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Kenney off to the UK to promote oil sands investment

Don Horne   

News

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney heads to the UK today for a trip his office says will highlight the province’s “responsible energy sector” and to counter what Kenney says is a campaign against investment in the oil sands.

A news release says Kenney will speak with international business leaders and financial institutions during the three-day trip to London to “reassert investment confidence in Alberta’s economy.”

It says the meetings will also “underscore the province’s reputation as one of the world’s most stable, secure and environmentally responsible energy suppliers.”

According to Canadian Press, Moody’s Investors Service earlier this month downgraded the province’s rating to Aa2 stable from Aa1 negative, citing concerns over its reliance on non-renewable resources — mainly oil.

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Kenney responded to the downgrade by saying he doesn’t believe analysts are giving Alberta credit for progress in reducing its environmental footprint, and financial institutions are buying into a political agenda that’s trying to stigmatize development of hydrocarbon energy.

The news release says Kenney’s visit will include a meeting with Bank of England governor Mark Carney, who was recently appointed UN envoy on climate change.

“One of the greatest challenges facing our largest industry is access to capital, particularly in European markets. That’s why it’s critically important to tell Alberta’s story, partly in response to the campaign that has pushed for a ban on investment in our oil sands,” Kenney says in the release.

Kenney’s office says the estimated cost of the trip for the premier, as well as special adviser David Knight Legg and a security detail, is $34,000.

Alberta’s Opposition New Democrats have been critical of the cost of Knight Legg’s four earlier trips to London, which they said cost taxpayers almost $19,000, including hotel stays and travel.

But Kenney defended the trips, saying they were made to promote the province and that the globally recognized business leader often kicks in his own cash.

(Canadian Press)

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