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Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach speaks to the media in Calgary on Thursday, Sept. 9, 2010. Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall appears on CTV's Power Play on Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2010. Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall appears on CTV's Power Play on Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2010.

Alberta oil not 'foreign,' U.S. official tells premiers

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CTV Edmonton: Sean Amato on Stelmach
Stelmach says he is impressed with the discussion he and other premiers were able to have with U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and believes that oil will continue to flow from the oilsands to the U.S.
Power Play: Panel of environment experts
The executive director with Pembina Institute, says he was impressed by Nancy Pelosi's level of leadership. The executive director with Climate Action Network says the meeting with Pelosi was productive.
Power Play: Liberal Foreign Affairs Critic Bob Rae
Bob Rae believes he has a lot in common with Nancy Pelosi and during his breakfast meeting with Pelosi they further discussed the oil sands situation and climate change. He also says Canada has to take action to fight against climate change.
CTV Edmonton: Joel Gotlib on Cameron's visit
Hollywood director James Cameron is making plans to visit Alberta's oilsands region by the end of September.
CTV News Channel: Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach
Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach says the emphasis was on the environment Wednesday during his 'open and candid' discussion with Pelosi.
CTV News Channel: Rick Smith, Environmental Defence
The executive director of Environmental Defence says the U.S. should demand that Premier Stelmach and Canada's oil and gas producers do more to reduce pollution from the tarsands before pipelines are expanded.
CTV News Channel: Marlo Raynolds, Pembina Inst.
The executive director of an environmental group that met with Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, says based on the meeting that the U.S. is committed to moving away from fossil fuels.
CTV News Channel: Robert Fife from Ottawa
CTV's Ottawa bureau chief explains why Canadian politicians are so eager bend the ear of Speaker of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi, who is one of the most powerful politicians in the U.S.
Canada AM: Brad Wall, Saskatchewan premier
Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall explains why he wouldn't waste an opportunity to promote free trade to Pelosi, the third-ranking politician in the U.S.
Canada AM: Colin Robertson, trade expert
An expert on Canada-U.S. trade says U.S. Speaker Nancy Pelosi needs to hear that we're America's biggest energy supplier, and get a sense Canadians know how they're going to handle the oilsands.
CTV Edmonton: Kevin Armstrong on the meeting
Premier Ed Stelmach says he will use his time with U.S. politician Nancy Pelosi to discuss Alberta's oilsands.
CTV News Channel: Jane Taber, Globe and Mail
A correspondent with the Globe and Mail says the meeting will be an opportunity for Stelmach to make his case that the oilsands are an important source of oil that will help the sluggish U.S. economy by creating jobs in the country.

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Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach speaks to the media in Calgary on Thursday, Sept. 9, 2010. Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall appears on CTV's Power Play on Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2010. Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall appears on CTV's Power Play on Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2010.

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Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach speaks to the media in Calgary on Thursday, Sept. 9, 2010.

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Date: Thu. Sep. 9 2010 8:00 PM ET

One of the most powerful politicians in the U.S. said that while Washington wants to wean itself off foreign oil, Canada is the exception because it isn't "foreign," according to Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach.

The comments came as U.S Speaker of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi met with politicians, environmentalists and First Nations leaders in Calgary.

"She didn't consider Canada to be foreign oil," Stelmach said Thursday, noting that the politicians also spoke about his province's efforts in renewable energy during their dinner meeting on Wednesday.

Stelmach, Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall and Quebec Premier Jean Charest were in on the Wednesday night meeting, along with federal Environment Minister Jim Prentice.

While Canada is a large supplier of energy to the U.S., a growing backlash against the oilsands has raised questions about its sustainability and environmental impact.

"Let's not be naive," Stelmach told reporters in Calgary. "One dinner may not alter or change a lot of positions or opinions by either the environmental groups or some of the elected officials, but we did have significant agreement in a number of areas."

Pelosi also met with First Nations groups and environmental agencies on Thursday to hear the other side of the argument.

One of those groups is Environmental Defence, whose executive director Rick Smith took issue with Stelmach's characterization of the oilsands.

Smith said the U.S. has never threatened to cut off Canadian oil imports, and he said that Stelmach was creating a "straw man" to distract from the real issues of pollution and climate change.

He noted that Pelosi was "in listening mode" during their consultations, and he added that she especially thanked First Nations leaders who spoke Thursday, as they "put a face" on the oilsands' environmental impact.

Smith, speaking with CTV News Channel, said Alberta wants to drastically increase oil production without "coming up with a game plan" to deal with the fallout on the region's ecosystem.

Smith also alluded to the latest in a line of reports that suggest the environmental impact of the oilsands may be much more severe than government or industry estimates indicate.

Marlo Raynolds, a climate change consultant with the Pembina Institute think-tank, said that Canadian politicians need to show more leadership in capping growth of the oilsands.

