Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

'Intimidating:' Alberta's Energy War Room Singles Out Climate Campaigner

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Dec, 2019 02:38 AM

    Steven Lee has spoken in hundreds of classrooms around the country about challenges for today's young people posed by everything from genetic engineering to artificial intelligence to climate change.

     

    But it wasn't until he gave a talk in Airdrie, Alta., just north of Calgary, that his message drew the attention of a government agency — Alberta's so-called "war room."

     

    "I'm a reporter with the Canadian Energy Centre," the phone message said.

     

    "Our website is launching next week and we will be writing a story about the 3% Project, which has raised concerns among some parents who reached out to us following presentations at their children's schools."

     

    Lee had just become perhaps the first person scrutinized by the centre, a $30-million government-funded operation intended to correct what it sees as misinformation about the province's energy industry. It recently opened its office in downtown Calgary.

     

    "Government cracking down on you — I wasn't quite sure what to make of that," Lee said.

     

    "A few individual parents angry with what I'm saying is understandable. But when a government agency formally and officially approaches you and your work, that is intimidating."

     

    Lee, 25, is a longtime activist who began the Foundation for Environmental Stewardship in 2012. The 3% Project is the group's main effort.

     

    It seeks to build consensus for climate change action by speaking to a million students, about three per cent of Canada's population. Although climate is a major focus of Lee's talks, his goal is to get students thinking broadly about the world they will graduate into, he said.

     

    "It's not just climate change. We're looking at artificial intelligence, automation, cybersecurity, genetic engineering. These are all global and systemic problems and this is something my generation will need to grapple with."

     

    In an hour-long video of a presentation to a Calgary high school, Alberta's oilsands are not mentioned.

     

    Although Lee took out $60,000 in personal debt and lived in his car for two months before he got backers for the project, it is now funded by several private Canadian foundations and corporations with support from the federal and New Brunswick governments.

     

    He has spoken to more than 400 high schools and 83 universities and colleges.

     

    On Dec. 10, an article appeared on the energy centre's website titled: "Alberta father irked by charity group that targets fossil fuel industry." It quoted a father concerned that Lee's presentation was one-sided. It also claimed inaccuracies in the group's materials, available on its website.

     

    Those materials quote an International Monetary Fund working paper that found Canada subsidizes its fossil fuel industry by about $46 billion a year.

     

    The centre pointed out that a working paper does not represent an official IMF position. It also questioned the credibility of the figure, quoting other studies that set the subsidy level closer to $3 billion.

     

    In an email to The Canadian Press, a co-author of the paper said his work had been fully peer reviewed within the IMF. Ian Parry also explained his subsidy figure was high because it included environmental and social costs as well as direct subsidies — a completely different measure than that used by the centre for comparison.

     

    "Broadly speaking, our estimates of environmental costs are in line with those of other studies," Parry wrote.

     

    The centre also questioned a quote from a 2013 study in Lee's material that concluded the fossil fuel industry spent $558 million between 2003 and 2010 on climate change denial. Its story said the study really showed most of that funding came from conservative foundations, not industry.

     

    The centre didn't mention that the study found funding for those foundations — which is untraceable — increased at the same time industry stopped directly funding climate change denial.

     

    "The correspondence is suggestive of an effort to conceal funding of (denial)," the paper states.

     

    Centre spokesman Grady Semmens, who said staff are not advised to call themselves reporters, defended the article.

     

    "The information addressed in our story is based on our review of the group’s publicly available handbook, information on their website and the concerns highlighted by the parents we spoke to," he said.

     

    Lee said his plans won't change as a result of the war room's attention, or dozens of hate messages and death threats he has received — most of them from Alberta. He is scheduled to speak again in the province in January.

     

    He notes that most of the points raised in the centre's article are familiar — that Canada's percentage of global emissions is small and that Canadian companies are world leaders in clean energy.

     

    "Most of them were very common tactics that people use against climate change messaging. I found it slightly surprising and disappointing that a $30-million war room, all they could pull off was the normal messaging everyone else already does."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Sister Of Richmond Homicide Victim Michael Thompson Asks For Help From Public

    The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT) is requesting public assistance to further its ongoing investigation into the homicide of Michael Thompson.

    Sister Of Richmond Homicide Victim Michael Thompson Asks For Help From Public

    Surrey RCMP Searching For Missing 50-Year-Old Man Sasha Bankovic Last Seen In Whalley

    Surrey RCMP is requesting the public’s assistance in locating a missing male.

    Surrey RCMP Searching For Missing 50-Year-Old Man Sasha Bankovic Last Seen In Whalley

    BC Government Tells ICBC To Delay 2020 Insurance Rate Application Until February

    In December 2018, ICBC announced that it was asking for a 6.3% increase to basic insurance rates. The British Columbia Utilities Commission (BCUC) gave their approval in January 2019.  

    BC Government Tells ICBC To Delay 2020 Insurance Rate Application Until February

    New DriveBC Webcams Help Travellers ‘Know Before They Go’

    People can better prepare for their travels thanks to the 30 new cameras and 71 more views added to the DriveBC webcam network in 2019.    

    New DriveBC Webcams Help Travellers ‘Know Before They Go’

    Social Media Claims Not Reported: Abbotsford Police

    Social Media Claims Not Reported: Abbotsford Police
    Over the past two weeks, the Abbotsford Police has observed social media posts that may cause alarm in our community.  These posts include that there have been attempted abductions, a sex ring group operating in Abbotsford, and strangers attempting to get into citizen-occupied vehicles.  

    Social Media Claims Not Reported: Abbotsford Police

    VIDEO: Two Suspects Arrested After Allegedly Assaulting Nine Kelowna Secondary Students And Ramming Their Vehicle

    Kelowna RCMP have arrested two individuals following an alleged assault with a weapon committed in East Kelowna on Tuesday.    

    VIDEO: Two Suspects Arrested After Allegedly Assaulting Nine Kelowna Secondary Students And Ramming Their Vehicle