Thereโs something really wrong about the Canadian governmentโs recent proposal to spend millions of dollars to scapegoat Alberta’s wild wolf populationย for the impact on caribou populations that is in fact due to industrial development wrecking wildlife habitat. (See our earlier coverage of this issue here.)
Itโs not just the impractical costs of the proposal and itโs not just the needless killing of wolves. Itโs the bold-faced dishonesty of this anti-science proposal in a time when industry and government are already facing a credibility crisis.ย
The government, on both the provincial and federal level, is using numerous talking points to demonstrate the โregrettable but necessaryโ character of the proposed wolf cull that will claim thousands of Albertaโs wolves in coming years.
These oil-friendly politicians falsely claim that the wolf is responsible for declining caribou populations; they falsely claim that the wolf cull is designed to recover caribou; and they falsely claim that the wolf cull isย temporary.ย
But these strategic talking points are not coming from the provinceโs scientists, biologists or conservation specialists. These real experts are describing the governmentโs storyline as a bunch of public relations hogwash.
The truth is that caribou populations are plummeting due to rapid industrialization of their habitat, chiefly the timber, oil and gas industries profiting off the Alberta Tar Sandsย boom.ย
As DeSmogBlog recently reported, the official body responsible for caribou recovery in Alberta is the Alberta Caribou Committeeย โ an organization dominated by timber, oil and gas industry interests.ย
Here is a look at the Alberta Caribou Committee’s members:
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Also take a look at the Alberta Caribou Committee’s websiteย list of sponsoringย ‘partners’:
According to Cliff Wallis, one of the sole conservation voices sitting on the committee, the ACC seems mostly designed to protect industrial interests at the expense of caribouย recovery.
โIt has been 7 years of frustration and hell, just watching industry and the industry associations block everything youโre trying to do to protect caribou and caribou habitat. Theyโve used every stalling tactic in the book. It just goes to the heart of where this industry is โ itโs got a black heart, and not the green heart they try to portray,โ Wallis told DeSmogBlog in anย interview.
Wallis works for the Alberta Wilderness Association (AWA) and has watched the priority of preserving caribou in the province sideswiped in favor of increased industrial development.ย
Heโs also been around long enough to see the conversation reworked by industry and government to turn wolves into the scapegoat.
Although wolf removal is now widely regarded as a โsolutionโ to the problem of caribou declines, it was never originally conceived as a โfixโ of any kind โ and thatโs because wolves are not the problem. Any mention of wolf predation was always understood to be a symptom of the real problem: unrestrticted industrialย activity.
Prior to a buried 2005 report that recommended a temporary moratorium on oil and gas leases in threatened caribou areas, the government considered critical habitat protections as a legitimate and effective way of recovering declining caribou herds.
In fact, because the provinceโs scientists designated habitat encroachment as the leading cause of declining caribou numbers, habitat protection was considered the most obvious and necessary path to caribou recovery. There was no controversy whatsoever amongย scientists.
Yet according to AWAโs Carolyn Campbell, industry refused to cooperate, claiming caribou habitat protection threatened their right to exploit the provinceโs oil and gas resources โ an argument the government quicklyย conceded.ย
Since then, government has made no attempt to develop a workable habitat protection plan and has, in fact, increased oil and gas leases in caribou range. Meanwhile industry groups like the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers have fought hard against the legalization of protective measures.
Because both government and industry have refused to get serious about habitat protection, the emphasis has been placed on wolfย control.ย
โThe science tells us that really the root cause is habitat disturbance and we must prevent any further new habitat disturbance in those caribou ranges. We must also act promptly to restore disturbed habitat. This is not news โ this is information that government and industry are deliberately ignoring,โ Campbell toldย DeSmogBlog.
Caribou recovery has always been secondary to industry interests, says Campbell, and since habitat protection has been taken off the table, any talk of โcaribou recoveryโ is just a public relations strategy to keep criticism of the tar sands at aย minimum.ย
โThere have been decades of so-called best practices which really amount to deferring the timing of some activities. But thatโs really, really ineffective because thereโs been no cumulative effects management,โ she said. โSo itโs really a PR move โ all those โindustry best practices.โโ
According to Campbell, the crux of the problem lies in Albertaโs overall management of the resources and its structural addiction to oilย revenues:
โthe provincial government is actually deeply conflicted to do anything that might slow down maximizing industry revenue today and is not really thinking about the consequences for our children,โ according toย Campbell.
โOne way we see this is the caribou policy โ there have been no attempts to stop bitumen leases or any other kind of other leases in caribou range. That should be the first and most pain-free step. If we could just stop selling leases to companies then we wouldnโt be creating a property right that they expect to exercise by exploring for and developing the energy,โ she continued, โand the government has refused to doย that.โ
In the end, says Campbell, the burden of Albertaโs reckless industrial development has fallen on the provinceโs wildย wolves.
โItโs a deeply unethical approach to oil sands development โ to target a species through no fault of its own.โ
As for Cliff Wallis and his continued role on the Alberta Caribou Committee, there seems to be little hope. โThey havenโt met for months,โ heย said.ย
On behalf of the Alberta Wilderness Association he says, โweโve maintained our opposition to the cull. If we could see habitat protection going along with itโฆbut weโre still into habitatย destruction.โย
Wallis and others want to see the potential in the cull, if it is to be expanded. They want to make sense of the slaughter by resting assured it will actually mean something for the caribou recoveryย effort.ย
But at this point, there is little to indicate that possibility.
With no end to the tar sands expansion in sight, the caribou are headed for localized extinction in many areas of theย province.
โWhere does it end?โ asked Wallis. โIt ends in the total destruction of habitat; no caribou or other wildlife either.โ
Watch DeSmogBlog’s video investigation: CRY WOLF: An Unethical Oil Story.
Image credit: Krisย Krug
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