Edmonton Journal

Notley, Berman face off over the future of oil

Premier, environmen­talist exchange harsh words at teachers conference

- JANET FRENCH jfrench@postmedia.com

To invest in Alberta’s oil industry or back away slowly was the question at the crux of a rift between Alberta Premier Rachel Notley and environmen­talist and policy adviser Tzeporah Berman on Saturday.

In back-to-back speeches to social studies, environmen­tal studies and Indigenous studies teachers at the River Cree Resort and Casino Saturday, Berman and Notley made contrastin­g pitches for why oil pipeline projects like the Trans Mountain expansion to B.C. are either a white-knuckled grasp on a dying industry, or a necessary investment to keep people employed and cover the costs of a transition to renewable energy, respective­ly.

“We can’t address climate change by building more of the past,” Berman told reporters after the addresses. “The idea that pipelines are answers to climate change is absurd. You don’t buy more cigarettes to quit smoking.”

In her speech, Notley said farleft environmen­talists are as much of an obstacle to progress on tackling climate change as right-wing politician­s. Jabbing at British Columbia, Notley said Alberta can’t build its economy around condominiu­ms and coffee shops.

“Here in Alberta, we ride horses, not unicorns. I invite pipeline opponents to saddle up on something real,” she said.

OIL IS PASSÉ, BERMAN SAYS

Berman, program director for Stand.Earth and adjunct professor at York University, said she doesn’t support pulling the plug on Alberta’s oil industry overnight.

However, given the high financial and environmen­tal cost of extracting fossil fuels from the oilsands, the industry is large enough, she said. With the dropping cost of renewable energy, improvemen­ts in battery technology and growth in the renewable energy industry, it makes more sense to invest in those booming sectors.

The Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, which hit another setback in August when a federal court ruled environmen­tal reviews and Indigenous consultati­ons were inadequate, is a “bad project that had a bad process,” Berman said Saturday.

While the Canadian government predicts no decline in carbon emissions during the next 12 years, Earth’s climate is already in trouble, said Berman. Although countries agreed in Paris in 2015 to prevent the Earth from warming this century by two degrees Celsius from pre-industrial levels, current policies will see the Earth warm by three to four degrees, Berman said.

The rising temperatur­e is sparking fires and floods, interferin­g with food production, driving up global hunger and increasing natural disasters that will displace millions of climate refugees. The risks are such that some major banks will no longer fund or insure new oilsands developmen­ts, she said.

Albertans are clever and innovative, and should use their skills to develop a plan that doesn’t threaten humanity, she said.

PREMIER: PIPELINE OPPONENTS ‘FOOLISH’

Following Berman’s address, Notley told the teachers Berman’s approach would be a disaster for the climate and jobs.

Echoing the arguments of some right-of-centre politician­s, Notley said a lack of pipeline capacity is forcing Alberta to sell its oil at a steep discount. Tripling the capacity of Trans Mountain would grow the potential market for the province’s oil and give Albertans fair value for their resource, she said.

Alberta needs those additional oil royalties to invest in a greener future, such as retraining programs for coal plant workers who will be out of jobs as coal-fired electricit­y is phased out by 2030 in the province. She also rejected Berman’s premise that a pipeline expansion will increase carbon emissions.

Environmen­talists are “foolish” for opposing pipelines, which are not only a safer way to transport oil than train or truck, but come with federal government promises of improvemen­ts to ocean protection, Notley said.

Berman and Opposition leader Jason Kenney have more in common than they’ll admit, the premier said.

“From both extremes, they will roll back action on climate and economic progress for working people,” she said. “In treating the economy and the environmen­t as mutually exclusive, they will fail on both.”

Kenney posted a video online Saturday saying it was laughable Notley was countering Berman after her government appointed the environmen­talist to an oilsands advisory group.

The Alberta Teachers’ Associatio­n took some heat last month when it announced Berman was invited to speak.

Associatio­n spokesman Jonathan Teghtmeyer said it was a great opportunit­y for teachers to hear different perspectiv­es in depth.

“I think that Albertans, just like our teachers, are concerned about the environmen­t, and I think they’re similarly concerned about the economy and jobs,” he said.

 ?? PHOTOS: GREG SOUTHAM ?? Premier Rachel Notley provides a response Saturday to an address from environmen­tal activist Tzeporah Berman on the Alberta government’s efforts to work with Indigenous communitie­s and address climate change while continuing to support Alberta’s oil and gas industry.
PHOTOS: GREG SOUTHAM Premier Rachel Notley provides a response Saturday to an address from environmen­tal activist Tzeporah Berman on the Alberta government’s efforts to work with Indigenous communitie­s and address climate change while continuing to support Alberta’s oil and gas industry.
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