Calgary Herald

Green leadership hopefuls challenge anti-oilpatch image

-

EDMONTON Kermit the Frog sang It’s Not Easy Being Green, and candidates running to be leader of the Green party of Alberta might relate.

At a time when the province’s oil industry is still struggling to recover from a slump and many blame environmen­talists for blocking new pipeline projects, one of the party ’s leadership candidates says some believe the provincial Greens want to shut the oilsands down.

“I think that’s definitely a mispercept­ion that we need to try to correct,” said Brian Deheer from Lac La Biche, one of two candidates hoping to be chosen leader this weekend.

The party’s official policy calls for a “moratorium on developmen­t of additional tarsands projects” until the impact of existing and approved projects can be studied. It also says the party “opposes the approval and constructi­on or expansion of any pipeline” for transporti­ng Alberta bitumen.

Deheer, a music teacher who represente­d the Greens earlier this summer in a provincial byelection in Fort McMurray, said he was asked during that campaign if his chances were hurt because his party “wants to shut the oilsands down.”

“That’s not what this policy states and that’s not what, I would argue, the Green party is striving for. Certainly there are concerns that we have about the oilsands,” he said, adding he’d like to see more solar and wind power added to the province’s energy mix.

“The oilsands are here and they’re going to be here for a long time, but what role do we want that industry to play? What direction do we want as a province want to pursue?”

Cheryle Chagnon-Greyeyes, a leadership candidate from Calgary, said she’s encounteri­ng more curiosity about her party than hostility, adding many voters aren’t happy with the federal government’s recent purchase of the Trans Mountain pipeline project.

Chagnon- Greyeyes said she, too, is in favour of studying green energy options, but stressed Alberta also needs to keep its bitumen processing jobs in Alberta.

“I drive a car ... I know we need oil at this point in time,” said Chagnon-Greyeyes. “I’m saying it can be done in a better way, a smarter way, a more environmen­tally conscious way that respects Indigenous communitie­s.”

The Green party has never won a seat provincial­ly or federally in Alberta.

As part of the leadership campaign, the party recently asked the candidates where they stood on the moratorium and pipeline policy.

Neither candidate in their responses referred to the oil reserves in northern Alberta as “tarsands,” the term that’s used in the policy and favoured by some environmen­talists.

Both Deheer and Chagnon-Greyeyes said that, instead of pipelines, they favour a transport system where heavy crude oil is transforme­d into pill-sized pellets.

The technique, according to advocates, creates self-sealing balls of bitumen of various sizes that can then be moved in coal rail cars or transport trucks with less risk of environmen­tally harmful spills, thus reducing the need for new pipelines.

“It makes pipelines obsolete. We can make do with what we’ve got now as far as pipelines go. But why aren’t we bringing those jobs here in the province and producing oil right here?” Chagnon-Greyeyes said.

Party members will vote for the new leader on Saturday.

I drive a car ... I know we need oil at this point in time. I’m saying it can be done in a better way, a smarter way, a more environmen­tally conscious way.

 ?? TIJANA MARTIN ?? Green party of Alberta leadership candidate Cheryle Chagnon-Greyeyes says her party encounters more curiosity than hostility.
TIJANA MARTIN Green party of Alberta leadership candidate Cheryle Chagnon-Greyeyes says her party encounters more curiosity than hostility.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada