She's outspoken AND smart.
That's certainly rare given the state of politics...everywhere.
First, a little bit about her:
Lori Ackerman has been mayor of Fort St. John since 2011. She was born in Manitoba and raised in all four western provinces. She has lived in the Peace region since 1980 and in Fort St. John since 1988.
Pretty impressive credentials, n'est ce pas?
Yup.
She wrote an open letter to British Columbia residents:
“If
you want to do something
about our reliance on fossil fuels
then address the DEMAND for them not the TRANSPORTATION of them.”
Lori Ackerman, mayor Fort St. John, B.C.
Dear British
Columbia Citizens,
That is not
a current headline but it could be. What would happen to our economy if it was?
I would like to talk to you about energy, pipelines and our natural resources.
I am a mum and a grandma and I have lived in the north all my life.
I am also
the Mayor of Fort St. John – right smack in the middle of one of the world’s
largest supplies of oil and gas. I live in a region surrounded by pipelines,
wells, hydraulic fracturing (fracking) sites and canola and wheat fields. I
have eaten the food we grow here and I drink our water. I understand what it
takes to extract our natural resources and what it takes to protect our
environment. I live it.
I don’t want
to try to convince you of anything but I would like to share with you what I
know to be true. I strongly encourage you to do some of your own research.
Learn more than what you read in a tweet or a Facebook post.
Where does
the petroleum we all use every day come from? Canada has some of the largest
petroleum resources in the world and yet Canada imports 634,000 barrels of
crude oil from foreign countries every single day. That is $26 BILLION of oil
imports every year that we could have supplied to ourselves. That product
arrives in tankers and is transported to where it needs to go by truck and
train right through our communities. And yet we don’t want our own product to
flow in pipelines to our communities for our own use or to our ports so we can
export it? That just makes no sense at all to me.
So let’s
talk about pipelines. I know pipelines are a safe, cost-efficient means of oil
and natural gas transportation and emit fewer greenhouse gases than alternate
transportation methods. Canada has 830,000 kilometers of pipelines. Three
million barrels of crude oil is transported safely every single day.
B.C. Has
over 43,000 kilometers of pipelines. If we took that oil out of the pipelines,
we would need 4,200 rail cars to move it. How many of those cars would you like
rolling through your community? Between 2002 and 2015, 99.9995% of liquid was
transported through our pipelines SAFELY. You probably spill more when you fill
up at the gas station.
I understand
you don’t want tankers floating down our beautiful B.C. Coast. But did you know
the USA has been shipping up to 600,000 barrels a day of crude from Alaska to
the Puget Sound through the Salish Sea for the last 20 years? Did you know that
B.C. Has a Tanker Exclusion Zone that has been respected for years?
That zone
stipulates that full tankers must travel on the west side of the zone but those
that are not transporting goods can stay inside the protective zone. Other than
one natural gas pipeline, Vancouver Island receives all of their petroleum by
barge every day. I don’t remember ever hearing anyone complain about that.
According to
Transport Canada over 197,000 vessels arrived or departed from west coast ports
in 2015 – 1487 of them were tankers. 400,000 barrels of crude oil is safely
transported off the B.C. Coast every single day. Sooo…. I think we are OK
there. Emissions? 80% of the emissions associated with fossil fuels are
generated in their combustion – not their extraction and transportation.
If you want
to do something about our reliance on fossil fuels then address the demand for
them not the transportation of them. Change starts with consumers not industry.
A large part
of the demand for fossil fuels in B.C. Is transportation. 33% of our fossil
fuels are used to operate cars, trucks, planes, trains and ferries. If we
switched all of that over to electricity we would need not just one Site C dam but
15 of them. Which communities do you want to flood to provide the energy for
your electric cars? Remember I live 7 km from Site C dam so I have a pretty
good understanding of them.
I love this
quote from Blair King an Environmental Scientist and Writer: “We live in a
world where all the work we do to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions in B.C. can be undone with the flick of a pen in China or India. No matter what we do,
those developing countries are going to get electrical power to their
populations – if not with LNG, then with coal; and if not with B.C. LNG, then
with lower intensity (read: dirtier) LNG from one of our competitors. In both
cases the end result is higher global GHG emissions than if B.C. LNG was used.”
He is
telling us to look outside our province and see the impact we can have on Greenhouse Gasses on our planet. Our LNG is cleaner than the stuff already on the market because
our regulations are tougher and we emit far less GHG in our production than in
other countries.
Our natural
gas industry is committed to continuous improvement. I understand that you are
concerned about safety. I am too. In Canada we have some of the strictest
safety requirements in the world. Canada’s oil and gas producers are
continuously improving the safety of their operations and transportation of
their products.
Emergency
Response Plans are customized for each community, covering key areas such as
public safety, protection of community infrastructure, and a clear plan of
action with local emergency responders. And we have the B.C. Oil and Gas
Commission to oversee B.C. projects and the National Energy Board oversees the
larger multi-jurisdictional projects.
The Oil and
Gas Commission is our provincial agency responsible for regulating oil and gas
activities in British Columbia, including exploration, development, pipeline
transportation and reclamation.
Core
responsibilities include reviewing and assessing applications for proposed
industry activities, engaging with First Nations, cooperating with partner
agencies, and ensuring industry complies with provincial legislation and all
regulatory requirements. International delegations come to B.C., as world
leaders, to learn how we have partnered environmental protection with resource
extraction. I think the Oil and Gas Commission does a good job of protecting
the interests of citizens.
Many of you
have concerns about the rights of our Indigenous Peoples. I will not speak for
them but I will provide you with a quote from Stephen Buffalo, president and
CEO of the Indian Resource Council: “I think industry is now willing to be a
partner (with First Nations). They want to come with the First Nations
together. We are depending on these pipelines for the success of the Canadian
economy.”
So let’s
talk about the economy. B.C.’s energy sector offers some of the largest
provincial economic opportunities in a generation. It is estimated that, in
2010, 11.2% of the provincial exports came from the natural resource sector.
That was over $21 billion worth.
Canada’s oil
and natural gas sector contributes $1.5 billion to the provincial government
but it is estimated that it could go as high as $2.4 billion per year. This is
money for health care, education and infrastructure. The resource sector is the
foundational stone upon which the B.C. economy was built, and it is as
important today as ever. 440,000 Canadians are employed because of the oil and
gas sector.
A recent
study by Philip Cross, former chief economic analyst at Statistics Canada,
shows the huge economic value of the natural resource industry in B.C., and in
particular the Lower Mainland. Cross’ report demonstrates that over 55 percent
of resource-related jobs and income (direct, indirect and induced) flow to the
Lower Mainland.
This means
those workers contribute to our economy by renting or buying homes, buying
groceries, enjoying a quality life and shopping their local businesses. Let’s
lead the world in resource extraction, continuous improvements and long term
planning.
Let’s be leaders in reliable and renewable energy development.
Let’s
support Canadian industry and stop buying foreign oil.
Let’s grow our economy
by meeting our domestic needs and exporting our abundant resources.
Let’s live
well now and in the future.
Thank you
for taking the time to be an informed citizen."
Lori Ackerman
Lori Ackerman is decidedly right of center in this graphic. |
"Maybe she has a sister who will run for mayor here," Kia would've offered.
We can dream...
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