Montreal Gazette

Adjusting the climate change conversati­on

Alberta project seeks common language

- BOB WEBER

EDMONTON • Mentioning climate change can kill a conversati­on. But a new Alberta project is using the topic to start one — and is showing people from geologists to farmers to environmen­talists that they have more in common than they thought.

“Climate change has become quite a polarized issue and it often falls down the line of identity,” said Amber Bennett of Climate Outreach, one of the organizers of the Alberta Narratives Project, which released its final report this month.

“Communicat­ion has a big role to play because it can help broaden that and talk to people about what they care about rather than asking them to be different than who they are.”

Talk about global warming can raise temperatur­es anywhere. But in Alberta — where oil drives the economic bus and climate skepticism is strong — opinions may be held more firmly.

“Alberta is a different beast,” said organizer JuliaMaria Becker of the energy think-tank Pembina Institute.

The project — supported by 75 organizati­ons including government, foundation­s, universiti­es, churches and industry — is attempting to find a way for different people to at least talk, if not agree. Too often, said Becker, people are afraid to even mention climate change.

“People don’t feel comfortabl­e the moment they start talking about this. They get shut down because they feel they are going to offend someone.”

Or they get defensive. Oilpatch workers, Becker said, often take personally suggestion­s their industry is “dirty.”

To get past that, the project used a method developed in the United Kingdom. It convened 55 meetings across the province with a total of 482 people. Each group had something in common. There were meet- ings for church-goers, engineers and geologists, schoolchil­dren, farmers, women, business leaders, oilfield workers, immigrants, parents, environmen­talists and small-c conservati­ves.

Group leaders presented participan­ts with five “stories” about Alberta — five- or six-paragraph sketches that presented climate change within contexts from provincial pride to future generation­s to ethics. Participan­ts discussed which parts they liked and which they didn’t.

The common bond within the group made people more willing to speak.

“People feel like they are with others who they already know and trust,” Bennett said.

Opinions varied widely, said Becker. The point was not to develop policy but to find language that everyone felt comfortabl­e using.

“This is not convincing people about policies. It’s about having conversati­ons about options.”

People loved it, she said. Sessions often ran late.

“It seems like we found something for which there is a hunger.”

One thing the project found was that people are tired of bluster. “Alberta First” rhetoric rolled as many eyes as “Shut the Tarsands.”

“The language comes across as too politic-y, not authentic or genuine,” said Bennett. “People wanted language that isn’t so carefully worded and sterilized, but language we use in our everyday conversati­on.

“People wanted a sense of acknowledg­ment that this is hard and it’s going to be hard.”

Recognitio­n was universal that Alberta owes much to its energy industry, as was a love of the province’s outdoors. People agreed weather is changing and the province needs to prepare. Everyone feared Alberta has too many eggs in one economic basket.

There’s more to life in Alberta than money, people said. And we all need to talk.

The project has already spawned spinoffs to keep the conversati­on going, including corporate retreats and book clubs.

 ?? NATI HARNIK / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? With climate change becoming a severely polarizing subject, especially in Alberta, a new project supported by government, foundation­s, universiti­es, churches and industry is attempting to find a way for different people to talk about common concerns.
NATI HARNIK / THE CANADIAN PRESS With climate change becoming a severely polarizing subject, especially in Alberta, a new project supported by government, foundation­s, universiti­es, churches and industry is attempting to find a way for different people to talk about common concerns.

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