Edmonton Journal

Allan submits controvers­ial enviro-group report

Greenpeace blasts public inquiry as `something out of Alice in Wonderland'

- DEAN BENNETT

The public inquiry report into what the Alberta government labels troublesom­e foreign funding of enviro-groups was delivered Friday — a year late and one million dollars over its original budget.

“When my final report is made public, I believe Albertans will gain a new understand­ing of how foreign funding has played an influentia­l role in public policy and political discourse,” inquiry commission­er Steve Allan said in a statement after delivering the report to Energy Minister Sonya Savage.

“It us up to Albertans alone to determine how they wish to see their public policy and political will realized, unfettered by the influence of foreign monies.”

Savage has up to three months before she is legally obliged to release the report to the public.

In a statement, Savage said they will meet that commitment, adding “this report represents a significan­t milestone.

“We expect that decisions about our economy and the developmen­t of our natural resources must rest with Albertans and not well-funded foreign special interest groups.”

The inquiry was an election promise from Premier Jason Kenney, who said he wanted to get to the bottom of concerns Canadian environmen­tal groups were being used as cut-outs and cat's-paws by competing foreign interests to stymie Alberta's wellspring oil and gas industry.

Allan, a forensic accountant, was given the assignment in July 2019, but he missed multiple deadline extensions — the COVID pandemic and legal challenges were cited as reasons.

The inquiry cost $1 million more than the original price tag of $2.5 million.

Critics say recently leaked draft versions of Allan's report clear environmen­tal groups of any law-breaking or wrongdoing but neverthele­ss tar them as “anti-albertan” for challengin­g non-renewable resource projects on the grounds of environmen­tal protection.

The groups have said any foreign funds make up a tiny fraction of their bottom lines.

They call the inquiry a buffoonish­ly sinister attempt to silence and intimidate them, with no public hearings, little evidence made public, little time to respond to accusation­s, and terms of reference so elastic they were changed twice.

“This has been something out of `Alice in Wonderland,”' said Keith Stewart, a senior energy strategist with Greenpeace Canada.

“We got funding from internatio­nal foundation­s. It was about two per cent of our revenue over a decade.

“We got a lot more money from Albertans.”

He said Greenpeace Canada has been one of the inquiry's targets and that letters to Allan asking for informatio­n and details were ignored.

“We don't even get to publicly defend ourselves or even see the evidence against us. (Allan) says, `I interviewe­d 100 people.' He won't tell us who they were. How are we supposed to respond to evidence that we're not allowed to see?” said Stewart.

Allan, in a letter this week to Greenpeace Canada, made it clear that “anti-alberta” is meant simply as “a non-pejorative geographic modifier.”

University of Calgary law professor Martin Olszynski said “antialbert­a” is not an innocent term but a broad-based slur, easily and gleefully weaponized by political opponents. He said it turns those concerned with the pace of resource developmen­t and its effect on the environmen­t into scapegoats and depicts them as traitors to the community.

“The precedent (from the inquiry is) anything can become anti-alberta, essentiall­y anything that the premier disagrees with,” said Olszynski.

“To some extent a government has a democratic mandate, but it only goes so far. It can't go to the point where opposition to that mandate — dissent — is branded as treason and sedition.

“That's very authoritar­ian.” Kathleen Ganley, energy critic for the Opposition NDP, said Savage should release the report immediatel­y.

“Leaked drafts of the report show the inquiry relied on misinforma­tion found in Google searches and `research' conducted by the UCP'S own ridiculous war room,” said Ganley.

“But despite putting their thumb on the scale with this shoddy research, the inquiry was still forced to conclude there was no wrongdoing or illegal activity.”

 ?? JIM WELLS ?? Steve Allan, who led a public inquiry into foreign funding of environmen­tal groups, has defended his use of the term “anti-alberta.”
JIM WELLS Steve Allan, who led a public inquiry into foreign funding of environmen­tal groups, has defended his use of the term “anti-alberta.”

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