The Scotsman

Jane not so Fonda Canadian leader after he OKS oil pipelines

● Hollywood star’s attack on Trudeau over plans for Alberta shale sands

- By ROB GILLIES

Jane Fonda has said people should not be fooled by “goodlookin­g liberals” like Justin Trudeau, after the Canadian prime minister “disappoint­ed” her by approving new pipelines from the Alberta oil sands.

After touring the oil sands area, the Hollywood star and political activist said environmen­talists everywhere had been impressed by Mr Trudeau at the Paris climate conference in late 2015.

“We all thought, ‘Well, cool guy’,” Fonda, 79, said, before adding: “What a disappoint­ment.

“He talked so beautifull­y of needing to meet the requiremen­ts of the climate treaty and to respect and hold to the treaties with indigenous people,” she said. “Such a heroic stance he took there and yet he has betrayed every one of the things he committed to in Paris.”

Fonda, on a trip organised by Greenpeace, is calling for a stop to pipelines and oil sands developmen­t.

“I guess the lesson is we shouldn’t be fooled by goodlookin­g liberals no matter how well-spoken they are,” she said.

Last year Mr Trudeau approved Kinder Morgan’s plans to triple the capacity of the Trans Mountain pipeline from Alberta to the Pacific Coast, as well as replacing Enbridge’s Line Three to Wisconsin.

But he also pushed ahead with a national carbon price and rejected Enbridge’s Northern Gateway project to northwest British Columbia, which would pass through the Great Bear Rainforest.

Mr Trudeau’s Liberal Party government is trying to balance the oil industry’s desire to tap new markets in Asia against the concerns of environmen­talists.

Fonda, a two-time Oscar winner for best actress, is the latest celebrity to visit and express concerns about the Alberta oil sands.

Actor Leonardo Dicaprio and Hollywood film director James Cameron have also visited.

But Alberta premier Rachel Notley said Fonda was using her celebrity to promote ill-informed informatio­n.

She said Fonda should not lecture oil workers about getting jobs elsewhere and added that it was “tone deaf” for her to visit Fort Mcmurray, Alberta, so soon after devastatin­g wildfires that destroyed 2,400 homes and buildings.

Ms Notley, who leads the left-leaning New Democratic Party, added that Alberta had a plan that made the province a climate leader in North America.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom