Sunday, March 14, 2021

Global Warming, Canadian Energy and the Working Class

Note - For this commentary we rely on:

·        The projected combined energy needs of Canadian industry, residential, commercial and transportation use as published by the Government of Canada website Energy Regulator to 2050. 

·        For C02 emissions we rely on the IEA Data.

·        For pipeline routes we rely on Enbridge Crude Oil Map 2020 and other authentic sources as Noted.

Global warming is a scientifically proven universally accepted threat to humanity.  The urgency of reducing its effects on humanity and the planet is accepted as a necessary task by all rational people.

The task is confronted in real existing economic and political conditions of our time.  The task unfolds in the midst of capitalism at the final monopoly stage of its development and the class struggles that arise from that reality.

Nor does the task begin with an ideal end result.  The task is undertaken in political and technical conditions that are in motion and far from ideal or simplistically resolved.  There is no straight line from where the working class is to where we need to be.

Canada is a developed state-monopoly capitalist country deeply integrated with the largest global economy - the USA.  Canada is the sixth largest producer of energy accounting for 4% of total global production.  Energy production accounts for 10% of GDP and 23% of total Canadian goods exports in 2019.  Oil and gas exports totaled $122 billion of which 96% or $121 billion, were to the U.S.A.  It is legitimate and necessary for workers to be constantly discussing issues related to energy.  

Workers do not simplify or contract out our class interests to others.  Adjusting slogans and programs and demands aligned with existing productive forces impacted by accelerating applications of science and technology is of vital interest to wage earners regardless of which sector of the economy we sell our labour power.  We are one class and no sector is dispensable.

The effect of global warming does not fall equally on all social classes.  It is the urban and rural labouring masses, wage earners, First Nations and Indigenous people and the poor that are its first victims.

Is the Class Struggle Over?

The overarching social divide of the present era is widely promoted in the corporate mass media to be between those who oppose global warming and all others.  Such messaging originates with capitalist governments, their think tanks and “enlightened” capitalists and billionaires who have a “plan” to oppose global warming.  The objectives have been set by 195 nations that have signed the Paris Agreement.

Authoritative special interest groups such as the Sierra Club, Suzuki Foundation, Green Peace, Council of Canadians and university faculties advocate for solutions that converge on demands that monopoly capital, producers of all carbon emissions, reform itself.  Such advocacy rarely takes into account the effects of such reforms on workers, or that workers have anything relevant to say, or role in determining the solutions.

For such interests - there is no class struggle, only the moral imperative of saving the planet.  A billionaire or a worker are equally responsible.  “We are all in this together”.

Such a classless standpoint provides moral cover for those evading confrontation with US-NATO imperialism’s preparations for nuclear war.  The possibility of nuclear war is the immediate threat to planetary and human life.  Evading such truth is impermissible for anyone claiming to be concerned about the survival of the planet.

Global warming has become a profit-making opportunity, making billions for “green capital” investors.  Carbon emissions are traded on the stock market as any other marketable commodity.

Big oil monopolies and their think tanks use blackmail, demanding public treasuries pay it a price to reduce carbon emissions.  Jason Kenney, Alberta leader of the UCP, is demanding $30 billion of federal funds as the price for reducing carbon emissions.

Above class theories of global warming are used by finance capital, promoted by its governments, think tanks and mass media, to divert the working class away from the struggle for its own immediate vital interests into a cheerleader for this or that “green endeavour”.  It obfuscates the working class from viewing itself as the decisive class power in determining the future economic development of the country.

The active struggle to assure the future energy needs of the country, and that it serves the people and not monopoly profit, is a class issue central to the struggle for the sovereignty of Canada and its future independent economic development.  Without energy self sufficiency there can be no socialism.

The profit system is the impediment to a more rapid transition from fossil fuels to alternative energy sources.  The obstacle to non-fossil fuel energy economies of scale is state monopoly capitalism and its fundamental law of maximum profit.

Science and technology already available can be used to mitigate carbon emissions and accelerate the transition.  However, it is appropriated by monopoly and placed at the service of elites of wealth and privilege, squandered on the militarization of the economy, and to perpetuate the system of private property, wage slavery and mindless mass consumerism.

Under such actual social and class conditions the suggestion that workers and their families should be compliant victims of the transition to a carbon free economy, should accept the destruction of their livelihood, is support for their exploiters.

The Present Needs of the Canadian People for Energy

The energy resources systems that exist now and that 38 million Canadians rely on are indispensable to the needs of the country to the end of century.  To say otherwise is to approve and abet a rapid de-industrialization of Canada.

The opportunist evasion of such reality is conveniently subsumed in the slogan of a “green energy economy” which its advocates can’t define and are powerless to enact and which is left to the market to define.  The Federal Government reacting to the changes in capitalist market realities have outlined their policy called “A Healthy Environment and a Healthy Economy” that reflects this reality of “left to the market” green energy transition.

The federal plan has five main elements:

·        Home Retrofits and Energy Management Tax Credits - much of the standards for this type initiative have been defined by LEED;

·        Zero-Emission Transportation – “Work with partners in the year ahead on supply-side policy options…”.  Currently GM and FCL are in talks with the Federal Government on incentives and loan guarantees to retool plants for Electric Vehicles.  Ford was given $600 million to make EV’s in Oakville after threatening to close the plant in June 2020;

·        Carbon Taxation – This is a continuation of taxing carbon and transferring the taxes collected.  This will transfer the costs onto workers who are forced to drive long distances in commuting to work;

·        Business Loan Guarantees - Private Public Partnerships through Canadian Infrastructure Bank Loans for Green Infrastructure Development. One of these projects is the Pirate Harbour Wind Farm at Port Hawkesbury Paper in Nova Scotia;

·        Plant 2 Billion Trees and Carbon Sequestration – The total investment over 10 years is to be $3.7B and will partner with provinces, territories, First Nations, private landowners and other conservation groups.

The federal plan is an admission of the seriousness of the problem but woefully inadequate to solve it since it is dependent on a corporate buy-in which means it must be profitable to its bottom line.

Development of the green energy economy is dependent on monopoly that subordinates all science to the law of maximum profit.  This is the case in the development of Electric Vehicles (EV) in Canada which is part of the federal plan of affecting supply side production of vehicles.  December 2019 GM closed its Oshawa Plant throwing thousands of auto workers out of work. 

One year later Unifor President Diaz hailed the return of GM to Oshawa and its $1B investment in the Oshawa Plant.  Ford received $600M in federal support for the development and manufacture of EVs while GM and Fiat are still in talks with the federal government.

However as much as the green energy plan is championed as a great victory for the move to a carbon neutral economy,  GM CEO Mary Barra said that the move back to Oshawa was necessary;

“We have been operating our full-size pickup plants around the clock to meet exceptionally robust demand for the Chevrolet Silverado and the GMC Sierra in the United States and Canada. The fact is we simply can’t build enough. And because we expect demand to remain strong, we must increase our capacity.”

In other words, we will continue to produce carbon emitting vehicles so long as there is demand while at the same time take anything that is offered to produce EV’s when we consider it more profitable.

Supply and Demand Side Economics

The cheerleaders for the closure of the “tar sands” fail to make the connection, or refuse to acknowledge that demand side economics are part of the equation.

Unifor’s demand that federal government continue with the “Industrial Technological Benefits Program through the Joint Strike Fighter Capability Project and expand the program to additional military purchases” to help the struggling Canadian aerospace industries along with other programs to develop and build carbon emitting planes is further indication that some industries get a pass by the green economy crowd while other workers in the “tar sands” are required to give up their jobs to save the planet.    

What unemployed worker wouldn’t accept a green job if it were available?

A green economy works for some workers fortunate enough to win the lottery on which plant, technology or industry is selected as the most profitable for green investment. 

