Edmonton Journal

Green advocate dropped from panel

- DEAN BENNETT

Controvers­ial environmen­talist Tzeporah Berman is out as a member of a government-appointed committee advising Alberta on how to develop the oilsands.

Berman and four other members of Alberta’s Oil Sands Advisory Group were let go after the 18-member panel wrapped up the first two phases of its consultati­ons.

Environmen­t Minister Shannon Phillips said Berman and the others contribute­d critical expertise in the early stages, but the panel’s focus is now narrowing.

“The first two tasks were really quite outward-facing tasks — the conversati­on with other Canadians, our internatio­nal reputation on taking climate action,” Phillips said Friday in Calgary.

“She and a couple other voices that were there for an external perspectiv­e, their work is now finished, or coming to be finished.”

The panel was struck almost a year ago to advise the province on oilsands developmen­t as Alberta moves away from coal-fired power and toward more environmen­tally friendly energy.

Berman, a former Greenpeace director, had become a symbol of contradict­ory government policy on the oilsands, and opposition politician­s repeatedly called for her to be removed.

She pocketed almost $23,000 advising Premier Rachel Notley’s government on environmen­tally sustainabl­e oilsands developmen­t, while also advocating against projects such as the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion to B.C. that would help the industry and boost the provincial economy.

She has compared the oilsands to the fictional wasteland of Mordor in The Lord of the Rings and supported the B.C. NDP in the provincial election for its stance on killing the Trans Mountain project.

Notley refused to fire Berman. The premier argued a diversity of voices is healthy. Phillips flatly denied the B.C. election played any part in Berman’s departure.

Progressiv­e Conservati­ve caucus leader Ric McIver said the decision was long overdue.

“After months of talking down Alberta and the hard-working people in the oilsands, we are happy to see that Berman has been asked to leave,” McIver said.

“Including diverse voices on this panel is important, but to appoint an anti-oilsands, eco-warrior as the co-chair was irresponsi­ble governing from the NDP. We just hope Berman hasn’t tarnished Alberta’s reputation.”

The panel on Friday recommende­d a series of escalating measures, including financial penalties, to ensure greenhouse gas emissions from the oilsands remain within a mandated 100-megatonne limit.

Environmen­tal advocates Karen Mahon and Alison Ronson, along with oil executives Christa Seaman and Lloyd Visser, were also taken off the panel.

 ??  ?? Tzeporah Berman
Tzeporah Berman

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