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Tourists urged to boycott Alberta

U.S. billboards latest tactic in struggle over oilsands' public image

By Trish Audette, Edmonton Journal, with files from Ryan Cormier July 15, 2010 4:03 AM

The oilsands public relations war heated up Wednesday, as billboards were unveiled in four major U.S. cities comparing Alberta oil production to the destruction caused by the Gulf oil spill.

The billboards in Denver, Portland, Seattle and Minneapolis described the province as home to "the other oil disaster."

The billboards feature pictures of a dead duck found in a Syncrude tailings pond and an oil-soaked pelican in the Gulf of Mexico.

"We think that actually in the end there's no comparison. The tarsands are much worse," Corporate Ethics director Michael Marx said.

Corporate Ethics International -- partnered with a handful of organizations such as the Sierra Club, Greenpeace, the World Wildlife Fund and others -- said Wednesday the billboards cost as much as $50,000.

The price tag for the whole "Rethink Alberta" campaign, which includes a hefty Internet presence and promises to take the campaign to potential tourists in Europe and perhaps Asia, was kept under wraps.

"I can tell you it's substantial. We have major funding for this effort and a commitment for multiple years," Marx said.

"I think we have all been caught off -guard by the scope of anti-oil campaigns, that these are international campaigns," said Janet Annesley, a spokeswoman for the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers.

In the past six months, her organization has changed its communications strategy, buying ads in national newspapers, magazines and on television to tell Canadians about how the oil industry is trying to lessen its environmental impact.

"The attacks on the oilsands are attacks on the industry, not necessarily attacks on individual companies. So it's incumbent on the industry association to step up, and be more visible," Annesley said.

"Just as a lot of the NGOs and the environmental activists ... don't disclose to the news media what their costs are, we are not disclosing ours."

Marx said Wednesday that Premier Ed Stelmach's 2008 promise to spend millions to improve its image was seen as a challenge by environmental groups.

"The government was very clear about the fact that it was setting aside $25 million to rebrand itself, partially in response to the negative image that it was gaining as a result of the tarsands," Marx said.

"Our role is really to expose the inconvenient truth about the social and environmental irresponsibility of corporations, and now of this province, and see how it affects their brand."

In Calgary on Wednesday, Stelmach defended the province. "We absolutely will fight back through promoting Alberta's story using accurate information."

While industry and government offi cials painted the Corporate Ethics campaign as misleading, Stelmach said the province has no plans to pursue any court action against the environmental group. He said court proceedings would "give them $5-million worth of media."

Although fewer than 500,000 Americans visit Alberta's biggest attractions each year, people in the tourism industry are taking the billboard and Rethink Alberta campaign seriously.

"They're painting the province with a black brush," said Ken Fiske, vice-president of tourism and marketing for the Edmonton Economic Development Corporation.

"Will it affect business? Absolutely. There's no question it's part of our market and for all of Alberta, it's a pretty big issue."

Travel Alberta spokesman Don Boynton said the Corporate Ethics campaign could affect the thousands of Albertans employed as tour operators, hotel workers and elsewhere in the tourism sector.

"This flies in the face of what tourism and travel is all about," he said.

"People want to connect with Canadians and witness our culture and environment. People who want to advocate for a particular cause, it's incongruent with allowing people to understand what we do with our environment and why we're a good destination."

But Boynton said previous attempts to tie tourism to political issues have failed.

Tourism Minister Cindy Ady said she was disappointed by the advertising campaign, but she said it is difficult to guess what impact the ads will have.

"Obviously, you never want somebody to strike at you like this. That being said, will it really work? We've had it before, and ... we've just gone on," she said.

She noted Travel Alberta spends about $50 million a year promoting the province. "I can show you pictures of Alberta that will just counter that message instantly," she said of the Rethink Alberta campaign photographs, which also include a picture of a pipe spewing brown liquid into a tailings pond.

"I just think Albertans are going to be bothered by this. They're going to say, 'This is a beautiful place,' and feel under attack by others."

In the next couple weeks, similar billboard advertisements are expected to go up in the United Kingdom, Marx said. And the organization plans an online ad campaign that would ensure people outside Canada who use Google to find out more about Alberta's tourism destinations would come across the Rethink Alberta ads.

The ultimate goal of the campaign is to end expansion of the oilsands.

The Corporate Ethics billboards are not the only spotlight on Alberta's environmental record this week.

In the United States, legislators continue to take aim at the expansion of a bitumen-carrying Keystone XL Pipeline from Alberta through the Midwest.

Today, a legal co-operative supporting the Beaver Lake Cree Nation is expected to release a report showing woodland caribou face potential extinction because of oilsands development in northeastern Alberta.

BY THE NUMBERS

Corporate Ethics International spent up to $50,000 US on billboards in four different American cities to discourage Alberta tourism. Other lobby groups involved include Friends of the Earth, Earthworks, Rainforest Action Network and ForestEthics.

Corporate Ethics International keeps its donor lists secret.

- -Alberta ships 1.4 million barrels of crude oil a day to the United States.

- -Canada ships 1.9 million barrels of crude oil a day to the United States.

- -Saudi Arabia, the second-largest shipper to the U.S., moves 1.06 million barrels a day.

In 2008:

- -82 per cent of Alberta tourism was made up of other Albertans, 11 per cent were other Canadians, four per cent were American and three per cent were from overseas.