For other workers, a vague promise for jobs at some future point in time in the meantime are vilified as “tar sands workers” and abandoned to populist rhetoric of the “I Love Alberta Oil & Gas” yellow-vest lobby, right-wing Calgary think tanks and the barren politics of the UCP. 

The promise of green jobs is proclaimed without regard for the consequences on the living conditions of those directly affected right now.  

Consider a few contentious examples,

In about five weeks from now US Democratic Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer may block access to Alberta light crude through Line 5 pipeline under the Straits of Mackinac.  The light crude flows to “Chemical Valley” in Sarnia Ontario and is processed into a variety of refined petroleum products, (RPP’s - e.g., jet fuels, propane and used in basic and synthetic chemicals).  If the Michigan governor carries through with her threat, 45% of the petroleum refined in Ontario and Quebec will stop.


The issue has become a major diplomatic crisis between Canada and the USA.

Applying the logic of the primacy of the existential threat of global warming, the actions of the US Governor should be applauded as a victory, since it will remove 50 megatons of carbon emissions created by Chemical Valley in Sarnia. The loss of 3000 Sarnia refinery jobs and a crisis for the Ontario economy is therefore “regrettable” collateral damage, the price that must be paid to save the planet.

The editor of People’s Voice, the newspaper of the Communist Party of Canada tweeted that the problem would not be upon us if the Liberal Government and Natural Resources Minister Seamus O'Regan had several years ago opted for a planned “green transition.”  FOS tweeted a response which simply asked what is to be done now?  The PV editor blocked FOS and left the discussion.  The Communist Party is aligned with all of the opponents of pipeline construction of any kind in any direction at any time. It listed such pipelines in its 2015 electoral program.



“No to the Enbridge, Kinder Morgan, Keystone XL, Line 9 and Energy East pipelines, and to oil and gas exploration and shipping on the west coast.”

Now presumably Line 5 can also be added to the CPC list.

A Line 5 blockade by Governor Whitmer will result in thousands of Ontario jobs being threatened with layoffs or possibly permanent terminations as the oil and chemical monopolies use a disruption as an excuse to rationalize.  Sarnia Mayor Mike Bradley has indicated that 3000 jobs in several refineries are directly affected.


What has been the response of the suppliers of the oil?

Imperial CEO Brad Corson, indicated that Imperial feels the probability of the blockade but in the event of any disruptions contingency plans to feed their refinery assets will include delivery through the St. Lawrence Seaway, other pipelines and rail.

Mark Little, Suncor CEO, also believes the probability of the shutdown is low.  However, he indicated that if it were to occur additional costs associated with other transportation means to its refineries in Sarnia will be recovered from strong local fuel markets.  In other words, there will be a cost increase passed on to consumers.

Rail VS Pipelines

Advocacy of pipelines versus rail as a safer method of transporting oil and gas is rejected by ardent environmentalists and simply evaded by the CPC.  Railway workers dying in derailments, incidence of near disasters in Saskatchewan and the possibility of more Lac Megantics is therefore regrettable collateral damage.  According to the slogans of environmentalism oil “should remain in the ground” – and apparently also the workers. Case closed.

Likewise, solidarity with rail unions demanding Transport Canada enforce safety regulations regarding train crews’ right to refuse unsafe working conditions, demands that the CPR and CNR operating oil tanks in violation of code standards for the transporting of hazardous materials can be set aside or considered of low importance compared to the existential threat of global warming.  If there were no oil it wouldn’t have to be transported.  Case closed.

For emphasis we restate what we said at the outset of this commentary;

“An ideal end result cannot be used as an evasion of the hard realities of the class struggle right now”.

Shut Down the “Tar Sands”

Consider the Communist Party of Canada’s 2015 electoral energy program demand to shut down the Alberta “tar sands” in five years.  Why just Alberta since oil is also produced in BC and SK? Alberta “Tar sands” has a more sinister ring to it.  

Communist Party Leader Liz Rowley restated the Party’s position on shutting down the “tar sands” during the CPC International Women’s Day online celebration where she said,

“…a People’s Recovery will…nationalize energy, close the tar sands and build renewable energy guaranteeing the jobs of workers displaced in the transition…”

The correct term is bituminous sands.  The production of oil from bituminous sand is of two types, open pit mining and in situ using high pressure steam to release the oil from the sand.

