When I joined Amnesty International, it was because you fought for prisoners of conscience in dictatorial regimes. Today, you are fighting on the side of foreign billionaires ~~ Jason Kenney
I received a copy of a response sent by Alberta
Premier Jason Kenney, regarding Amnesty
International’s ridiculous attack on Alberta’s defence of energy jobs from the
foreign funded campaign to land-lock Canadian resources.
Kenney indicated
that amongst the world’s major energy producers, Canada has by far the highest
human rights, labour, and environmental standards. He went further in saying
that Amnesty International could not be more wrong in attacking Alberta’s
efforts to stand up to the foreign-funded campaign to block Canadian energy
exports.
Here is that response to the Canadian head of Amnesty International, Alex Neve:
Here is that response to the Canadian head of Amnesty International, Alex Neve:
Dear Mr. Neve,
Before responding to your open letter, titled Human rights concerns regarding
the Government of Alberta’s “Fight Back Strategy,” I would like to offer a note
of sympathy. Honestly, it can’t be easy being the long-time head of Amnesty
International Canada (AI), stuck in annoyingly free and peaceful Canada, having
to work yourself up into high dudgeon to denounce a democratically-elected
government peacefully standing up for its citizens.
On the other hand, your insistence that the burning human rights threat
in Canada right now is – to use your description – the “establishment of an
energy ‘war room’ devoted to defending the oil and gas industry in Alberta and
a public inquiry into the foreign funding of groups who oppose or criticize
energy developments in the province” can hardly pass unchallenged. Relentless
misinformed attacks against our oil and gas industry have cost us thousands of
jobs and hurt families from every region of our province. The cost in
investment and jobs has been incalculable. Our government won the largest
democratic mandate in Alberta history in part on a promise to stand up to those
attacks. I will not apologize for keeping that promise.
Again, I understand it must be hard for you. When you look around the
world and see the rise of authoritarian governments, civil war, human
trafficking, genocide, and other gross violations of human rights, it must be a
tall order to find something, anything to denounce here in our gelid but
placid Dominion.
You see your colleagues in the Kingdom of Saudi
Arabia standing up to a government that “severely restrict[s] the rights to
freedom of expression, association and assembly” and “extrajudicially executed”
and dismembered a prominent journalist (those are all quotes from the AI
country profile).
You see your counterparts in the Bolivarian
Republic of Venezuela facing a regime under which “hundreds of people were
arbitrarily detained” amid “reports of torture and other ill-treatment,
including sexual violence against demonstrators” and “the Attorney General was
dismissed under irregular circumstances.” (That last part rings a bell – you
might want to look into it.)
You see your confrères in Russia fighting “further
restrictions to the rights to freedom of expression, association and peaceful
assembly,” “harassment and persecution” of religious minorities, “torture,” and
a regime that systematically sabotages Western democracy, while your greatest
challenge is … a provincial government speaking out in defence of its economy
and in defiance of an active campaign against it.
This is a double pity. It can’t be much fun for you and, more seriously,
it undermines the credibility of what was once, and still could be, an
important organization.
As I have written before, when I joined Amnesty International as a
teenager it was to defend the rights of political dissidents like Andrei
Sakharov and to oppose totalitarian regimes like those currently in charge in
most major oil-producing countries. I am disappointed to see that you continue
to squander the moral authority accrued in those brave campaigns on smearing
the most responsible and rights respecting major oil-producer in the world.
There was a reason I singled Russia, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela for
comparison. They – along with Iran – would be major beneficiaries of a
moratorium on Canadian oil production.
No one will cheer your letter harder than Vladimir
Putin, the Houses of Saud and Al Thani, the caudillo Nicolás Maduro, and
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. OPEC’s oleo-gopolists will be chuckling from their
gilded palaces at your naïveté.
Demand for oil is not going away soon. Every credible estimate shows
several more decades of strong oil demand, and the world is going to get it
from somewhere. Shutting down Alberta’s oil industry means more global supply –
including much of the oil imported to Canada’s east coast – will be sourced
from the world’s worst human rights abusers, instead of from the most ethical
and best-regulated industry in one of the freest countries in the world.
