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OP-ED: Stand up for Alberta energy and against baseless “greenwashing” accusations

By now, most Albertans who pay even a little attention to the news as it relates to our best-in-the-world energy sector have heard about former Liberal environment minister Catherine McKenna’s baseless accusations that the energy industry is “greenwashing” and isn’t serious about improving practices to achieve low emissions. 

McKenna now possesses a title so long in her climate role with the United Nations (UN), that it well matches her pretentious comments insulting our energy industry. Like any good old Liberal eco-radical, her out-of-touch remarks reek of elitism, as she boards jet planes to talk about saving the planet. Give us a break. 

Here, at Alberta Proud, we want every Albertan to know what McKenna and her ilk think about us. In this day and age of social media, ‘here today and gone tomorrow’ may be the mantra of this modern world, but this pattern of looking down on our energy sector and doing anything to undermine it cannot be taken lightly.

We are asking Albertans to get loud and get Alberta Proud in standing up for our energy sector. Enough is enough and we have to stop tip-toeing around these eco-radical mistruths. They hurt our energy workers, our economy and our nation as a whole. 

To say we are proud of the tech innovations that are taking place in our energy sector is an understatement. We have some of the world’s lowest GHG intensity natural gas production, which helps reduce global environmental impact. We have tremendous investment into carbon capture technology and methane detection and we need to continue to attract global investors in order to move forward with decarbonization projects. 

We are also proud of our industry leaders for putting their boxing gloves on and standing up to McKenna’s absurd comments. These leaders include Lisa Baiton, the president and CEO of the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers.

If you read McKenna’s eco-radical piece, I equally encourage you to read Baiton’s response, in an op-ed printed by Troy Media on March 1, 2023: Catherine McKenna’s attack against Canada’s energy sector irresponsible and oblivious to the world’s energy challenges

Baiton hit back on McKenna for the negative impact of using the sensationalized term “greenwashing”: “billions of dollars in industry capital are currently invested and designated to be invested in carbon capture and other clean technologies. Dismissing this as “greenwashing” ignores real investment, cooperation between industry and governments, and pragmatic climate solutions.” 

Global demand of 101.7 million barrels of oil per day is only going to continue to climb. In order to meet global energy demands, the world needs stable and reliable oil production. It only makes sense for Canada to increase oil production, given that we adhere to some of the highest ethical and environmental standards in the world. 

Putting Canada in the driver’s seat not only protects global energy insecurity, it will lead us toward lower global emissions – as we are a leader in employing clean tech solutions to reach our low emissions goal even faster. 

Gregory Tobin of the Canada Strong and Proud Network maybe put it best in his recent True North op-ed, pleading with our global leaders to get off despot oil and onto responsibly-produced Canadian LNG: “We need a government that sees Canada and its bounty of resources as a solution to global economic turmoils … A strong, richer, more prosperous Canada will lead to a safer world – let’s make it happen for Ukraine’s sake.”

The secret is out: the energy industry cares about the environment and about winning the race to low emissions. It’s going to be done through investment in clean tech, partnerships with our Indigenous Canadians and getting our political leaders to see that the answer to improving our climate lies right here with our best-in-the-world Canadian energy, our Alberta energy.

Lindsay Wilson is the President of Alberta Proud.

OP-ED: Which government will stand up for more Alberta, less Ottawa?

If there’s one thing most of us can agree on, it’s that this federal government has a major spending problem. And when the task of renewing a passport becomes an arduous endeavour that takes months and months to achieve, it begs the question: can we rely on this government to accomplish anything at all in a timely or cost-effective manner? 

Here at Alberta Proud – the grassroots, all-things-Alberta machine that advocates for lower taxes, accountable politicians and our best-in-the-world energy – we are seeing everyday Albertans getting increasingly fed up with the disappointment being dished out by the federal government. 

Whenever we bring up dialogue around “More Alberta, Less Ottawa,” it’s met with rally cries of support. As the feds continue to print money due to reckless government spending, as grocery prices hit double-digit increases in the last year, and more than 60 per cent of Canadians are struggling to put food on the table – can you really blame any reasonable person for not trusting the federal government anymore?

We are all impacted by it, from every item we purchase to every bill we pay, including our mortgages and rents.