During a meeting Thursday, Raynolds said Pelosi expressed plans to legislate the U.S. away from oil and other fossil fuels.

"It's the type of leadership that we really need to see in Canada," Raynolds told News Channel from Ottawa.

While Raynolds stopped short of calling for the closure of the oilsands, he said that some serious caps need to be put on its expansion.

"We have to put into question further expansion of the oil sands resource," he said.

"We have to set absolute limits on environmental impacts, or else we cannot do this responsibly."

Meanwhile, Saskatchewan's premier said he made the point that Canada's oilsands industry is constantly striving to improve its green business practices.

He said Pelosi was in Canada to listen and learn about our oil industry, and was a knowledgeable and engaged participant in the discussion.

Wall said he and Stelmach espoused initiatives that are underway to reduce the carbon footprint in the oilsands. The goal was to convince Pelosi that Canada's oil is a sustainable investment for the U.S., which is the largest purchaser of the product.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper spoke to Pelosi on Thursday about her oilsands meetings and about a number of other issues, according to a statement from his office.

Liberal foreign affairs critic Bob Rae spoke with the veteran American legislator at a breakfast meeting on Thursday, noting that her powers as speaker of the House of Representatives "are significant."

"It should not be unusual for us to be meeting with our colleagues from the United States," Rae added. "We obviously share a great deal in North America. Our economic ties are intensely close."

Comments are now closed for this story

Kay
said

Brian & David - You obviously know little about the oil sands project. Before you condem it - visit it! The Yanks have long relied on coal for fuel and that, dear boys, is far more dirty than the oil sands will ever be. More coal miners have died from related lung diseases than the darned ducks on the McMurray tailing ponds! Let the Americans go ahead and buy their oil elsewhere - it will only be from those they love to hate!!


M in Alberta
said

I know that the Americans are our biggest trading partner. That is a dangerous thing in itself. With our economy tied in so closely to their's,the Americans our delaying our recovery from the recession because their economy is not doing as well as it should be.

China's demand for oil will only continue to grow. The way I see it, if the Americans don't want our oil, lets sell it to someone else.

We don't need to be spending thousands of dollars trying to convince them that they NEED our oil!


Paul
said

Hmmmm. Oil sands. So the sand it contaminated with thick bitumen. So we dig up the dirty contaminated sand, and wash all the oil out of it, and return the clean sand back to where the dirty sand used to be. And this is bad for the environment?????


Ian
said

The term dumb and dumber comes to mind.


Bill from Winnipeg
said

Well said Robert........


Cam Steuart
said

How absurd that anyone has to defend their oil production to the glutenous United States of America. If it wasn't for their bottomless pit use of petroleum we likely wouldn't have developed the oil sands in the first place. Maybe Pelosi would rather deal with Iran and Venezuela for her country's oil needs!


David - Ottawa
said

The tar sands are dirty, but Im all for its development if EVERY effort is also made to make it environomentally sustainable (with 0% negative impact on the environment). This is not yet the case.


Irritable Canadian
said

Come November, Pelosi will be the outgoing Speaker of the House. The Dems are going to be destroyed at the polls. Who cares what this cow thinks?


brian
said

Clean up the tar sands and stop embarrasing us to the world--these companies are making BILLIONS of dolars profit per year, they are polluting our land, water and lakes, and when the oil is all gone they will pull up roots in 3 months and leave. This will leave us taxpayers with the clean up bills of billions--they can darn well clean it up now as they move forward.


Phillip Martin
said

Thank you for a good analysis.No industry in Canada has been subject to disinformation and propaganda like the oilsands.Most is disseminated by people who have never been there to see the intensive efforts to protect the environment. Sadly some of our media have been complicit in this debacle. Hopefully commonsense will prevail and obsessive fiction will vanish. Oilsands is Canada's lifeline. We are an export nation. Most Canadians forget that.


Robert Stevens
said

If the Americans don`t want our oil thats just fine it just proves that they would rather give the money to the same people that blew them up on Sept 11


George Poole in Lunenburg
said

Makes for good democrat political theatre at home I guess in the lower 48 to 'bash on them evil Canadian conservatives' I say let them yankees propose all the harsh rules they want on importing tarsands oil, we hold the cards, and oil is a global commodity. :D


Kevin P
said

Canadian oil is the most environmentally friendly in the world. Period. Yes it can and is being improved. Go search out Russian pipeline leaks, African or middle east spills. These are just the obvious problems. Our day to day operations are multitudes better on the environment than most foreign oil extraction. And our oil doesn't provide blood money to anyone.


the PHEW from here
said

JPC - You said it! We also don't have to start a war (Iraq/Iran) to get the oil we need to run our SUV's and big businesses!


JPC near Regina
said

There's nothing to defend - Canadian oil is the most sustainable in the world...did WE screw up the Gulf of Mexico?


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