U.S. And Europe Threaten Their Own Energy Independence
By: Rachel Marsden
It's been a rough month for Canada. America's biggest trading partner and 
overall non-jerk country just wants to sell some oil to its friends. Canada is 
sitting on a black-gold mine, but its oil sales are unable to keep pace with 
production -- a problem that will only increase as the nation further taps the 
Alberta oil sands and Arctic territory.
Canada's conservative prime minister, Stephen Harper, understands that energy 
means influence and independence. It would be tough to argue that Canada is on 
some kind of power trip, and it's not difficult to understand why the country is 
interested in establishing oil trade deals that would help its closest 
ideological allies retain their energy independence.
Decisions by Europe and America in the past month have pushed away Canada and 
its oil overtures under the guise of environmentalism -- which is turning out to 
be the new protectionism. And for what? So America and Europe can explore more 
"green-friendly" petroleum deals with unstable Middle Eastern and African 
regimes? It's not as if curtailing purchasing can stop production. China has 
expressed an interest in having it shipped in -- so Europe and America are 
effectively shifting any environmental impact to another part of the globe with 
even fewer controls.
The latest blow came this month, when the U.S. government delayed the 
Keystone crude oil pipeline that would deliver Canadian oil to Texas. Officials 
cited concern over a water supply in Nebraska along the pipeline's proposed 
route. Who knows now whether the project will ever be completed. In the 
meantime, Canada is gushing out more oil than it knows what to do with, while 
the American government ensures that its citizens remain at the mercy of Middle 
Eastern regional strife and whether or not a petro-sheik wakes up on the right 
side of the bed.
So if you're an American upset about the price of oil, blame the government. It 
just had an opportunity to lower the price but gave it away -- likely to the 
Chinese, who will gladly choke the polar bears that Westerners won't.
Another anti-Canadian oil decision came late last month from the European Union. 
Canada has been trying to work out a free-trade deal with Europe, but the bloc 
ruled last month that Canadian crude oil extracted from oil sands is more of a 
pollutant than other sources of oil, assigning it a bureaucratic rating to 
reflect this assessment. Canada is arguing that over the course of the entire 
extraction-to-delivery cycle, oil sand products are no dirtier than other 
alternatives, and it is criticizing the lack of transparency in the decision 
while threatening to appeal the matter to the World Trade Organization. 
Europeans, meanwhile, are selling their first-to-sixth-born children to put gas 
in their Renaults.
It's not that Europeans couldn't use Canadian oil. European countries are 
currently negotiating for oil with post-Gaddafi Libya without really yet knowing 
who they're dealing with. They've been importing it from Russia, contributing to 
Vladimir Putin's oil-for-influence program. Not too long ago, Russia shut off 
Europe's oil tap because it got into a tiff with Belarus, and the pipeline to 
Europe runs through that country. All these headaches, and yet Europe doesn't 
currently ship in any oil from Canada, although it quite feasibly could -- if it 
weren't for blatant protectionism cloaked in environmentalism.
It doesn't help that domestic Canadian lobbying groups are actively working 
against their own economic interests, claiming oil sand products inherently 
damage aboriginals and perform unspeakable acts on Mother Nature. Over the past 
week, I've seen two documentaries on the Kremlin-funded Russian international 
television network making similar claims about North American natural resource 
industrialism -- all while Russia opens up its new Nord Stream natural gas line 
running right under the Baltic Sea from Russia directly into Germany, where it 
can provide an environmentally friendlier alternative to crude while not ceding 
an inch of crude-oil imperialism.
No one's telling Russia it has to make cars that plug into walls or put 
windmills atop the Kremlin. Instead, the West will probably just keep kicking 
Canada until its own toes bleed.
COPYRIGHT 2011 RACHEL MARSDEN