Monday, December 7, 2009

'Dirty' image puts Canada in doghouse at Copenhagen

The country “is the dirty old man of the climate world,” according to a recent Guardian article. Another prominent article published ahead of the Copenhagen climate-change summit called it a “corrupt petro-state.” Various diplomats and scientists have rallied for its expulsion from international organizations.

China? Venezuela or an oil-stained African state? 

 

Try Canada!


Almost 200 countries will attend the Copenhagen conference, which starts Monday, but few of them will roll in with a more blackened image.

Among the international carbon-reduction negotiators, Canada is seen as part of the problem, not part of the solution, partly because its greenhouse emissions under the soon-to-expire Kyoto Protocol soared when they were supposed to go in the opposite direction, and because the proposed new cuts are relatively small.

But it was the turbo-charged expansion of the Alberta oil sands, one of the single biggest sources of planet-warming carbon dioxide emissions, that truly vilified Canada.

 

Climate-change scientists and negotiators think Canada's desire to protect the oil sands more than offsets any desire to push hard for success in Copenhagen.

“The oil sands are an extremely dirty source of energy and I'm sure this has a major role in determining Canada's position,” said Kim Carstensen, the Dane who leads the WWF International's climate-change work and was a member his country's delegation to the 1992 Rio de Janeiro Earth Summit, Copenhagen's spiritual father.

Canada's per-person greenhouse gas emissions are among the world's highest, which should not come as a surprise, given the country's cold temperatures, long distances and vast (though shrinking) industrial base. What shocks some countries is Canada's response to Kyoto. When it ratified the treaty in 2002, then Prime Minister Jean Chrétien vowed that Canada would reduce emissions by 6 per cent by 2012 over the 1990 base year. They are up 26 per cent or more instead.“Canada did not take its Kyoto obligations seriously, particularly under Stephen Harper, and that goes against Canada's image,” said Saleemul Huq, a lead author of the reports of the Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change, the United Nations scientific body that assesses climate change.

 

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has committed to a 20 per cent reduction by 2020, but from a new base year – 2006 – when the Canadian economy was on fire. In late 2007 Canada blocked a Commonwealth resolution to support binding emissions targets for industrialized countries.

A year later, environmental groups presented the country with the “Fossil of the Year” award for the country most disruptive of the climate-change talks in Poland. Last week, at the Commonwealth Summit in Trinidad and Tobago, Clare Short, Britain's former development secretary said, “Countries that fail to help [reduce global warming] should be suspended from membership, as are those that breach human rights.” She was referring to Canada.

 

Not everyone thinks Canada's shabby image is justified. Matthew Bateson, director of energy and climate for the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (whose members include B.C. Hydro and Canadian oil sands giant Suncor) says “It's unfair to paint Canada with a black brush.”

He notes that Canada is one of the world leaders in developing carbon capture and storage (CCS), a new technology that strips carbon dioxide from the flue gases of coal-burning plants or refineries and buries it underground. “CCS is one of the technologies needed to transition to a new, low-carbon economy and Canada is putting its money where its mouth is,” Mr. Bateson said.

Still, there is no doubt Canada will have a lot of explaining to do at the two-week-long Copenhagen summit and that much of its task lies in trying to dab green onto the grubby oil sands – or at least convincing others that the some green exists.

For a task that carries national and international implications, however, Canada's efforts have been decidedly low-key and ineffectual. To the public, Green peace campaigners have shaped the image of the oil sands.

Even some of Canada's respected business leaders acknowledge that they have fallen behind in the image campaign.

“The industry has to accept some responsibility,” said Murray Edwards, vice-chairman of oil sands miner Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. of Calgary “It has not been as pro-active as it should have been or could have been over the last decade in making sure the public understands the balance in the oil sands between the economy and the environment.”

One company, Cenovus Energy Inc., has bought TV spots aimed to show the benefits of its products. The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers delivers representatives to various debates to help shape the “conversation” and works to correct inaccuracies in anything written about the oil sands.

But even strong voices aren't getting much attention.

“This clearly has the hallmarks of being a situation in which the reputation is under siege and it needs to be managed,” said Niraj Dawar, a professor of marketing communications at the Richard Ivey School of Business. “A picture of a dead duck [1,606 died in an oil sands tailings pond] is far more powerful than the data or information that they can provide. What they need to come up with is pictures of their own.”

 

Others say the oil patch needs a complete rethink of its strategy.

28 comments:

  1. Very difficult to read text. Will revisit later.

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  2. We deserve a good slap and need to get with the programme.

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  3. had some difficulty reading it,but read most of it.don't know much about oil,but hopefully things will work itself out in restoring Canada's image.

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  4. Hey Frank yeah I just got in here and I literally have seen this place in Alberta it's all about the Tar Sands in Alberta as they hold the second largest reserve of oil and natural gas but....

