Pathways Alliance Co-founder Donated to Pierre Poilievre Campaign, Records Show

Oil sands executive Alex Pourbaix gave $1,600 after attending Conservative fundraiser.
Geoff Dembicki
Geoff Dembicki
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Pierre Poilievre
Poilievre is promising to 'axe' Canada's carbon tax. Credit: CPC

For the past year and a half an industry group called the Pathways Alliance has been running national ads claiming oil sands producers are climate leaders โ€œon the road to net zero.โ€ 

But federal records newly reviewed by DeSmog reveal that the groupโ€™s co-founder has personally donated to the Conservative Party of Canada, whose leader Pierre Poilievre is campaigning to abolish the countryโ€™s most prominent climate policy, a nationwide tax on carbon emissions, saying it brings โ€œmisery and suffering on the Canadian people.โ€

Alex Pourbaix, executive chairman of the Calgary-based oil sands company Cenovus, made a $1,600 donation to the Conservative Party the day after attending a private fundraiser last year entitled โ€œAn evening with Pierre Poilievre,โ€ contributions data on the Elections Canada site show. The maximum allowable donation was $1,700. 

Pathways cofounder Alex Pourbaix. Credit: Ed Ritger

Pourbaix helped create the Pathways Alliance, a marketing and lobbying organization that is representing the six largest Canadian oil sands producers in multi-year talks with the current Liberal government of Justin Trudeau about cutting the sectorโ€™s climate impacts via large taxpayer-funded investments in carbon capture and storage technology. 

โ€œItโ€™s certainly interesting โ€” or telling โ€” that he made a political donation to the leader of the official opposition,โ€ Emilia Belliveau, energy transition program manager for the non-profit organization Environmental Defence, told DeSmog. She recently wrote a post detailing Pourbaixโ€™s long history of climate obstruction.  

Neither the Pathways Alliance nor Poilievreโ€™s office responded to questions about the donation. 

Credit: Elections Canada

The fundraising event, which was originally reported on by The Breach, took place at a private residence in the mountain resort town Banff, Alberta, on April 11, 2023. It was promoted by the Conservative Party as a โ€œBring it Home fundraiser with Pierre Poilievre.โ€ 

Unlike the grassroots members of his party, who in 2021 voted against a resolution acknowledging โ€œclimate change is real,โ€ Poilievre acknowledges the existence of human-caused global temperature rise. But he opposes national laws designed to address it. 

Under his leadership, the Conservative Party has claimed that a proposed federal cap on oil and gas emissions would โ€œsend dollars to dictators.โ€ He is currently touring Canada promising to โ€œaxeโ€ the countryโ€™s carbon tax and recently led a failed attempt to topple the minority Liberal government over the policy. In place of climate legislation, he proposes oil and gas industry expansion. โ€œWe’re going to clear the way for pipelines,โ€ Poilievre has promised. โ€œI am going to support pipelines south, north, east, west. We will build Canadian pipelines.โ€  

Around two dozen guests at his 2023 fundraiser in Banff hold executive-level positions with Canadian oil and gas companies or work adjacent to the industry as Calgary-based investors and lawyers specializing in fossil fuels, according to an attendance list analyzed by DeSmog. 

They included Mark Little, the former CEO of Suncor and Tim McKay, the outgoing CEO of CNRL. Both oil sands companies are members of the Pathways Alliance. Fundraising records show that Little and McKay each donated $1,600 to the Conservative Party in the lead-up to the event. 

Credit: Elections Canada

Those donations came as the Pathways Alliance blitzed the country in advertisements claiming that the oil sands sector is aligned with the Trudeau governmentโ€™s goal of eliminating or neutralizing all Canadian greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. โ€œOur net-zero plan is in motion,โ€ read one ad on the side of a bus in Vancouver.

The Pathways Alliance reported that it generated 1.5 billion โ€œtotal advertising impressionsโ€ in 2023 alone. However, that campaign is now being investigated by the Competition Bureau over a complaint from Greenpeace alleging that Pathways made false claims downplaying the environmental impact of its members, which are among Canadaโ€™s biggest polluters. 

A new peer-reviewed study from researchers at universities in Canada and the U.S. builds on that complaint, concluding that Pathways Alliance advertising throughout 2023 was filled with โ€œgreenwashing.โ€ That includes vastly underreporting the true climate impact of oil sands operations, omitting that its carbon capture and storage plan is intended to boost oil sands production and failing to state that the majority of funding would come from Canadian taxpayers, not oil sands companies. 

โ€œIn the public-facing content we looked at, their numbers were either questionable or misleading or even just missing when they were talking about their emissions or the cost of the plan,โ€ Chris Russill, a Carleton University journalism professor and academic director of the climate communication centre Re:Climate, told DeSmog about the new peer-reviewed research. โ€œWe donโ€™t find their net-zero plan credible.โ€

InfluenceMap’s updated Carbon Majors report, also released today, reveals that four Pathways Alliance members โ€” Cenovus Energy, Suncor, Canadian Natural Resources, and ConocoPhillips โ€” are among just 117 companies responsible for 88% of global C02 emissions since the Paris Agreement was signed.

Pourbaix insists that decarbonization is a top priority for the oil sands. โ€œNext to safety, there is nothing more important to Cenovus and our industry than reaching a durable solution between government and industry to achieve our emission aspirations,โ€ he told a conference call with analysts several months before the Conservative fundraiser.

Records from last year show he didnโ€™t make any contributions to the federal Liberals.

Geoff Dembicki
Geoff Dembicki is an investigative climate journalist based in New York City. He is author of The Petroleum Papers and Are We Screwed?

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