Unethical Oil: Why Is Canada Killing Wolves and Muzzling Scientists To Protect Tar Sands Interests?

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In the latest and perhaps most astonishing display of the tar sands industryโ€™s attacks on science and our democracy, the government of Alberta has made plans to initiate a large-scale wolf slaughter to provide cover for the destruction wrought by the industrialization of the boreal forestย ecosystem.

In the coming years, an anticipatedย 6,000 wolvesย will be gunned down from helicopters above, or killed by poisonย strychnine baitย planted deep in the forest. Biologists and other experts say the cull is misguided, and that their studies have been ignored or suppressed. Worse, they warn that although the government is framing the wolf cull as a temporary measure, it hasย no foreseeable end.

The Alberta government has already initiated the wolf cull in regions of Alberta heavily affected by industrial development. In the Little Smoky region, an area heavily affected by the forestry, oil and gas industries and just a few hundred kilometeres away from the tar sands region, a broad wolf cull has already begun, claiming the lives of more than 500 wolves.

Recently the Alberta government proposed a plan to open this brutal form of ‘wildlife management’ to other regions, suggesting an extensive and costly cull in place of more responsible industrialย development.

This is clear evidence of the fact that Albertaโ€™s tar sands oil is unquestionably conflict oil, despite the propaganda spouted by the โ€œethical oilโ€ deception campaign. Aside from its disruptive affects on wildlife, tar sands oil is dirty, carbon intensive and energy inefficient from cradle toย grave.

And thatโ€™s without mentioning the role the tar sands boom has played in Canadaโ€™s slide from climate leader to key villain on the international stage. Beyond its environmental consequences, tar sands extraction has negatively affected local tourism and recreation-based economies, impacted public health and torn at the rich fabric of cultural diversity and pride among Albertans and allย Canadians.ย 

Behind the Harper administrationโ€™s unbounded drive to drown Canadaโ€™s reputation in tar sands oil pollution lies the political corruption characteristic of the classic petro-state. Free speech is being oppressed, while respected members of the scientific community claim they are being muzzled, ignored andย intimidated.

Conservation and environmental groups are being falsely attacked as โ€˜radical ideologues’ and ‘saboteurs’. Neighbors are pitted against each other while important decisions about the future prosperity of all Canadians are rigged to favor the interests of multinational oil companies and foreign investors.

The wolf cull is ostensibly designed to protect northern Albertaโ€™s woodland caribou, a species that in recent years has become critically threatened.ย But scientists have ridiculed the plan, saying this sort of โ€˜wildlife managementโ€™ turns the wolf into an innocent scapegoat, while the real culprit โ€“ the provinceโ€™s aggressive timber, oil and gas development โ€“ is spared any real scrutiny orย accountability.

According to this strategy, caribou and wolf alike fall prey to another kind of predator: multinationalย corporations.

The National Wildlife Federation launched a campaign against the wolf cull last week, noting that the Keystone XL pipeline, if eventually built, โ€œwould amount to an American seal of approval for the strychnine-poisoning of Alberta’s wolves.โ€œย 

At the risk of potentially permanent impacts on important Alberta wildlife species, extractive industries are spearheading an unscientific effort to further tamper with nature, targetingย Albertaโ€™s wolves for declining woodland caribou health. In reality, scientists have demonstrated that habitat destruction and industrialization are the real threats to the caribou and the entire ecosystem. This classic case of misguided ‘wildlife management’ is meant to obscure irresponsible industrial development, not to protect iconic Canadian wildย species.

Stop Unethical Oil in its Tracks. Signย DeSmogBlog’s email petitionย calling on Environment Canada to reject this anti-science attack on wolves. Let’s hold industry accountable for damaging the boreal forest ecosystem, not scapegoat innocent wolves.ย ย 

Photo Credit: Neven Bjelic

Sadly, Albertaโ€™s history of covering over regrettable and irresponsible wildlife management runs about as far back as its history of industrial development โ€“ a correlation all too evident in the recent caribou recoveryย charade.ย 

The Caribou ‘Recovery’ย Backstory

Caribou numbers have been in decline in the province since the early 1960s, although knowledge of their diminishment dates back to the 1920s. But it took until 2001 – after nearly two decades of prodding by the provinceโ€™s scientists – for the Alberta governmentโ€™s Endangered Species Conservation Committee (ESCC) to designate the woodland caribou a โ€˜threatened species.โ€™ The designation, long avoided by the government, invokes a host of legal obligations, most notably, to the provinceโ€™s Wildlife Act and the federal Species at Risk Act (SARA).ย ย 

Despite its name, the ESCC amounts to little more than an industrial development club, and it is directly responsible for delays in critical caribou protections. The ESCC is an initiative of the Government of Albertaโ€™s Ministry of Sustainable Resource Development (SRD), and has a short list of extractive industrial members including the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers, two representatives from Alberta Forest Products Association, Alberta Fish and Game Association, Alberta Irrigation Projects Association and the Western Stock Growersโ€™ Association.ย 

The ESCC currently refuses to demote caribou to a critically endangered status despite encouragement from leading scientists, and accusations that it is stalling critical protections intended by the Wildlife Act. The Alberta Wilderness Association, one of the key environmental bodies fighting to preserve Albertaโ€™s caribou and halt the needless killing of wolves, has accused the ESCC of protecting industry interests, citing this as the cause behind the ESCCโ€™s continuous failure toย act.ย 

After the ESCC hesitantly listed the caribou species as threatenedย (a less formidable title than endangered), the Alberta Woodland Caribou Recovery Team was formed. By 2004 the team had developed a thorough working plan to recover caribou populations, making recommendations that covered all sides of the caribou issue, from protecting habitat to minimizing human activity. And each of the teamโ€™s recommendations were adopted โ€“ but with one surprisingย exception.ย 

The Alberta government refused to consent to a key recommendation for โ€œa moratorium of resource development allocations in the range areas of caribou populations at immediate risk of extirpation.โ€ This recommendation isnโ€™t asking a lot: just the halt of mineral and timber allocations in specific regions where the caribou were facing complete desolation. But Albertaโ€™s leaders refused to tolerate any setbacks to forestry or oil and gasย development.

