibly well-funded environmental foundations who’ve turned opposing the Tar Sands into a lucrative mercenary industry unto itself; b) nothing more than a handful of crazy, socialist, tree-hugging “extremists” (of course, leaving out the part about 80% of British Columbians being in favour of a coastal oil tanker ban).
In other words, call it everything except that which it is: a well-organized, yet organic movement comprised of a broad cross-section of society – everyone from wilderness tourism operators, community groups and citizens to provincial and international environmental organizations and, most importantly, a coalition of over 60 different First Nations. It’s a campaign based on creativity, culture, and a deep concern for the future of this precious province and coastline – not to mention the local and global eco-footprint of the Tar Sands. It’s British Columbians (and Americans, now, with the opposition to the Keystone XL proposal) realizing they have a role to play – and an unprecedented opportunity – in crimping the growth of the Tar Sands. Call them “choke points” if you like – whatever it is, it’s damned inconvenient for an industry used to getting its way.
As Alberta’s energy minister told the “Oilsands: What’s Really Going On” conference, “If we don’t get moving on these projects, our greatest risk in Alberta is that by 2020 we will be landlocked in bitumen.”
Perish the thought.
We have to reduce our fossil fuel, by 80%, come 2020. We have to work towards renewable energy. Wind, solar and thermal energy. If we don’t, this planet will bottom out, and start to die in earnest. We may even be too late now.
Our oceans are dying because of our pollution. The acids eats the shells off crustaceans. They have found acid in the ocean, right up to the coast of BC. Scientists were dismayed, they thought the acid to be only in the very deep oceans. This is a definite sign, we have to clean up our act, starting now.
There is no way, we can allow the Enbridge pipeline and the dirty Chinese and U.S. oil tankers, in our beautiful northern coast. Our rivers, streams, lakes, air, soil and seas, We must stop poisoning them. Our clean drinking water is being eroded by, pipe bursts, fracking, and toxic mine waste being dumped in our lakes. The mine poisoning also leaches into our clean underground water. Clean water is worth a hell of a lot more than oil and gas. We can’t drink oil.
The huge Athabasca watershed is contaminated, by the dirty tar sands. Eco damage there, can never be cleaned up. It’s permanent.