Last week I met a canny Canadian public relations operator named
Alykhan Velshi. A veteran of Washington’s conservative think tank
world and Ottawa’s Conservative government, his current project is
EthicalOil.org, a campaign
on behalf of the proposed Keystone XL pipeline (an expansion of
TransCanada’s existing Keystone pipeline system) which would run
from the tar sands in Alberta — a source of oil that became
technically and economically viable fairly recently — down to
Texas. But this isn’t the defensive and anodyne PR campaign you
normally see from the oil industry. Instead, billing Canadian oil
as “Ethical Oil,” the campaign asks whether you’d rather get your
gasoline from Canada or Saudi Arabia — and argues explicitly in
terms of human rights:
The environmentalist movement, of course, is against the
Keystone XL pipeline, because they’re against any exploration of
oil. But the given that it’s simply unrealistic to think that
alternate sources of energy are going to replace fossil fuels any
time soon, there is a fundamental moral deficiency in their
position. As energy policy scholar Amy Jaffe Myers
argues in the current prediction-themed
print edition of Foreign Policy, the center of gravity of
the global energy supply is poised to shift in the coming decades
from the Middle East to the Americas, with salutory geopolitical
effects. Opponents of exploration in the tar sands are in essence
trying to delay those effects, to the benefit of the sort of people
who won’t let women drive, and it’s good to see them being called
out on this. Commentary’s Alana Goodman
followed Velshi to the anti-tar sands protest at the White
House where, hilariously, Velshi borrowed a couple of think tank
interns, dressed them in
burkas, and had them join the protest on behalf of “Americans 4 OPEC.”
The left is split on this issue, as many labor unions are in
favor of the pipeline for the obvious reason that it would provide
jobs for their members. The Laborers International Union Local 1140
— joined by TransCanada’s vice president —
marched in support of the pipeline in Omaha’s Labor Day parade
yesterday. The pipeline needs approval from the State Department,
and while the Obama administration has hedged a bit
it seems likely that they’ll end up approving the pipeline.
Talking to Velshi, though, I got the sense that his campaign isn’t
just about the pipeline — it’s about giving workers in Canada’s
much-maligned oil patch a reason to be proud of what they do. And
given the alternatives, they should be proud.
About the Author
John Tabin is a frequent contributor to The American Spectator online.
The debacle of this president’s administration is both a cause
and a symptom of the decline of American values. Unless Congress
impeaches him, that decline will go on unchecked. An eminent jurist
surveys the damage and assesses the chances for the recovery of our
culture.
The American Christmas, like the songs that celebrate it,
makes room for everybody under the rainbow. Is that why so
many people seem to be hostile to it?