King Ralph Klien attacks Al Gore

Started by Sportsdude, Jul 05 06 03:35

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Sportsdude

Alberta Premier slams Al Gore interview on oilsands projects

CP

Yahoo

  Edmonton - Premier Ralph Klein has criticized former U.S. presidential candidate Al Gore for comments he made in a magazine interview in which he attacked the massive oilsands industry in northern Alberta.  

 Gore told an interviewer in the latest issue of Rolling Stone that oilsands processing is a huge waste of energy and creates an eyesore on the landscape of Western Canada. "For every barrel of oil they extract there, they have to use enough natural gas to heat a family's home for four days," Gore told the magazine.

 

 "And they have to tear up four tonnes of landscape, all for one barrel of oil. It is truly nuts. But you know, junkies find veins in their toes. It seems reasonable, to them, because they've lost sight of the rest of their lives."

 

 Gore concluded the United States must reduce its dependence on oil as the primary source of energy to save the planet from the devastating impact of global warming.

 

 Klein, who was recently in Washington to promote the oilsands as a reliable source of energy for the U.S., said Gore's views are simply not realistic.

 

 "I don't know what he proposes the world run on, maybe hot air," Klein told reporters Tuesday. "I don't listen to Al Gore in particular because he's a Democrat. And not only that, he's about as far left as you can go.

 

 "The simple fact is America needs oil. They need gas. And unless he can find some other source, fine."

 

 Klein has stirred controversy in the past by rejecting scientific data suggesting industrial pollution is one of the leading causes of global warming.

 

 He has even said global warming trends that occurred millions of years ago may have been caused by "dinosaur farts."

 

 But the premier conceded for the first time Tuesday that the current causes of global warming are "man-made."

 

 "I don't argue with the science that all of us - as we exhale, as the population grows, as there are more vehicles on the streets and more carbons produced - that we contribute to global warming."

 

 Klein said although Alberta strongly rejected measures in the Kyoto accord to reduce global warming, he believes the province is taking a prudent approach in reducing emissions.

 

 "We take the matter of global warming very seriously. We just don't think that the Kyoto Protocol is the way to go," he said. "As far as I know, we're the only jurisdiction in Canada to put in legislation to reduce greenhouse gases."

 

 But Kevin Taft, Alberta's Liberal Opposition leader, said he doesn't think Klein's Conservative government has given the issue of global warming the kind of attention it deserves.

 

 "For the Alberta government to stick its head in the sand on this issue is just nuts," Taft said. "The world is going to switch to other forms of energy. There will be no choice."

 

 Taft said Alberta needs to keep pace with the rest of the world by investing in research of alternate forms of energy.

 

 Klein said Alberta is taking the right approach for a province which has a resource-based economy.

 "We're a carbon-based economy."

"We can't stop here. This is bat country."