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The article below, on the Alberta oil sands, is 16
months old. She wrote the March 19th 2011 antinuclear
article that I posted earlier. Very logical and convincing
articles.
Jerry -------------------------
http://communities.canada.com/calgaryherald/blogs/corbellareport/archive/2010/09/03/by-popular-request-my-fairy-godmother-column.aspx
This is
the typical Alberta view on our relationship with the ROC (rest of Canada ),
excluding B.C. and Saskatchewan of course. Fascinating article by Lisa
Corbella of the Calgary Herald.
Calgary
Herald Sat Dec 19 2009 Licia
Corbella
Quebec and the Fairy Godmother
Today, let's have some
fun and play Fairy Godmother to Quebec. Let's
grant the province the wish it articulated in Copenhagen. Wave the magic wand
and poof, wish granted. Shut down Alberta's oilsands,
except, since it's Quebec making the wish, we have to call it tarsands,
even though it's not tar they use to run their Bombardier planes, trains and
Skidoos.
Ah, at last! The blight on Canada's reputation shut
down. All those dastardly workers from across Canada living in Fort
McMurray, Calgary and Edmonton out of jobs, including those waitresses, truck
drivers, nurses, teachers, doctors, pilots, engineers, etc. They can all go
on Employment insurance like Ontario autoworkers and Quebec parts
makers! Closing down Alberta's oil industry would immediately
stop the production of 1.8 million barrels of oil a day. Supply and
demand being what it is, oil prices will go up and therefore the cost at the
pump will go up, too, increasing the cost of everything else.
But lost
jobs in Alberta and across the country along with higher gas prices are a small price to pay to save the world and
not "embarrass" Quebecers on the world stage. Not to worry though, Saudi
Arabia, Libya and
Nigeria can come to the rescue. You know, the guys who pump
money into al-Qaida and help Osama bin Laden target those Van Doos
fighting in Afghanistan. Bloody oil is so much nicer than dirty tarsands
oil.
Shutting down the oilsands will reduce Canada 's
greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 38.4 Mt (megatonnes). Hooray! It's so fun to
be a Fairy Godmother! While that sounds like a lot, Canada only produces
two per cent of the world's man-made GHGs and the oilsands only produce
five per cent of Canada 's total emissions or 0.1 per cent of the world's
emissions. By comparison, the U.S. produces 20.2 per cent of the
world's GHG emissions, 27 per cent of which comes from
coal-fired electricity.
The 530-square-kilometre piece of land
currently disturbed by the oilsands (which is smaller than the John F. Kennedy Space
Center at Cape Canaveral, Fla. at 570 square kilometres) must be reclaimed by law
and will return to Alberta 's 381,000 square kilometres of boreal
forest, a huge carbon sink.
Quebec, of course, has clean hydro power, but
more than 13,000 square kilometres were drowned for the James Bay
hydroelectric project, permanently removing that forest from acting as a carbon
sink.
But Fairy Godmother is digressing all over the place.
While the oilsands only produce five per cent of Canada 's GHGs, it
contributes much more to Canada 's economy. After all, oil and gas make up
one-quarter of the value on the TSX alone. Alberta is also the largest net
contributor per capita by far to Confederation and there are only two more -- B.C.
and Ontario
.
Quebec hasn't made a net contribution to the rest of
Canada for a very long time. This is not to be critical (after all,
Fairy Godmothers never criticize), it's just a fact. In 2009, Albertans
paid $40.46 billion in income, corporate and other taxes to the
federal government and received back just $19.35 billion in services and
goods from the feds. That means the rest of Canada got $21.1 billion from
Albertans or $5,742 for each and every Alberta man, woman and child. In 2007
(the last year national figures are available), Alberta sent a net
contribution of $19.49 billion to the ROC or $5,553 per Albertan -- more than three
times what every Ontarian contributes at $1,757. Quebecers, on the other
hand, each received $627 net or a total of $8 billion, money which was
designed to help "equalize" social programs across the country. Except, that's
not what is happening. Quebec has more generous social programs like
(nearly) free university tuition (paid for mostly by Albertans) and cheap
provincial day care (paid for mostly by Albertans).
But in this Fairy
Godmother world, poof, those delightful unequal programs have now disappeared! Quel
dommage!
The July
2009 Canadian Energy Research Institute (CERI) report states that between 2008 and 2032, the oilsands will account
for 172,000 person-years of employment in Ontario during the construction
phase, plus 640,000 for operations over the 25-year period. For Quebec, the
oilsands will account for 84,000 person-years of employment during
the construction phase, plus 292,000 for operations over the 25-year
period. In total, the oilsands are expected to add $1.7 trillion
to Canada 's GDP
over the next 25 years.
Wave wand and Poof, Jobs, gone! So, now that the
oil industry has shut down and left Alberta, Alberta has become a
have-not province and so has every other province. Equality at last! Hugo
Chavez will be so pleased.
Meeting our Copenhagen targets suddenly looks
possible, as most of us can't afford to drive our cars or buy anything but
necessities, so manufacturers have closed their doors and emissions are way
down.
The dream of many Quebecers to form their own nation
and separate from Canada has died at last. Alas, in Alberta ,
separatist sentiment has risen dramatically, citizens vote to separate and the
oil and gas industry returns.
Albertans start to pocket that almost
$6,000 for each person that used to get sent elsewhere and now their kids get free tuition.
Fairy Godmother's work is done. Wish granted. Quebecers must now sign up
for a foreign worker visas to work in Alberta to send their cheques back
home so junior can start saving up to pay for
college.
Licia
Corbella is editorial page editor of The Calgary Herald.
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