The Growing Conservative Backlash Against Carbon Capture and Storage

A climate technology favored by oil companies is now being attacked from the right.
Geoff Dembicki
Geoff Dembicki
on
Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre
Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre has spoken in support of CCS. Credit: Pierre Poilievre / YouTube

Earlier this year a far-right group called Canada Proud began running Facebook ads to its more than 534,000 followers attacking the climate change technology favored by conservative leaders as well as the countryโ€™s largest oil and gas producers. 

โ€œCarbon capture is billed as a green technology that stops carbon from entering the atmosphere,โ€ the ad explains. โ€œBut is it really good for the environment? As it turns out, not really.โ€ The technology, Canada Proud claimed, โ€œcan poison groundwater, it can put carcinogens in the soil and even has a record of causing earthquakes.โ€ 

Major oil sands companies and their political allies in Alberta and Ottawa have for years pushed the opposite message โ€” that carbon capture and storage, also known as CCS, is necessary to ensure the survival of oil and gas while also addressing climate change. 

So far the loudest attacks against carbon capture have come from environmental groups and progressive politicians which see it as an expensive false solution to climate change that furthers our dependency on oil and gas. 

But as more of these projects move forward, theyโ€™re also activating opposition from the right, creating new political divisions between establishment conservatives and groups attempting to catalyze grassroots anger towards expensive industrial megaprojects in rural areas. 

โ€œItโ€™s very interesting that groups like Canada Proud are seemingly mobilizing, or testing the waters to mobilize, against carbon capture and storage,โ€ Bob Neubauer, an assistant professor in communications at the University of Manitoba who studies rightwing populism and climate change disinformation, told DeSmog. 

โ€œTheir base doesnโ€™t appear to be full of people who are excited about a technocratic post-carbon scenario,โ€ he added.

Mobilize Media, the company behind Canada Proud, didnโ€™t respond to questions from DeSmog.

Rightwing Influencers Attack CCS

Dissatisfaction with the technology has been edging into the mainstream of rightwing discourse. โ€œWe might as well take tax money at gunpoint and burn it,โ€ Canadian conservative influencer Jordan Peterson in February wrote on X to his 5.3 million followers in response to a CCS project in Wyoming. 

U.S. presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has been frequently interviewed on conservative media platforms, last year called carbon capture a โ€œboondoggle.โ€ Vivek Ramaswamy, who ran a failed primary campaign this year against Donald Trump for the Republican leadership, called pipelines in Iowa that can transport captured carbon to sites where it can be buried underground โ€œthe greatest violation of property rights.โ€ 

Premier Danielle Smith announced up to $5.3 billion in taxpayer support for the Pathways Alliance CCS project in Alberta. Credit: Danielle Smith / YouTube

These tensions are growing in Alberta, the heart of Canadaโ€™s oil and gas industry, where a consortium of six top oil sands companies known as the Pathways Alliance applied this spring for regulatory approval to build a $16.5 billion carbon capture and storage project. Itโ€™s been blanketing the country in ads stating that โ€œcarbon capture is an important step towards carbon neutral resource extraction.โ€ย 

Albertaโ€™s premier Danielle Smith, who earlier this year shared a stage with Tucker Carlson and was recently interviewed on Petersonโ€™s podcast, has announced taxpayer support of up to $5.3 billion for the plan. โ€œLet me tell you, we are only going to strengthen the case for carbon capture, utilization and storage in the years ahead,โ€ she said during an industry convention last year. 

Grassroots Opposition Growing

Rural northern Alberta, where the project will be built, is definitely no hotbed of environmental activism. The region is home to an anti-renewable energy group called Wind Concerns whose leader earlier told DeSmog that climate science is โ€œridden with fraudulent data and outright lies.โ€

Yet locals there have created a new group called No to CO2 Landowners Group, which has teamed up with the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation and environmental organizations to oppose the Pathways Alliance carbon capture plan. 

โ€œDespite their claims, this is unproven technology with far-reaching implications into the future,โ€ Amil Shapka, one of No to CO2โ€™s representatives, has said. โ€œWith this being Canadaโ€™s largest CO2 pipeline and storage project, is our community ready for the potential health, safety and environmental risks to our water?โ€

The increasingly scrambled politics of carbon capture are now creating tensions at the national level in Canada. Because the federal Liberal government has proposed investment tax credits up to $10 billion to support the Pathways Alliance plan, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is now associated with a mega-project opposed by some rural Canadians. 

Pierre Poilievre Still Supports CCS

Thatโ€™s put carbon capture in the crosshairs of the anti-Liberal group Canada Proud, which has also launched an online petition against the technology. โ€œRural Canadians deserve a safe and clean local environment and Canadians deserve affordable gas, groceries and heating,โ€ the petition reads. โ€œTherefore we, the undersigned, are calling on Justin Trudeau to STOP forcing expensive and destructive carbon capture on Canada’s energy industry.โ€

In reality, itโ€™s the other way around. Oil producers have touted carbon capture to the federal government as โ€œa major componentโ€ of their plan to address climate change, much preferable to other solutions proposed by the federal Liberals such as a cap on oil sands emissions

And their policy preference โ€” billions of dollars in taxpayer money to support carbon capture projects that can extend the oil and gas industry for decades โ€” has been echoed by federal Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre.   

โ€œWe need to greenlight new green projects like nuclear power, hydroelectricity, tidal wave power, carbon capture and storage,โ€ Poilievre said during an interview in May about his climate change plans. 

That positive messaging on carbon capture isnโ€™t ending up on Canada Proud, even though Poilievre several years ago hired Mobilize Media, the company behind the Facebook page, to promote his federal leadership campaign. (The Conservative Party of Canada didnโ€™t respond to questions from DeSmog about its current relationship with Mobilize). But Canada Proud continues to post pro-Poilievre content on its Facebook almost daily, including the Conservative leaderโ€™s frequent attacks on the countryโ€™s carbon tax. 

Likely thatโ€™s because itโ€™s easier to post anti-climate content for a far-right audience than anything supporting action, Neubauer said, especially when a majority of federal Conservative Party grassroots members have voted against a party proposal stating โ€œclimate change is real.โ€

โ€œCanada Proudโ€™s policy priorities [on this issue] seem to be completely out of step with the stated policy priorities of the Conservative Party and the leaders of the oil and gas industry,โ€ he said. โ€œBut the rank and file of the conservative climate movement has been made so rabidly anti-climate action that thereโ€™s probably not a lot of upside to back CCS.โ€

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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