It was the best of times ..........
I think
that one day we will look back upon the last couple of decades and say that
without a doubt those were the best years for humanity in terms of lifestyle,
safety and security here in Canada and in other developed economies. It would
seem doubtful that humans will solve the issue of climate change. Canada, in an
effort to lead by example, looks to create an economic shift in our economy in
order to reduce our 1.8 % percent of global emissions. The outcomes from Paris
suggest China will double their emissions by 2030 and India will triple theirs.
Currently the carbon tax being proposed by the Federal Government is $15 tonne.
That number needs to be somewhere around $160 tonne to reach the stated targets.
Peter
Foster writes in the Financial Post on Feb 18, 2016 titled Naomi Klein stars
in ‘This Misrepresents Everything’ : …..Klein’s
documentary This Changes Everything, which will air on CBC - “Can I be honest
with you?” Klein asks at the beginning of this very dishonest film. “I’ve
always kind of hated films about climate change … Is it really possible to be
bored by the end of the world?”
No, Naomi, but it is possible to be bored by people
who prattle incessantly that the end of the world is imminent when it isn’t,
and who want to end the best world we’ve ever had.
We, as
the CAGC, track social media metrics for not only our feeds but for all feeds
across the Industry Associations and specific industry focused websites. The
numbers are interesting in terms of how difficult it is for the Industry to
gain traction. Most feeds have somewhere between 500 and 1000 followers. Bigger
ones include CAPP with 4,000 Facebook Likes; 38,000 Twitter Followers and 3,500
LinkedIn Followers. Their campaign Energy Citizens has 66,000 Facebook Likes
and 5,600 Twitter Followers. Even Cody Battershill’s Canada Action – I love
OilSands only has 26,000 Facebook Likes and 17,000 Twitter Followers. Given we
are a country of more than some 33 million, we actually touch a very small
portion with our media.
The CAODC
are launching their own campaign called Oil Respect.
Why Oil Respect Might Just Work by Bill Whitelaw, CEO, JuneWarren-Nickle's Energy Group, February 22,
2016
Picture this: a stone tossed into a pond.
It creates on the water's surface an impact that
displays as ever-widening circles radiating outward. Each successive concentric
circle is wider than its predecessor.
It's a good metaphor for a Canadian economy
increasingly stressed by the impacts of low commodity prices; each circle has
its own identifiable characteristics of economic impairment. And the outer
circle is now almost unimaginably large and it's dawning on ordinary Canadians
that an energy sector in the tank does no one any good.
Now, in your mind's eye, replace the stone with a
drill bit and imagine it tossed into the troubled waters that is the Canadian
economy.
The drill bit is another useful metaphor: how many
of them are turning, or not, in a very real way defines Canada's economic
momentum. In the context of the bit-in-a-pond allusion, the concentric circle
can be understood to represent impacts on Canadians as they ripple outward.
The drill bit is also usefully symbolic in that it
represents Oil Respect, a timely and impactful awareness campaign launched last
week by the companies whose bits hit the ground to produce the resource wealth
that defines Canada.
The Canadian Association of Oilwell Drilling
Contractors (CAODC) is the industry group representing Canada's drilling
companies, large and small.
They're the firms whose rigs and personnel execute
the development strategies on behalf of Canada's oil and gas companies.
They're also the companies whose staff members and
share values are among the first in a complex and lengthy value chain to take
it in the chin when industry activity slams to a halt.
Only a quarter of Canada's rigs are working.
Understandably, the drillers have had enough.
Hence Oil Respect.
There are many awareness campaigns out there.
Almost too many in terms of potentially crossed signals. But Oil Respect goes
to the real root of the problem: the reality that 100,000 Canadians are walking
the unemployment lines as a consequence of low petroleum prices. Lives are in
tatters. Dreams are broken. And it doesn't matter if the number is 98,000 or
105,000, the facts on the ground are real.
Oil Respect is about those facts.
That people matter.
One of our industry's problems is that we tend to
blame "other" ordinary Canadians; those who are not of the sector,
for not understanding "how things really work."
Oil Respect aims to show sector workers are just as
ordinary as anyone.
Such campaigns also aim at politicians, and while
it's true most men and women in office are functionally illiterate when it
comes to matters of energy, nothing to date has sufficiently politicized the
industry's current distress to produce much beyond bromides and platitudes.
Oil Respect just might work. Those unemployed are
voters. And so are their friends and families.
The other reality is we haven't done a terribly
good job franchising our own remaining employees with the means to have a
conversation with the friends and neighbours — those not of the sector — about
how the sector hangs together and produces the economic benefits that Canadians
enjoy. Their voices matter too.
That's why every senior leader, operating and
service company alike, should get behind Oil Respect.
The drillers took a stance.
Let's put the industry's collective weight behind
the program. Buy the T-shirts. Distribute the bumper stickers. Tell your staff
to do the same. Tell them to tell their friends. And have their friends talk to
their friends.
Go to http://www.oilrespect.ca/. Click the links.
Put the links on your websites. Drive traffic. Take social media to those so fond
of using it against the sector.
Sign the petition to have a day in February 2017
declared a day to recognize workers. Sign the second petition to push for
pipeline support.
Make the difference.
In some
distant time and space in order for our civilization to survive it must be ready
for one of two “major policy changes”: inequality must be “greatly reduced” or
population growth must be “strictly controlled.” Currently we are a long ways
from either.
From the
Thursday Files
In the end, we'll all
become stories.
-
Margaret Atwood
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