Recently, some disturbing Statistics Canada numbers have indicated that only 40 per cent of Canadians trust the media and less than that trust Parliament. Just this week marked the ninth Liberal MP since 2015 to be found guilty of breaching government ethics. It’s a disappointingly high number that no doubt directly correlates to the tanking of trust in this Trudeau government and a rise in Canadians tuning in to alternative media. 

Here in Alberta, we have been through a global crash in energy prices, all the while the federal government has had their hands out for equalization pay. Albertans feel a disconnect from Ottawa and are angered when Trudeau and his team make impactful decisions without proper consultation. 

Premier Danielle Smith largely won a leadership race based on her promise to stand up for Alberta and stand up to Trudeau. 

All Sovereignty Act semantics aside, the peanut gallery is pretty silent on challenging the concept of standing up to Ottawa’s overreach on such issues as firearms legislation, internet censorship, fertilizer restrictions that would decimate our farming industry, warning labels to put a bad rap on our best-in-the-world beef and the latest and greatest Just Transition plan – laying the federal framework to “transition” our energy workers away from our oilsands and toward “green energy jobs” aka unemployment.

While Premier Smith and the UCP have pushed back with a strong, and eminently true stance that the world needs more oil and gas jobs, and that we have everything right here to become a global supplier for our allies, Albertans are rightly concerned that the federal government could move ahead with this eco-radical agenda without considering the devastating impacts on not only our province, but the rest of the country and the world. 

What’s even more alarming is that a tough provincial election is only months away and the Rachel Notley-led NDP have remained silent on standing up for our hardworking energy workers.

Oil prices are now soaring, global demand for our best-in-the-world energy is rising, Alberta has made record debt payments and our credit rating is rising. Our other industries are booming, including agriculture, aviation, financial services, petrochemicals, technology and innovation and tourism. 

And we have to ask ourselves, would the NDP policy agenda keep that going, or would it disrupt it all in the name of an ideology?

Meanwhile, the UCP continues to forge ahead with concrete plans to reform our healthcare system, tackle both rural and inner city crime, as well as shout from the rooftops that Alberta is open for business and foster investment and job growth across the industry spectrum.

Will it be enough to restore general trust in the government for the voters? Time will tell, but it’s encouraging to see this government directly address some of the most important issues to Albertans. 

Lindsay Wilson is the President of Alberta Proud

OP-ED: The “Just Transition” is injustice to Albertans

Source: pm.gc.ca

As the Justin Trudeau Liberals continue to crusade their eco-radicalism, Albertans are met with perhaps the biggest slap in the face yet. 

Just last week, Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson announced the federal government’s intentions to roll out “Just Transition” legislation over the coming weeks. The plan is to replace high-paying jobs in the energy sector with “green jobs” such as solar panel installation techs. 

Stemming from the 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change, it’s being touted by Trudeau and his team as a “sustainable” and “forward-thinking” plan where “any losses will be compensated.”  While the early buzzwords are unsurprisingly vague, it is clear this plan is certainly not “just” and is most definitely another attack on the West.

These buzzwords and catch-phrases coming down the pipe are almost as ominous as their sources: the eco-radical Liberals who prove time and again that they have an agenda to demonize our best-in-the-world Canadian energy, our Alberta energy, and everyone who benefits from it.  

No wonder Alberta Premier Danielle Smith is biting back. And hard. Not since Trudeau senior’s National Energy Program (NEP) in 1980 have we seen such an outright attack on Alberta. But this time it’s far worse. While the NEP created a rift between Alberta and Ottawa that some feel is forever beyond repair, at least it was trying to build up our oilsands in order to take our wealth. 

Fast forward four decades, Just Transition is a plan to entirely shut down our oilsands, and every single Albertan must be aware of how dangerous this legislation really is. 

Smith is holding nothing back and all of us at Alberta Proud applaud her for having the tenacity to stand up to Trudeau’s latest arrogance, which would end the Alberta Advantage once and for all. 

That’s the whole point of her hotly contested Alberta Sovereignty Act – which gives us the legal framework to fight back against federal chess moves that interfere with our provincial constitutional rights. And if the feds trouncing on our provincial jurisdiction over our own resources isn’t interference, I don’t know what is. 

Rightly so, Smith is standing her ground – Alberta has long been in the race toward low emissions through oil well remediation, hydrogen development and carbon capture or ‘carbon tech,’ where we have already been blazing the trail for a decade.

