WATCH : The future will judge the decisions we make today. And that’s especially true when it comes to climate change and the push to reduce emissions.
“I don’t know the last time I ever recall this big a group of executives and companies coming to Ottawa,” said Cenovus Energy executive chair Alex Pourbaix, a member of the delegation, in an interview from Ottawa Tuesday.“We’re first trying to educate people out here about the diversity of businesses and opportunity in Alberta — and on top of that, you know, there are a lot of issues at play right now.
This week, Alberta government-funded ads about the perceived risks of federal emissions reduction policies rolled out across a number of markets — including in Ottawa, where the province has paid to plaster trucks with banner ads warning passersby that the federal plan will lead to higher electricity bills.But Pourbaix said Alberta’s business leaders are keen to focus on policy, rather than “the political issues that could work more to separate us than bring us together.
Pourbaix, for example, through his role with Cenovus, is heavily involved in the Pathways Alliance — a group of Alberta oilsands companies which has been lobbying the federal government for financial and policy support for a proposed massive carbon capture and storage network to help reduce emissions from Canada’s oil industry.‘Just Transition’ has wrong name, right idea on jobs: Cenovus head
“We just really wanted to bring all of those industries together and come to Ottawa and say, ‘you know, it’s important for all of Canada that Alberta live up to its full potential,”’ she said.
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