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Oil-Rich Alberta Gets Rebranded

Oil-Rich Alberta Gets Rebranded

Write: Keller [2011-05-20]
Tilde Herrera,The Canadian province of Alberta recently rebranded itself with an optimistic slogan it hopes will erase some of the bad publicity generated by its oil sands development, which some called the world's dirtiest.

"Freedom to create, spirit to achieve" is now the official tagline for a region home to the planet's second largest petroleum reserve. It's costing the Albertan government some $25 million (US$20.2 million) to make the switch from its years-old slogan, "Alberta's Advantage."

It is money well-spent, Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach said.

"It's worth more than $25 million, protecting a $40 billion (US$32.3 billion) revenue stream," Stelmach told the Edmonton Journal.

Canada edged out Saudi Arabia as America's top oil supplier, with about half coming from the oil sands. It begins as bitumen-coated sand or clay that takes an enormous amount of energy, water and manpower to extract and process.

The name-calling hasn't been pretty. The Environmental Defense Fund dubbed (PDF) Canada's oil sands "The Most Destructive Project on Earth." Greenpeace declared the oil the world's dirtiest. A National Geographic feature story this month didn't help the industry's cause: "But clawing and cooking a barrel of crude from the oil sands emits as much as three times more carbon dioxide than letting one gush from the ground in Saudi Arabia."

The province said in its 20-year strategic plan it would bring a balanced approach to developing the oil sands and environmental stewardship, while also promoting healthy communities. It is heavily banking on carbon capture and sequestration to address the region's emissions.

Whether the campaign will have any impact on U.S. citizens, a target group in its re-branding market research, remains to be seen, but signs indicate it won't be difficult. According to the market research, few Americans are aware of the "debate" about the environmental impacts of developing oil sands.