But fossil ideas require fossil solutions. The eco-radicals resort to “banning, blocking and barricading” and that is exactly what the early insights into Just Transition have revealed: a blatant desire of the Trudeau elites to keep our best-in-the-world Alberta energy in the ground. 

Don’t forget this approach has been the signature style for Environment Minister “Uneven” Steven Guilbeault, the former head of eco-radical group Equiterre, who illegally scaled then-premier Ralph Klein’s house to install solar panels as part of a bizarre anti-oil stunt. 

While Alberta Environment Minister Sonya Savage is calling on Trudeau to drop the name “Just Transition,” we say, keep it! Don’t let Trudeau hide behind semantics from what this plan really is: a plan to destroy our oilsands and stick it to Alberta. It’s another attack on the West, like trying to stick surgeon general-style warning labels on our Alberta beef, or decimating our farming industry with planned fertilizer reductions that will starve out the nation. 

And so 2023 begins with shots fired on Alberta.

Lindsay Wilson is the President of Alberta Proud.

GUEST OP-ED: Public sentiment is now shifting against latest Trudeau gun laws

As the Alberta government readies to rumble with Ottawa over standing up for our province and the people in it, the Trudeau government is certainly demonstrating gross federal overreach with what is believed to be the largest gun ban in Canadian history, leaving little confusion over why Albertans are getting amped up over autonomy.

Trudeau’s Bill C-21 is creating a firestorm among hunters, sportsmen and associations from across the country. It began as a ban on “military-grade” assault-style firearms – black guns. Then the feds turned their sights to legally-obtained handguns. And now the revisions made will impact thousands of rifles and shotguns that are “low-powered, slow to fire and only ever designed to shoot birds, deer or skeet.”

While some Canadians could see merit in the banning of “military-style assault rifles,” in light of our country’s deadliest mass shooting – the April 2020 rampage in Truro, Nova Scotia that claimed the lives of 22 innocents and injured three others until the RCMP shot the gunman – the scales of public sentiment on the current ban have seemingly tipped against Trudeau and his Ministers.

Unlike our southern neighbours, gun culture in Canada is more subdued and has a strong history of reasonable legislation. But get in the way of a northerner on his or her annual moose hunt or Sunday outing to fill the freezer with deer? Look out. That is a sure-fire way to ruffle some Canuck feathers.

Even Montreal Canadiens goalie Carey Price is speaking out against this draconian gun grab, taking to Twitter to tell fellow Canadians that Trudeau is out of line, with hunting rifle in hand, sporting camo garb: “What Justin Trudeau is trying to do is unjust. I support the Canadian Coalition for Firearms Rights to keep my hunting tools.”

Ironically, maybe it takes a hockey goalie to be the hero and defend common sense from our attention-seeking selfie-king prime minister, instead of hundreds of thousands of law-abiding gun owners in protest.

Trudeau now says he is “listening to concerns” over the impacts of the ban on hunting rifles. Sadly, if we look at his seven-year track record of listening – nothing built, back or better – this too is probably just poli-speak. But perhaps like his failed attack on Alberta beef, we could see the prime minister fold a bit.

Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba have made it clear they do not support the federal push, with potentially more provinces to join. And while Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino wags his finger at them and calls their pushback “reckless” and “political stunting,” it’s pretty tough for even the greatest gun opponents to argue their reasons for opposition.

These opposing provinces maintain that they won’t take part in the buyback program because they don’t have the RCMP resources to waste on harassing duck hunters, that the ban is virtue signalling and that law-abiding gun owners are being unfairly made to look like criminals. All of which are fair and truthful reasons to oppose the gun grab.

But if more provinces join the ranks of opposition at this latest measure of federal government overreach, how far will the feds get with this anyways? More importantly, why wouldn’t the feds listen to provincial voices of dissent if this is really a democracy?

It’s the same old story, where you can bet a lot of these pencil pushers in Ottawa have never protected a herd from a predator, fed their family by the grace of a bountiful November hunt or engaged in a family tradition like a Saturday afternoon at the gun range.

They just don’t get it.  And perhaps they never will.

Safe to say from our perspective at Alberta Proud, it just lends more to the winning argument that we need more Alberta and less Ottawa.

Never forget, once we give government an inch, they will always take a country mile. And it looks like Trudeau is putting an ultra marathon feather in his cap over this one.

Lindsay Wilson is President of Alberta Proud.

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