Enbridge claims opposition is better funded than oil lobby, only in it for the money

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Enbridge opposition is a lucrative business, says oil company president

From the Prince George Citizen – May 19, 2011

by Gordon Hoekstra

Enbridge put a challenge to the Calgary
business community Tuesday to fight back against critics of the
proposed $5.5-billion Northern Gateway pipeline.

In a speech to a Calgary Economic
Development luncheon Wednesday, which was disseminated via e-mail and
social media, Enbridge senior executive Stephen Wuori said opposition to
business and development is itself a big business, with professional
protesters plying their trade and raising hundreds of millions of
dollars.


A Prince George-based environmental group opposing the project took issue with Wuori’s notion.


Sea-to-Sands Conservation Alliance
representative Mary MacDonald said their Prince George-based group is
certainly not receiving outside money. She characterized the alliance as
group of concerned citizens working with a few local donations and
volunteer effort.


She added it was ridiculous for a big
oil company to criticize the financial resources of opponents of the
pipeline. Enbridge has said it will have spent about $250 million on the
project once the regulatory process is complete.


“Enbridge could out-money the opposition easily,” said MacDonald.


Enbridge reiterated its position that
it is critically important for Canada to get a stronghold in other oil
markets, such as Asia.


“First, Canada desperately needs to
diversify its crude oil customer base. Northern Gateway does exactly
that and will deliver tremendous economic benefit to all of Canada,”
said Wuori, president of liquid pipelines for Enbridge, in the text of
the speech.


Wuori asked the business luncheon
audience in Calgary to help balance the discussion about the pipeline,
saying he expected that what they have heard of the project was
alarmist, inaccurate and didn’t tell the whole story.


He called on the audience to challenge information they viewed as not factual.


Wuori’s list of one-sided stories
included that oil sands can’t be safely transported in pipelines.
Enbridge has pointed to its 2010 record of transporting 99.99 per cent
of its 750 million barrels of oil safely.


Wuori argued Northern Gateway is a game changer for Canada, needed to turn it into a world energy super power.


“We need to do a better job of telling
that story and connecting the dots in the public discussion,” he said.
“And finally, as leaders we need to stand up, answer the tough
questions, challenge misinformation and proudly defend the work we do.”


Opponents say that any economic benefits are not worth the environmental risks from a pipeline or tanker spill.


MacDonald took exception to Enbridge’s
efforts top claim ownership of economic development in northern B.C.,
arguing the pipeline could have negative impacts on the existing tourism
and fishing sectors.


The Northern Gateway project, which
will pass just north of Prince George, is meant to open up new markets
in Asia for crude from the Alberta oilsands. Virtually all of Canada’s
oil is exported to the U.S.


The controversial 1,149-kilometre
pipeline has attracted increasing opposition from First Nations,
environmental groups, some communities in northern B.C., as well as some
tourism and fisheries groups.


First Nations from north-central B.C.
who oppose the pipeline staged a protest in downtown Calgary last week
to coincide with Enbridge’s annual general meeting. The protests
generated national headlines.


Another protest was staged in Prince
Rupert the same week during the North Central Local Government
Association’s annual convention.

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About Damien Gillis

Damien Gillis is a Vancouver-based documentary filmmaker with a focus on environmental and social justice issues - especially relating to water, energy, and saving Canada's wild salmon - working with many environmental organizations in BC and around the world. He is the co-founder, along with Rafe Mair, of The Common Sense Canadian, and a board member of both the BC Environmental Network and the Haig-Brown Institute.