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  5. Hi Parrie I just fixed it and saw this in my email...ironically this is very true and Canada does need to clean up and I thought I would post this as it's very true. Alberta became the richest province in Canada primarily due to what is known as the Tar Sands...

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  6. Karyn it's a wake up call for the government as they PM Harper and those before him just let this all go and the money made - well one would think that Canada is such a clean country and this really is a wake up call for the government and as well the companies although we are the 2nd to Saudi Arabia in the production. Now what do we do about the environment?

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  7. Not only Canada I would say ...

    But it came as a surprising statement, all along I percieved Canada's a clean country, well, that's how growth and development does ...

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  8. Tess Canada literally is due to one province called Alberta....Alberta thrived on the money it made, now it's time for some changes and many Canadians feel so as when this came out of recent I think it literally surprised most everyone. Canada is clean but one areas of Canada is very enviormentally dirty...it's a large large country the second largest in the world by land mass. So it's not all of Canada if you google or bing map of Canada you will see where Alberta is and all the other provinces.
    There are others countries however our government has not abided by some rules that are coming into place globally. This even surprised me.

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  9. Alberta needs to clean up there act.

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  10. We have our problems also...even with all the laws that have been passed to clean up our air the big oil refinery's still pollute our environment....there is no easy fix...

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  11. No Julie I don't think so, I think that some of this is overblown with the enviorment as before mankind, there were volcanoes and so forth and I think that we at least can try but I would tend to think that the war right now and the economy do come first but when I read this I have been there and to see the place it's the sized of almost all of California. If companies make money and profits then they should do something to ensure that there is at least somethings that are within place. Just my own thoughts as I was very surprised to read this when I arrived home this evening.

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  12. Yes Jack you are so right...there are so many other problems in this great big world of ours that are way more important and no easy fix for any of them....Have a great night....(smile)

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  13. And you as well Julie...smiling back at ya.

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  14. Well it all depends on what they are willing to give up-we need to look at hard facts and not lets blame someone for the climate change-and if you want my honest opinion about it there is very little in the overall skeem of thins that you can do about it anyway-unless you are ready to put a whole lot of people out of work-and have us all go back to the neanderthal age and live in caves-

    so playing the blame came is not in it for me-

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  15. I luv Canada! All the same I am not surprised. I had quite a few Canadian runners comment on the difference in air quality. It caught me off guard this past summer an I blogged about it. I shall see if I can find it.

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  16. Heidi I read this when I arrived home tonight and there are means that companies can do much better. It's not so much within the blaming it's within the realizing of what we are doing we will always be reliant on oil and gas but even if there is a small amount of measures that these companies do - then there is an effort that is worthwhile. Canada has always been seen as being so clean and yet our Prime Ministers as of yet observe the trend in making a few measure that could do even just a little better.

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  17. Sure Cinn, don't get me wrong Canada is great country and the air quality is great but I just thought I would post it as within Alberta it's always been noted as the oil capital yet with that all said, the means of how we harvest it could be improved.

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  18. April 27 trail running weekend. We do runs in Canada. I hope to do 30 k around the bay. I heard its beautiful!

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  19. there I agree with yoou-the problem is sand and shale oil is a knotty problem to solve like the problem with coal why aren't we on Plands back to stop producing soft coal what that does to the lungs is horrific-
    good blog by the way my friend

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  20. i have heard the old ones say that the gasses from volcano can heal the ozone and that the hurricane cleanses the oceans---the old ones say that nature will heal herself ------life is fluid and ever changing and growth brings new means of adaptation to surroundings---all natural---we are all dependent upon this planet for our lives and so i believe we all have a responsibility to even the smallest micro creation----all nations should understand that none of us is alone and yet all of us are alone in our decisions and our actions.....public transport and good rail systems---rather than "well groomed lawns" perhaps a few indigenous trees...small steps but forward moving.........gracias for reminding us all of a good dialog

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  21. Yes the problem is the that this is that this oil is not typical, it's harvested by way of the sand and shale oil is terrible. Heidi, while in Edmonton I never saw so many people with asthma and lung problems as you have said here and I would travel each morning to the Edmonton International and with all these people that were dressed up to go out of the rigs and where I had my home, I never saw so many that worked so hard and made very good money but health wise they I thought to myself where they would be in ten years from now. Coal there are so many places that still do. But the stats amazed me when I arrived home and read on this well are we going to go green or is it just a trend. Regardless Canada does not fair out that well and maybe this aspiration for a global green is a bit much - I am not sure...and not trying to be politically correct it is what it is and I still think that regardless we will always rely on oil and gas.

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  22. Si, volcanos emit much more and before we existed they did much more harm to the ozone layer. Before we were around there was much happening within the ozone. I still feel that this green peace thing has some merit but at the same time we can improve to some extent. Snow is ecologically correct I think : )

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  23. Its called trail running weekend posted April 27 I can copy the link tomorrow hugs

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