Across the street, at left, the building in Washington’s lobbyists’ quarter a few blocks north of the White House that houses Energy in Depth and the Independent Petroleum Association of America (Photo: Google Street View).

There’s nothing outright bonkers about the report by Energy in Depth, the U.S. fossil fuel advocacy organization paid $64,000 by the “Public Inquiry into Anti-Alberta Energy Campaigns” to come up with justification for the conspiracy theories pushed by the United Conservative Party Government during and after the 2019 election campaign.

Sure, Foreign Funding Targeting Canada’s Energy Sector is tendentious and needs to be taken with a grain of salt. 

The cover of “Foreign Funding Targeting Canada’s Energy Sector,” the Energy in Depth report commissioned by Alberta’s “Public Inquiry into Anti-Alberta Energy Campaigns” (Image: Energy in Depth).

The 38-page document relies on common tricks known to all public relations people to give a misleading impression while not actually lying. This is known as spin doctoring. 

This is not to say, though, that the Energy in Depth report is not a competent work of industrial propaganda.

On the contrary, it is an excellent example. It would have been a fine model for the Alberta Energy War Room when it was set up by Alberta Premier Jason Kenney. But unlike Canadian Energy Centre Ltd., as the $30-million-per-annum War Room is technically known, Energy in Depth appears to be run by people who know what they’re doing. 

Energy in Depth is bankrolled by the Independent Petroleum Association of America, which represents independent oil and gas drilling companies involved in hydraulic fracking in the United States. 

The IPAA and Energy in Depth are very close. They literally operate out of the same suite of offices seven blocks north of the White House in Washington, D.C.

Energy in Depth describes itself as “a research, education and public outreach campaign focused on getting the facts out about the promise and potential of responsibly developing America’s onshore energy resource base.” It offers “rapid response and a research platform on numerous oil and gas issues.”

It invites visitors to its website to hang around and give it a shout if they have questions. “You’ll also find studies – some on jobs, others on safety, and even a few about how the shale ‘revolution’ in the United States continues to impact energy markets (for the better!) all around the world.”

Its work is slick. 

The entrance to the Rockefeller Centre in New York City, included because, you know … The Rockefellers (Photo: David J. Climenhaga).

But when it reports to Mr. Allan that for two decades “wealthy foundations outside of Canada have funnelled money and resources to campaigns that attack the oil industry” and then says in the next paragraph that “the total amount of money going towards anti-fossil fuel efforts is staggering” and cites a $557-million figure, it’s comparing apples and oranges. 

That is to say, it’s placing a U.S. spending claim adjacent to a Canadian situation and letting readers draw their own, probably inaccurate, conclusions.

When it paints like-minded people working together to stop practices they believe are harmful and dangerous as if they were engaged in a global conspiracy, that’s just spin. Most of us would think such activities are not only normal in a democracy, but the duty of good citizens.

When it quotes spectacular numbers of jobs and fabulous sums of tax revenues supposedly lost because of environmental campaigns, that’s what Mark Twain called a stretcher. Like inflated promises of economic benefits from dubious, environmentally harmful industrial activities, sensible people view such claims with skepticism.

When it huffily suggests environmental groups’ activities are covert and sinister but proclaims fossil fuel industry campaigns open and transparent because “most of the energy industry’s money directed towards advocacy has gone into direct lobbying, which is easily tracked and subject to robust disclosure requirements,” that’s just hilarious.

Inquiry Commissioner Steve Allan (Photo: Lieutenant Governor of Alberta).

And when it tosses in as an unsubstantiated afterthought to the final line of its report that “other investigations, including by the United States Congress, have looked into efforts by Chinese and Russian entities to fund and influence environmental activism targeting North American energy production,” that is little more than scary rumour-mongering. 

The report’s myriad footnotes look positively scholarly. But if readers examine them closely, they will not find much illumination. Many link to garden-variety newspaper clippings proving only that someone, somewhere talked about the topic at a public meeting. 

The document includes a list of short profiles of organizations identified by the authors as “main funders” of the alleged anti-Alberta campaigns the Alberta inquiry purports to be trying to unearth. 

The profiles commence with a slightly longer dissertation on the Rockefeller Family’s charity funds, outlining the rather modest support they have given to Canadian environmental charities but leaving the impression of something bigger and more sinister. A list of short abstracts on a few environmental organizations and campaigns follows. There’s not much real news here. 

So why did the Commissioner Allen’s inquiry pay a cool $50,000 US (about $64,000 Cdn) for this pedestrian research?

Any reasonably competent public relations agency could have produced a report like this in a couple of weeks, a month at most. The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers certainly could have whipped one up in jig time. Even Canadian Energy Centre Ltd. itself, set up to do such work itself with its own staff researchers, should have been able to oblige.

Of course, by now the Canadian Energy Centre has zero credibility. In fact, its brand would likely damage any campaign associated with it. Likewise, too many Canadians are wise to CAPP. So Mr. Allan presumably decided to reach south of the border to an organization with a vague name that the Canadian public might not recognize as part of the oil industry. 