- -1.6 million international visitors came to Alberta and spent $5.7 billion.

- -828,000 Americans visited Alberta and spent $583 million.

- -229,000 tourists from the United Kingdom visited Alberta and spent $260 million. In 2008, Americans went to (some visitors to more than one area):

- -Edmonton 392,519

- -Rockies 263,265

- -Calgary 160,406

- -Southern Alberta 119,086

- -Central Alberta 124,144

- -Northern Alberta 51,078

In 2008, Europeans went to (some visitors to more than one area):

- -Edmonton 136,608

- -Rockies 520,692

- -Calgary 374,728

- -Southern Alberta 55,012

- -Central Alberta 47, 806

- -Northern Alberta 22,153

American tourists are most likely to come from California, Washington and Montana. European tourists are most likely to come from the United Kingdom.

- -Travel Alberta has a $50-million annual budget.

- -Alberta employs 100,000 in the tourism industry.

taudette@thejournal.canwest.com

© Copyright © The Edmonton Journal

Read more: http://www.edmontonjournal.com/news/Tour...z0tkjkw6h4

http://www.edmontonjournal.com/news/Tour...story.html
1600 ducks die in a single event at a tailings pond and it makes international news. 4700 birds (including 1300 raptors) die EVERY YEAR at the Altamont Pass windmill farm outside San Francisco and no one says a word. Nope, no double standard there.

http://birds.suite101.com/article.cfm/bi..._windmills

To put things in some sort of perspective, have a gander at these figures. In the USA ALONE, over 9.5 BILLION birds are slaughtered for food every year. Note that that does not count the other forms of life that are killed and consumed for food, and again, those figures are only for the USA.

http://www.upc-online.org/slaughter/2000...stats.html

Personally I won't lose too much sleep over 1600 ducks. It was unfortunate that they died, but s*&t happens sometimes. Looking at the big picture, this does not even register.

As for not buying our "dirty oil", then don't. The rest of the world is lined up to take your place. When your industry and vehicles grind to a stop for lack of fuel, I wonder what tune you will whistle then.
136,000 Europeans visited Deadmonton? They must be the ones that got lost leaving Calgary. :-P
for tourism?

What for?
I have no idea why anyone would want to visit here.

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I've seen pics of that hotel. That one in Quebec is nice too.

I'm a beach guy though. I'll spend $7000 this year for two Mexican vacations.
I don't see the envionmentalists speaking out against US imports of oil from Nigeria. Maybe what's going on there is OK with them. Perhaps the US should stop importing Canadian oil and further trash the environment in Nigeria instead. They could also increase reliance on Middle-East and Venezuelan oil. Great plan they have there!
Just a bunch of hippies with a bone to chew.

Oil money is always more powerful than hippie money..
Americans should boycott tourism in the Gulf states in order to protest offshore oil drilling and the evironmental disaster in the Gulf. It would make about as much sense as this Alberta boycott nonsense.
Howie, just be rest assured it is some idiot liberals. And you are exactly right, they never say anything about the birds killed in the windmills.

But according to libli, they are the smart ones.......



AK
No more B.C. salmon to the USA - all will go to those three - four - five star resorts in Cuba and other Caribbean countries !!!
(Jul 15, 2010 11:42 AM)Howie Wrote: [ -> ]I have no idea why anyone would want to visit here.

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Fantastic pics! Thanks!
You're welcome Lo Ves. I cannot take any credit for the pictures though, as I shamelessly "borrowed" them from the 'net. Here are some more if you are interested. Again, the pics were not taken by me.

Bow Lake in Banff National Park
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Moraine Lake in Banff National Park
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Spirit Island on Maligne Lake in Jasper National Park
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Mount Edith Cavell in Jasper National Park. Edith Cavell was an English nurse executed by firing squad by the Germans in World War I.
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Lake Louise and the Lake Louise Hotel in Banff National Park
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On a chair lift at the Lake Louise ski resort. You can see the Lake Louise Hotel and the frozen Lake Louise to the right of the girl in the purple ski suit. I have skied at Lake Louise MANY times. It is about 2 hours from my front door. http://www.skilouise.com/
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The main ski lodge at Lake Louise.
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Snow boarder at the Sunshine Village ski resort. I have also skied at Sunshine Village MANY times. In fact I held a season pass there for many years. Sunshine Village is about 1.5 hours from my front door. http://skibanff.com/
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The City of Calgary. It is home to more than 1 million people and the Bow River is a world class trout stream. Yes, you can fish for trout in downtown Calgary. Smile I drive over the iron bridge in the foreground every day going home from work. The Calgary Zoo is located on the treed Island that the bridge links to.
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IF I didn't have this aversion to cold weather, I would visit up there in a heatbeat.



AK
Howie, thanks again!
Doesn't Saby live up in that area? Hey Saby, I'm coming to visit!!!
(Jul 16, 2010 07:26 PM)angelking Wrote: [ -> ]IF I didn't have this aversion to cold weather, I would visit up there in a heatbeat.
AK

AK, Cold weather? July, August? Guess you're one of those 'murcans' who arrive at the Canadian border with skiis on their car in July!! Just checked the temps for tomorrow for Alberta and it is far from cold!!! 73F

Howie, we spend a lot of time in Ontario Canada, but from these wonderful images, Alberta is definitely on our list, as is British Columbia!
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