Albertans should just say no to Just Transition

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The salary value of the jobs under threat is worth about $219 billion annually

Kris SimsWhen the federal government writes down its plans for Alberta, we should take a close look.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Just Transition plan could have a deep impact on Alberta’s energy, farming, construction and trucking.

Details are murky, but based on what we do know, Just Transition could cost thousands of jobs and billions of dollars.

A ministry memo obtained by Blacklocks Reporter outlines the “uneven impact” it could have:

“The transition to a low carbon economy will have an uneven impact across sectors, occupations and regions and create significant labour market disruptions,” the memo reads.

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KEEP AN EYE ON ALBERTA

“We expect that larger scale transformation will take place in:

  • “Agriculture (about 292,000 workers or 1.5 per cent of Canada’s employment),
  • “Energy (about 202,000 workers or one per cent of Canada’s employment),
  • “Manufacturing (about 193,000 workers or one per cent of Canada’s employment),
  • “Building (about 1.4 million workers or seven per cent of Canada’s employment) and
  • “Transportation sectors (about 642,000 workers or three per cent of Canada’s employment).”

With the kinds of jobs expecting a “larger scale transformation,” the plan could be named Just Break Alberta.

Statistics Canada says about 140,000 people work in Alberta’s energy sector, about 40,000 work in agriculture and about 40,000 in trucking.

The feds say the jobs listed are the totals for categories, not ones that would necessarily be turned inside out by the plan.

That’s not very comforting for farmers, energy workers, truckers and many others. That’s especially true when they look at comments the prime minister has made in the past.

In 2017 Trudeau stated, “we can’t shut down the oilsands tomorrow; we need to phase them out.”

Taxpayers should also feel uneasy about the price tags tossed around in that federal memo.

“We have been particularly interested in the approach taken by Scotland, as it is looking at just transition from a broad, economy-wide perspective,” states the memo.

And oi, is it expensive!

“The Scottish government created the Just New Deal (2020): £3 billion package of investments from the Scottish National Investment Bank in order to attract just finance. Additional 2020-21 measures include £1.6 billion to improve building efficiency and tackle fuel poverty; £100 million Just Job Fund; £60 million to help industrial/manufacturing sectors decarbonize and diversify,” the memo reads.

That cost is equivalent to C$7.9 billion, while Scotland has a population of five million people. Adjusted for our population, that would be about a $57-billion hit for Canadian taxpayers.

And that’s just the direct cost to taxpayers.

The jobs listed in the memo as “significant labour market disruptions” total more than 2.7 million positions.

The salary value of those jobs is worth about $219 billion annually.

If just a fraction of these jobs was destroyed or had to be replaced with taxpayer subsidies, Albertans and taxpayers couldn’t afford it.

Alberta got the memo, and we should just say no to Just Transition.

Kris Sims is the Alberta Director for the Canadian Taxpayers Federation.

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The opinions expressed by our columnists and contributors are theirs alone and do not inherently or expressly reflect the views of our publication.

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By Kris Sims

Kris Sims worked in radio in the Comox Valley before moving to Ottawa to work as a legislative assistant on Parliament Hill. She then joined Ottawa News Talk Radio 580 CFRA as a reporter and anchor, eventually becoming a journalist for the CTV parliamentary bureau. Kris was a founding reporter for Sun News Network and covered issues of big government, personal liberty and the rights of small-town and rural Canadians until SNN was shut down. She then worked as the director of communications for Veterans Affairs Minister Erin O’Toole, and as the senior producer for Evan Solomon at CFRA Radio. With deep family roots in Alberta’s rodeo country, she is proud to fight for the rights of all taxpayers.

1 comment

  1. Three countries: China, India and Russia contribute 40% of the world’s emissions. Not only have none of them made relevant reduction commitments but all of them are currently building hundreds of coal power plants that will negate (or even exceed) most or all of our reductions.
    Dramatic emissions reduction pledges in the West are irrelevant without corresponding reductions in the rest of the world. How can western governments justify to their people the sacrifices proposed? Where is the benefit to our environment? We must start thinking globally before we act locally. Let government justification start with real-world scientific evidence that anthropogenic CO2 controls the Earth’s thermostat.

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