The net result of the campaign to landlock Canada’s oil and gas
reserves, in which (to use an old but apt term) you are playing the role of
useful idiot, will be to take money out of the pockets of Alberta workers to
line the silk pockets of men who commit enough human rights abuses before
breakfast to keep Amnesty International busy for a year. If you are truly
concerned about human rights, look at where the world’s oil will come from if
we don’t export it from Canada.
Although your letter is repetitive and scattershot in its criticisms, I
will respond to your main points in turn. Not because you raise serious issues,
but because your hyperbolic bill of particulars is all-too typical of critics
of Alberta’s oil and gas industry. It demands a rejoinder in the interest not
just of our province, but of accuracy. Ironically, your letter is a perfect
illustration of just why Alberta needs a way to respond to common
misconceptions – and the decade-long campaign to discredit the Canadian oil and
gas industry – with facts.
For example, you allege that our plan to correct inaccuracies about
Alberta’s oil and gas industry will “have particularly serious implications
for advancing reconciliation with Indigenous peoples in the province.”
What out-of-touch balderdash.
In fact, I received your letter while I was meeting with the leaders of
northern Alberta First Nations, whose people have enjoyed prosperity precisely
because of their partnerships with Alberta oil sands producers and who strongly
support our government’s efforts to respond to the campaign to landlock
Canadian energy.
Shortly after I was sworn in as Premier, I hosted the first
Government-First Nations gathering in years, which was attended by 46 of the 48
Alberta First Nations Chiefs. The overwhelming – I would say, unanimous –
consensus was that Alberta’s First Nations want to be partners in the
prosperity that flows from the responsible development of our shared natural
resources.
They have seen first-hand that Alberta has Canada’s highest level of Indigenous
employment because of our energy sector, and especially our oil sands. And they
have had enough of foreign and urban do-gooders telling them how they should
steward their traditional lands – a phenomenon BC MLA and former chief
councillor of the Haisla Nation, Ellis Ross, and others acidly refer to as
“eco-colonialism.”
That is why the UCP platform proposed unprecedented steps to partner
with First Nations in defense of our shared economic interests through the
Alberta Indigenous Opportunities Corporation (AIOC). This $1 billion
commitment, backed with the full faith and credit of the Alberta government,
will encourage First Nations participation in resource development. The AIOC
will be a first-of-its kind policy, a creative solution to the challenges that
many resource-rich but capital-poor First Nations face in owning or co-owning
major oil and gas projects.
We have heard from dozens of First Nations inside and outside Alberta
who are eager to access this support, and the federal government has expressed
an interest in becoming a financing partner.
We have also launched a $10 million Indigenous Litigation Fund to help
First Nations defend their own economic development rights in court when they
are threatened by government actions like the West Coast tanker ban or the
cancellation of the Northern Gateway pipeline – both decisions taken by the
federal government without consultation and over the strong objection of many
B.C. and Alberta First Nations.
You may be surprised to hear that I agree that “Reconciliation with
Indigenous peoples is a Legal and Moral Imperative”. I use the same language myself, calling the
need to partner with our First Nations, the first custodians of our rich trove
of resources, a “moral imperative.”
We know that there are still too many Indigenous people in Canada who do
not enjoy the prosperity that natural resources development has brought. In
that spirit, I hope that you will join me in cheering the fact that there are
at least four consortia of First Nations bidding for a major stake in the Trans
Mountain pipeline. Projects like this represent real economic opportunity for
Canada and our First Nations and are a step towards meaningful reconciliation
of which we should all be proud.
Separately, I appreciate your concern for vulnerable individuals who you
worry will be harmed by government advocacy. I am pleased be able to reassure
you that you fundamentally misunderstand the context and purpose of the “fight
back” strategy. In fact, I am sure you’ll be relieved to know that you have it
exactly backwards: our energy industry and the jobs across Alberta and Canada
that depend on it are not threatened by isolated or vulnerable individuals but
by well-funded family foundations like the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the David
and Lucile Packard Foundation, and hedge fund billionaire Tom Steyer, whose
fortune was made in part from coal mines.
Those would be the Rockefellers whose fortune was made by the Standard
Oil monopoly and the Packards of Hewlett-Packard fame, whose foundation has
assets over US$7.5 billion and who recently rewarded former NDP advisor
Tzeporah Berman with a US$2 million prize for her anti-oil sands activism.
When I joined Amnesty International, it was because you fought for
prisoners of conscience in dictatorial regimes.