Industryย Takeover

Photo by Kris Krug

The recovery team was unceremoniously disbanded the following year. The dismissal of the team – and its recommendations – while at odds with the intended purpose of the recovery plan, might best be explained by the presence of some powerful industry voices at the strategy table: Alberta Energy and the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers (CAPP), Canadaโ€™s largest contingent of petroleum lobbyists. Representing CAPPโ€™s interests on the recovery team were Devon Resources and Talisman Energy.

But nothing explains that twist in the story better than Alberta’s staunch fidelity to continued industrial development. And nothing stands to threaten that blind committment more than a band of respected scientists officially recommending a moratorium on certainย activities.ย 

Since 2004, Alberta has made no progress on the issue โ€“ the tar sands expansion continues with reckless speed while caribou populations continue toย decline.

Albertaโ€™s refusal to consider limiting tar sands expansion โ€“ even where caribou herds are facing imminent extirpation (localized extinction) โ€“ has led to a wholly unscientific alternative: a concerted effort to shift blame onto the wolves.

In the wake of the recovery teamโ€™s dispersal, the Alberta government launched a newย official โ€˜multi-stakeholderโ€™ body tasked with overseeing the provinceโ€™s Caribou Recovery Strategy: the Alberta Caribou Committee. Then Minister of Sustainable Resource Development, pro-hunt David Coutts, formed the ACC to take over the responsibilities of the Recoveryย Team.

Science Underย Attack

The Alberta Caribou Committee (ACC) describes itself as a โ€œcommunity of Government, Industrial, and Academic partnersโ€ working to โ€œintegrate industrial activities in northern Alberta with the conservation of caribou and caribouย habitat.โ€

This proposed โ€˜integrationโ€™ of conservation and industrial activities, however, means that independent scientific research is directed by heavy-handed industrial interests and a politicalย agenda.ย 

Internationally renowned biologist Paul Paquet describes the shared interest of industry and government in Alberta as a threat to scientificย integrity.ย 

โ€œThereโ€™s a real lack of independence there and there isnโ€™t even independence of most of the government scientists. Most are in a position where they have to represent a provincial concern rather than a scientific one or theyโ€™re compromised in some other way,โ€ Paquet told DeSmogBlog. โ€œItsย unfortunate.โ€

Scientist have found themselves fighting for caribou preservation in an impossible set of circumstances, where industry refuses to slow the pace of timber and tar sands development, and the government facilitates this growth in any wayย possible.ย 

But perhaps that has something to do with the composition of the ACC.ย 

Who Calls the Shots?

The Alberta Caribou Committee is so heavily dominated by timber, oil and gas interests, their public list of members reads like an industry conventionย brochure:ย 


ย 

Take a look at the Alberta Caribou Committee’s websiteย list of sponsoringย ‘partners’:

Notice an overwhelming number of oil and gas and forestry interests entrusted with this ‘wildlife recovery’ effort?

The list of ‘partner’ funders of this organization includes, among funding members: EnCana, Canadian Natural, Suncor, and Husky Energy. Energy companies interested in becoming a โ€˜contributing partnerโ€™ are directed to contact a representative from TransCanada Pipelines.ย 

Recommendations made by the ACC are done so under the direction of a governance board, also stacked in favor of industry and government interests. The board reports to the Minister of SRD, Frank Oberle. From 1988 until 2004, Oberle worked as a management forester and senior forestry advisor forย Daishowa-Marubeni International Ltd., one of the industry members of the ACC. Currently Oberleย is an MLA from the Peace River region of Alberta – a constituency heavily involved with the tar sands industry, with a bad caribou track record.ย 

With such close steps between industry and the caribou recovery strategy, it’s as if industry interests are both calling the shots and pulling theย trigger.

This wolf cull seems designed as a concerted effort – at the provincial and federal level – to conceal the cumulative social and environmental impacts of rapid tar sands expansion, keeping the decision-making power in the hands of a small group of industry and government representatives with an embedded industrialย agenda.

It appears the government and industry are willing to export Canada’s natural resources at whatever cost to our society – and it looks like wolves and caribou just got added to that list ofย expenses.

The question is, are we willing to pay the steep price of our health and heritage to supply polluting fuels to other countries who don’t always share our principles ofย democracy?ย 

The public comment period surrounding the proposed caribou recovery plan is set to close Februaryย 22nd.

Stop Unethical Oil in its Tracks. Signย DeSmogBlog’s email petitionย calling on Environment Canada to reject this anti-science attack on wolves. Let’s hold industry accountable for damaging the boreal forest ecosystem, not scapegoat innocent wildlife.ย ย ย 

Part 1 in aย series on Unethical Oil, please bookmark andย follow DeSmogBlogย forย more.

Image Credits: Shutterstock |ย Irina Afonskayaย |ย Intraclique LLCย | Neven Bjeliฤ‡ | Kris Krรผgย 

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