Canada has one of the largest deposits in the world in Athabasca, followed by Venezuela, Russia and the USA. The CPC does not address the issue of carbon emissions from similar mining and processing operations in Venezuela, Russia and the USA, only Canada.

Why not call for the shut down of all oil producing countries’ oil industries, why not Venezuela, who in terms of size and population is very similar to Canada. The Communist Party does not address that issue.

If global warming is the greatest existential threat confronting humanity such rationale would lead the Communist Party to conclude that the US blockade of Venezuela leading to the collapse of its energy sector resulting in the mass impoverishment of its working class should be supported.

On June 16th 2016 in the aftermath of the fires in Fort McMurray AB, the leader of the Communist Party of Canada at its 38th Convention, after attributing the fires to climate change arsonists, demanded governments retrain “tar sands workers” and provide equivalent jobs. The CPC leader concluded by calling for the immediate shut down of the “tar sands” the main source of jobs in the community.

Fort McMurray is a city of 67,000 in the municipality of Wood Buffalo.  The city has schools, a college with university accredited programs, a hospital, large recreational and cultural facilities that serve many surrounding communities.  Not only does the oil sands mines and upgrading facilities support Fort McMurray but they also support other Alberta communities such as Ft. Saskatchewan, Edmonton, Hardisty to name a few.  Where would all these people go if the “tar sands” are immediately shuttered?

The CPC for many long years routinely uses such hyperbole and leaps of logic in its publications and statements to arbitrarily decide which carbon emitting sectors of the economy can be sacrificed and which retained.

Before proceeding further, we believe it is important that words that besmirch the dignity of labour such as “tar sands workers” should not be used by communists or any other groups claiming to speak for the working class.  Such pejorative language is not used to describe visible minorities gender or sexual orientation and is not acceptable to describe workers in a similar manner.

We are unionized and non-unionized skilled trades, office workers, professionally certified technicians, technologists, engineers, scientists, healthcare professionals, hi-tech workers, clean energy and environmental professionals, first nations, and LGBTQ2S+.  Women and men from Alberta, from all over Canada and the world engaged in the discovery, extraction, processing and delivery of petroleum products to domestic and foreign markets.  That is not dissimilar to what most Canadians employed in other value-added industries also do.

We are workers forced to sell our labour power in the extraction, processing, transportation and refining of bitumen and natural gas to energy, transportation and refining monopolies.  These monopolies appropriate the products we produce containing surplus value resulting from our unpaid labour time.   This appropriated unpaid labour time is marketed by these monopolies to the Canadian, US and other foreign markets and that enrich the preferred investor-owners enormously.

We are employed by monopolies as are auto workers, auto parts workers, transportation workers, defence productions workers, plastic manufacturing workers, workers producing good food and junk food, Amazon workers, Postal workers, communication workers.  We apply no derogatory or pejorative terms to our brothers and sisters engaged in wage labour.  Nor do we accept any derogation of our work such as “tar sands workers” engaged in producing “dirty oil” to destroy the planet.  We are workers as all others forced to sell our labour where there is a market for it in order to live and survive.

Carbon emissions and where it comes from

Carbon emissions occur everywhere in Canada.  Canada’s total carbon emissions as a percentage of global emissions is 2%.  Not a small per capita number and partially explained by the fact that Canadas is the second largest land mass in the world and has very long and cold winters.  Alberta bitumen mining and processing is the highest single emitter compared to other sectors of the economy accounting for     60 Mt of GHGs per year, representing 8.5% of Canada's total emissions and about 0.13% of global GHG emissions.   Other sectors are shown from Stats Can below.

Determining the cause of emissions cannot be simplistically confined to the supply side of the energy industry.  The other reality is the demand side.  Carbon emissions from Canada would of course be largely eliminated if there was no demand for fossil fuels.