Today, you are fighting on the side of foreign billionaires trying to
shut down an industry on which hundreds of thousands of hard-working men and
women depend.
Forgive me if I express a concern of my own: that Amnesty International
may have drifted somewhat from its core mission.
As for your concerns about freedom of expression and association, those
rights are not threatened by our government telling the truth about our energy
industry. Our intent is to counter misinformation, exaggerations, and outdated
information with facts and evidence. You acknowledge this when you say that the
“narrative that has accompanied the launch of the ‘war room’ focuses on
‘uncovering the truth’ and ‘tackling misinformation.’”
That’s exactly right.
There is a great story to tell about Alberta’s oil and gas sector. It’s
a story of innovation, of world-leading research and development, of decreasing
emissions, of cleaner technology. Most importantly, it is the story of an
industry that has been an engine of social progress for people of all education
levels from across the country, including women, new Canadians, and Indigenous
peoples. How you can twist this good news story into a threat to human rights
confounds comprehension.
Speaking of exaggerations, your claim that “by any measure, oilsands
development in Alberta is a major source of global carbon emissions” is
exactly the sort of distortion that makes this project necessary. Canada is
responsible for 1.6% of global GHG emissions and the oilsands account for 8% of
that, or about one tenth of one percent of global emissions.
Your claim would be wildly inaccurate even if the
oil sands were ten times their current size.
This is not to diminish the importance of Alberta showing leadership in
GHG reductions. Our government is committed to lowering emissions, including by
putting a price on large emitters and funding technology that will lower
emissions both here and around the world.
The second part of that plan is particularly important.
While we will reduce emissions here in Alberta, our greatest
contribution to the global challenge of climate change will be come from
developing and exporting new technology and our cleaner natural resources,
especially natural gas, to displace the coal-fired electricity in the world’s
largest and dirtiest emitters. The reduction in global emissions we can achieve
by exporting our know-how and resources to the developing world dwarf any
reductions the anti-oil sands campaign could ever hope to achieve. Contrary to
your letter, we may not be a big part of the problem, but we are determined to
be a big part of the solution.
As for the rest of your accusations and insinuations, they only make
sense if you deny that there is a well-funded campaign against Alberta’s
natural resource industry and a concomitant need to rebut it. This would be the
campaign that you dismiss as “vague conspiracy theories about the hidden goals
of US based foundations.” I assure that if their goals are hidden it is because
they have worked hard to keep them that way. One of the original strategy
documents of the Tar Sands Campaign, from 2008, actually stressed that “the
[Tar Sands Campaign] Coordination Centre shall remain invisible to the
outside” (their emphasis).
Unfortunately, the Tar Sands campaign is real and anything but vague.
Under the heading “Tar Sands Campaign Strategy 2.1,” that same document lays
out step-by-step, in precise detail, the “tar sands termination agenda” to
“embarrass Canada” and “delegitimize” the oil sands.
As if that weren’t enough, the North American energy industry is also
being targeted by a sophisticated social media and cyber campaign funded and
coordinated by Putin’s Russian government. A 2018 report from the U.S. House
Committee on Science, Space and Technology concluded that “Russia exploited
American social media as part of its concerted effort … to influence domestic
energy policy” and specifically “targeted pipelines, fossil fuels [and] climate
change.”
It’s a coalition of the bleeding-hearted and the bloody-minded.
This is the threat Alberta has faced for more than a decade. It is an
existential threat to our economy backed by American billionaires and
coordinated through dozens of foreign and Canadian environmental organizations
and advocacy groups. Their success can be measured in tens of billions of
dollars in lost investment and thousands of lost jobs. That is why in the
recent election we told Albertans that “We will fight back against the
foreign funded special interests who are trying to landlock our energy.”
Having received an historic popular majority, we intend to keep our
word.
Albertans deserve a government that will not roll over in the face of
foreign-funded special interests. Our commitment to stand up for Alberta is the
furthest thing from a threat to human rights; it is a pledge to meet myth with
fact and misinformation with evidence.
If Amnesty International Canada really cannot see the difference, then I
am sorry – the organization I joined as a teenager had a clearer sense of
purpose and a better moral compass.
Sincerely,
Hon Jason Kenney, PC MLA
Premier of Alberta
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