But why did this cost so much?

After all, Energy in Depth is bankrolled to provide information like this free to anyone who wants to write about the oil industry or defend it. As part of the propaganda wing of the fossil fuel industry, its mandate is surely is to produce fact sheets, videos, charts and graphs gratis, on demand.

So why did it cost anything at all? 

The simplest explanation is that it was written to order to reach the conclusions desired by Mr. Allan’s so-called public Inquiry, which has been conducted entirely in private.

Energy in Depth, in other words, could be depended upon to save the Kenney Government some embarrassment for its discredited conspiracy theories about the Rockefeller funds and others by including among its “key findings” that “wealthy foundations outside of Canada have been the driving source of funding behind these campaigns. Key among these funders are Rockefeller philanthropies.”

Given what the inquiry got, we paid too much. 

Mr. Allan must not have anticipated the document would be available to the public in time to read before his report was released.

The inquiry is supposed to deliver its final report on Monday. 

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11 Comments

  1. “have looked into efforts by Chinese and Russian entities to fund and influence environmental activism targeting North American energy production,” that is little more than scary rumour-mongering.”

    And zero research. I googled “Chinese oil companies in Alberta”, and just in tarsands alone, came up with this link:

    http://sellsidehandbook.com/2017/09/26/chinese-energy-companies-canada/

    There’s dozens of other links showing Chinese companies buying up and operating Alberta oil and gas assets of all kinds.

    Yup, those Chinese companies, at least one fully government-owned, aren’t investing here, it’s all a mirage. Nah, they’re trying to undermine themselves by funding and influencing environmental activism against — themselves. Sure, goes the right wingnut mind, but yah gotta understand it’s a double-cross commie plot to get kenney, my pick for the crown of Small Mind of Canada, 2006 to present. Yeah, those Chinese oil and gas sector companies are really scary spy fronts trying to promote environmentalism so quietly, your average Albertan doesn’t even know they’re present in the province. Does kenney? Does truth matter to him? Of course not.

    Can’t even get facts right, the report. Hardly matters, it’s merely propaganda pushing a state of mind amenable to armpit scratcher mainstream thought, so that they go “Aha! I knew it!”

  2. For a more accurate report on this issue THE WAR ROOM could have checked out an article by Sandy Garossino in the National Observer from Oct 3rd, 2019, for FREE.

  3. I read the article, it seemed to be custom made for the emperor of the Kenney Petroleum Corporation.
    Thank goodness I have the where withal to form my own opinion about what is a solution to global warming.
    If I listened to Industrial Propoganda” of articles like that one I would question my common sense and the ability
    to see past my nose.

    Thanks for all you do David,
    Bruce

  4. You are doing an excellent job of exposing this report for what it is. Stick-tap. I am kind of surprised to be honest – I suppose I’m being cynical, but it seems to me that if a person were willing and able to read and assess arguments at an adult level, they would already have been convinced of your conclusion months ago. Reading your coverage of this is sort of like watching an art critic write ten thousand words about a piece of bathroom vandalism, or a respected food critic writing a review of a cow pie, or a doctor writing a thesis on Why You Shouldn’t Lick Doorknobs During COVID.

  5. The very first paragraph of the Executive Summary in the US report claimed rail blockades shut down “some rail lines entirely” which was really only true of some commuter lines in Eastern Canada. Starting from this overstated premise they leaped to claiming food prices increased and shipping, presumably of grain to the west coast, was delayed.

    Last February, while Premier Kenney hyper-ventilated about an afternoon protest on a CN line in Edmonton shutting down grain shipments, a land-slide in British Columbia caused by heavy rain had shut down the CN line to the coast for several days. Never-the-less last February’s year-to-date grain shipments were only down 1.6% compared to the previous year and mostly because of “a delayed harvest, an eight-day strike at CN in November, temporary speed restrictions, and mainline washouts in January” to quote the impartial Grain Monitoring Report.

    So, while the rail blockades generated a lot of nonsense in the press, their effects on grain shipments were trivial and the railways have to get much credit for moving more grain so quickly in the following months – actually increasing year over year shipments from then on.

    The assertions about rail blockades from the US report show how misguided nonsense from Canadian sources can be picked up south of the border and re-sold.

  6. I’ve clicked footnote links and so far I’ve completed only the first column on the first page. The majority of the links are broken, including energyindepth.org and eidclimate.org references which state: Sorry, no posts matched your criteria. This is not looking good.

    One has to wonder what more remedy does Kenney propose to deal with this dastardly attempt to beat the poor whimpering oil industry to death.

    Sadly, probably the most content verifiable footnote is missing: Jason Alice Kenney in Wonderland, His Stream of Thought Annotated Version. That could be an interesting read.

  7. A Conservaphrenic plot to dupe—uh—exactly who, again?
    Look no further than the informative albertapolitics.ca to help us sort out this truly incredible Bitumignoranium Conspiracy.
    Thnx again, DJC, for your excellent work!

  8. The UCP are definitely getting desperate. When all else fails, they have to try something else. I think the UCP’s days are numbered.

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