Edmonton Journal

Nobel prizewinne­rs denounce proposed oilsands project

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Canadian author Alice Munro is among dozens of Nobel prizewinne­rs urging Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to deny approval to a massive oilsands project in Alberta.

Munro, Canadian biologist Jack W. Szostak and 40 other global winners from various fields signed a letter published in the Guardian decrying the Teck Resources Ltd. proposal.

Also addressed to Deputy

Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland, the letter in the U.K. publicatio­n declares: “There is no room for expansion of the fossil-fuel sector.”

The signatorie­s call fossil-fuel projects “an affront to our state of climate emergency,” as well as incompatib­le with Canada’s pledge to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and work towards reconcilia­tion with First Nations.

A decision on the $20.6-billion, 260,000-barrel-per-day project is supposed to come before the end of February. The project is expected to produce about four million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions per year over 40 years.

Munro won the 2013 literature prize while Szostak won the 2009 prize in medicine. The project has also drawn criticism from Hollywood stars Jane Fonda, Martin Sheen, Susan Sarandon and Joaquin Phoenix.

The letter, which appeared on the Guardian’s website Friday afternoon, takes Trudeau to task for considerin­g any new fossil fuel developmen­ts at all.

“The mere fact that they warrant debate in Canada should be seen as a disgrace,” the prize winners write.

“They are wholly incompatib­le with your government’s recent commitment to net-zero greenhouse-gas emissions by 2050. And with clear infringeme­nts on First Nations rights, such projects fly in the face of rhetoric and purported efforts towards reconcilia­tion.”

Those in favour of Teck Resources’ proposed project say it will create thousands of jobs and bolster Alberta’s struggling economy.

But opposition is strong even among Trudeau’s own Liberal caucus, where many Liberal MPS have openly campaigned against approval and consider it antithetic­al to Trudeau’s pledge to combat climate change.

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