Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alberta To Hold $2.5-million Public Inquiry Into Funding For Oil And Gas Foes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Jul, 2019 09:57 PM
  • Alberta To Hold $2.5-million Public Inquiry Into Funding For Oil And Gas Foes

CALGARY - The Alberta government will hold a public inquiry into environmental groups that it says have been bankrolled by foreign benefactors hell-bent on keeping Canada's oil and gas from reaching new markets while letting oil production grow unabated in the Middle East and the United States.

 

"They often say that sunlight is the best disinfectant. This public inquiry will be sunlight on the activities of this campaign," Premier Jason Kenney said Thursday.

 

"It will investigate all of the national and international connections, follow the money trail and expose all of the interests involved."

 

He said the inquiry — with a budget of $2.5-million — will find out if any laws have been broken and recommend any appropriate legal and policy action.

 

"Most importantly, it will serve notice that Alberta will no longer allow hostile interest groups to dictate our economic destiny as one of the most ethical major producers of energy in the world."

 

Steve Allan, a forensic and restructuring accountant with more than 40 years of experience, has been named inquiry commissioner.

 

Allan's ability to compel witness testimony and records is limited to Alberta.

 

But Justice Minister Doug Schweitzer said much of the information Allan will need is publicly available and he'll be able to travel outside Alberta to gather more.

 

The first phase of the inquiry is to focus on fact finding, with public hearings to follow if necessary. Allan is to deliver his final report to the government in a year.

 

Opposition NDP member Deron Bilous said the inquiry is the equivalent of hiring someone to do a glorified Google search.

 

"This is a fool's errand," he said.

 

"I don't believe this will help Alberta further its interests in accessing pipelines and expanding our market access."

 

Kenney said deep-pocketed U.S. charities have been deliberately trying to landlock Alberta resources for years by funnelling money to an array of Canadian groups. Many of his assertions are based on the writings of Vancouver researcher Vivian Krause.

 

He blames those groups for the demise of several coast-bound pipelines that would have helped oilsands crude get to markets besides the U.S., as well as delays in building the Trans Mountain expansion to the west coast.

 

Krause said earlier this week that while the U.S. energy industry has benefited from anti-Canada "demarketing" campaigns, she has found no evidence commercial interests are involved.

 

She and Kenney both agreed it's because Canada is an easy target.

 

"We're very easy to pit against each other — Quebec, the West," Krause said.

 

Kenney said Canada has been the kid in the school yard most easy to bully.

 

"I think they understood that this country amongst all of the major energy producers would be the most easily intimidated by this campaign," he said. "And you know what? They were right."

 

Prominent environmentalist Tzeporah Berman likened the inquiry to a "witch hunt" meant to silent dissent.

 

"It weakens our democracy and attempts to scare citizens from engaging in the debate on issues critical to our economy and a safe climate," she wrote on Twitter.

 

Berman has been involved the Tar Sands Campaign against oilsands expansion — often cited by Krause and Kenney as an example of a concerted U.S.-funded effort to meddle in Alberta's energy sector.

 

"The mistake Vivian Krause and Premier Kenney make is thinking that it's one campaign. It's not," Berman said in an interview last month. "It's dozens of campaigns. If it's anything, it's a movement or movements."

 

Berman said Krause has concocted a "reverse David and Goliath battle."

 

"Canada is a very small drop in the bucket for global philanthropic dollars on climate change," she said. "(Krause's) data is wrong and the fact that Kenney has just accepted it is insane."

MORE National ARTICLES

7th Homicide Of 2019: Man, 20, Dead After Shooting In Brampton, Peel Police Appealing For Witnesses

On Tuesday June 18, 2019 at approximately 10:45 p.m. Peel Regional Police responded to a 911 call in the area of Orenda Court and McCallum Court in Brampton. 

7th Homicide Of 2019: Man, 20, Dead After Shooting In Brampton, Peel Police Appealing For Witnesses

Teen Killed By Fallen Tree At Camp In B.C., Another Person In Hospital

SOOKE, B.C. — One teenager has died and another is in critical but stable condition after a tree fell on at least one of them at a camp near the Vancouver Island community of Sooke, B.C.

Teen Killed By Fallen Tree At Camp In B.C., Another Person In Hospital

Protests, Legal Challenges Planned To Block Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion

Opponents of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion are preparing for a long summer of legal challenges and protests aimed at blocking the project from being built.

Protests, Legal Challenges Planned To Block Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion

B.C. Files Second Legal Challenge Against Alberta Over Turn-Off-Taps Law

VANCOUVER — The British Columbia government has filed a second lawsuit against Alberta over its turn-off-the-taps legislation.

B.C. Files Second Legal Challenge Against Alberta Over Turn-Off-Taps Law

Budget Watchdog Says Cost To Match One Of Trump's Business Tax Cuts Is $37B

Budget Watchdog Says Cost To Match One Of Trump's Business Tax Cuts Is $37B
Parliament's spending watchdog is putting new numbers to the cost of matching recent U.S. business-tax changes, pegging the price to the federal treasury at more than double government estimates.

Budget Watchdog Says Cost To Match One Of Trump's Business Tax Cuts Is $37B

Trial Hears Man Shot At Least Nine Times By Manitoba RCMP Officer

Trial Hears Man Shot At Least Nine Times By Manitoba RCMP Officer
THOMPSON, Man. — The manslaughter trial of an RCMP officer in northern Manitoba heard a man was shot at least nine times by the constable.    

Trial Hears Man Shot At Least Nine Times By Manitoba RCMP Officer