Calgary Herald

Notley pushes new oilsands agenda in D.C.

Alberta’s environmen­tal reputation changing for the better, premier says

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

Alberta’s new premier began her campaign to rehabilita­te the reputation of her province’s oilsands in the United States, where it was battered by the debate over the Keystone XL pipeline.

Rachel Notley walked a Washington audience through the climatecha­nge measures taken by her NDP government; she also described her province as home to nature lovers who care about the environmen­t and being good global citizens.

“I’m sure you’ve heard a lot about our province, especially the oilsands,” Notley told an audience from Johns Hopkins University on Thursday.

“Quite frankly, it is possible some of it might not have been very positive. But I am proud to say that over the course of the last year, since my government has been in office, Alberta’s environmen­tal reputation has started to change. And, I believe, change for the better.”

Opposition to the oilsands grew during the years-long Keystone debate, as it went from relative anonymity among the U.S. public to becoming protesters’ preferred poster child for the high-carbon economy. Notley said previous Conservati­ve government­s in Ottawa and Edmonton didn’t help matters by foot-dragging on the climate file.

In an interview, she explained the goal for her three-day U.S. visit was to start changing perception­s.

She told audiences about her NDP government’s $30-a-tonne carbon tax, her plan to phase out coal, and the 100 million-tonne cap on oilsands emissions that she said is one-third of some previous long-term emissions projection­s and that will force the industry to innovate if it wants to grow.

There’s one point she didn’t emphasize: that neither Alberta’s efforts, nor the federal government’s, would at this point help Canada meet its emissions targets.

Alberta’s emissions would not actually decline under her plan — just grow slower than previously projected.

The premier said she knows perception­s won’t change overnight.

She’s meeting on this trip with a White House environmen­tal official; the head of the Center for American Progress, a prominent progressiv­e think-tank that opposed Keystone XL; and the Republican head of the Senate energy committee.

“If I leave here with people going, ‘Oh, isn’t Alberta doing something that maybe we should take a look at, maybe even learn from, and they’re kind of doing the right stuff now,’ then that’s a win,” she said in an interview Thursday.

“I think we have an important, important story to tell. And it’s not just a story. That’s the new thing. It’s real. We have significan­t action we’re taking on climate change.”

She stressed how important the oil industry is to her province’s economy. She told the Johns Hopkins audience that it’s responsibl­e for one-sixth of Alberta jobs.

Notley did not use her trip, however, to promote future oil pipelines.

She was asked whether she hoped her efforts would help gain approval for some future version of Keystone XL. She said that’s not her focus now.

The issue could resurface after the current U.S. presidenti­al election.

Both Republican candidates support the pipeline cancelled by U.S. President Barack Obama. The Democrats both oppose it.

“I’m not a big fan of hypothetic­al questions,” she told The Canadian Press.

Asked about the pipeline debates back home, she said she has no interest in letting them strain national unity.

Notley said she intends to have a respectful conversati­on based on the facts, allowing both sides of the issue to have their views heard.

Ongoing pipeline proposals have caused tension with neighbouri­ng B.C., become a hot topic for the Parti Quebecois and prompted Saskatchew­an’s premier to express annoyance with Quebec.

Notley said she’ll avoid fingerpoin­ting.

“Canada is a collection of provinces. Historical­ly some people play that feature off against one another. I don’t think that’s typically resulted in progress,” she said.

“It is not in any way, shape or form the appropriat­e frame for this conversati­on. And we’re not going to do that with it.”

 ?? CLIFF OWEN/AP PHOTO ?? Alberta Premier Rachel Notley answers a question following her address to an audience from Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced Internatio­nal Studies in Washington on Thursday.
CLIFF OWEN/AP PHOTO Alberta Premier Rachel Notley answers a question following her address to an audience from Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced Internatio­nal Studies in Washington on Thursday.

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