Penticton Herald

Buying pipeline political deceit

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Dear Editor: The Trans Mountain pipeline project purchase is one of Canada’s greatest political deceits. It is not a balance of the economy and environmen­t, but a sellout that subsidizes the economy of the past while holding back a diversifie­d, low-carbon economy of the future.

Canadians are now investors and the prime minister can’t answer basic questions of the project that are critical to its business case and risks.

Those supportive of the pipeline do so because they want economic prosperity and feel optimistic about their future.

Increasing economic dependence on the fossil-fuel sector, however, is obstructin­g participat­ion in a low carbon economy.

With this plan, we are declaring that we owe nothing to generation­s after us. How do we explain this to our kids? We have had more than 20 years of empty targets and in 2018 as we are experienci­ng the costly impacts of climate change our prime minister invests in a project that will ramp up oil production to blow past the worst scenarios.

The oil sands won’t be shut down overnight, but building pipelines to facilitate extraction only pulls us back and commits us to decades of further inaction. If we are concerned about jobs and the economy, it doesn’t make sense to subsidize a project whose purpose is to generate as few jobs as possible in Canada by shipping bitumen to be refined overseas (benefittin­g large, foreign-owned oil companies) let alone doubling down on an industry that caused Alberta’s recent recession.

Increasing automation in the oil sands proves the trajectory is to sell our resources at a greater rate with fewer jobs.

As Alberta recovers from the oil-fueled recession, now is the time to pivot. Many Albertans who worked in the oil sands have retrained for jobs in a less volatile sector. Therefore, the new jobs should be in new sectors for Alberta and Canada that supports a low carbon economy.

For the remaining workers, existing jobs can be maintained by shifting from maximizing extraction and minimizing jobs created, to maximizing the number of jobs we can create from the remaining oil we are able to extract within our carbon budget. This means focusing on refining and creating value-added petrochemi­cals.

Investing in the Trans Mountain project demonstrat­es the lack of economic vision for our country. The true national interest is in creating a prosperous economy that provides solutions to the great environmen­tal challenges we have accumulate­d. Robert Stupka Kelowna

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