In 2018, the oil and gas sector accounted for 193 megatonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (Mt CO2 eq) (26% of total emissions), followed closely by the transportation sector, which emitted 186 Mt CO2 eq (25%).  Why haven’t the environmentalists and the CPC called for the total ban on the demand side use of all fossil fuels everywhere in Canada, and put a five-year timeline on it?  Ipso facto no more carbon emissions from Canada. Case closed.


The CPC seems incapable of analyzing the demand side requirements of fossil fuel energy use even though its leadership lives in the industrial heartland of the country which is the greatest consumer of fossil fuel energy in the country and without which most of its manufacturing industry would die in a few months.


Real Energy Needs of Canadians Right Now?

Thirty-eight million Canadians each day rely upon a continuous supply of energy from the existing historically evolved integrated Canadian energy system comprising fossil fuels, hydro and nuclear electrical, natural gas, solar, wind and biomass.  Thermal coal generation is now largely phased out and the major Canadian contributor to carbon emissions comes from mining and export of coal used in steelmaking that is mined and shipped to foreign markets from Elkford BC.

According to Energy Regulator Canada this total supply in 2020 was 14,000 petajoules.

Western Canadian oil, conventional and bituminous, is the primary energy source for the entire transportation system of Canada, accounting for 3200 petajoules of fossil fuel energy or about 22% of total combined energy use in the country.

Let us consider the effects on the Canadian people and the working class if the 2016 CPC demand to shut down the “tar sands” in five years that now, in 2021 would be upon us. Consider what removal of 22% of Canada’s energy supply would actually mean.

The 3200 petajoules of fossil fuels removed starting in 2016 would by now have had to be totally replaced by other sources of energy, otherwise the entire transportation system would have collapsed.  Such a transition would require that all fossil fueled transportation including rail and air as well as heavy equipment and agricultural machines would have to be converted to zero-emission.  

What would that alternative energy supply be?  The entire transportation system would have to be converted to electrical or hydrogen.  The most optimistic forecasts predict that happening at the end of the 21st century.  Moreover, as it happens, it is a gradual problem-solving process and not a precipitous leap as the CPC proposed.  Five years?  No problem!  Case closed.

If reducing green house gas emissions was as easy a proposition as the Communist Party has suggested we are sure that other scientists would have concluded the same calculations.  Such “back of the napkin” economics as clever as they may seem for a captive membership would be laughed out of any real scientific and engineering discussions as nonsense.

Taking the present supply of fossil fuel amounting to 3200 petajoules out of the integrated energy mix would have an enormous impact on other sectors reliant on electrical and natural gas.  Electrical and natural gas supplies would have had to increase in five years by 22% otherwise industrial, residential, and commercial use would be in an unmanageable crisis.  Some environmentalists are also opposed to the expansion of natural gas and others also against any nuclear generation and some even for decommissioning of hydro dams.  The CPC does not comment on such demands that if implemented would return Canada to where it was in the 17th century.

The non-fossil fuel sources of energy that would make up a 22% short fall in total energy supply in five years, to now 2021, could only be the result of ramping up solar, wind and biomass.  There are advances being made in these carbon neutral sources but the horizon for its mass application was not remotely possible in the time line from 2016 to 2021.  Delegates at the 38th Convention of the CPC were persuaded to vote for such a timeline anyway.

At present, wind, solar and biomass use in Canada accounts for about 100 petajoules of the 1500 petajoules of residential energy, 500 petajoules of the 6000 petajoules used by industry and a negligible amount that barely registers as a component part of present commercial use.

The jobs of millions of Canadians employed in the industrial and manufacturing sectors of the economy rely on about 7200 petajoules of combined refined petroleum products (RPP’s), electrical and natural gas energy.

The CPC leadership gave scant study to such matters.

The CPC’s demand five years ago to shut down the “tar sands” by 2021 in the light of such aforementioned realities should by now have caused the CPC to critically reassess its energy program statements and cease reacting with contempt and scorn to those who point out such contradictions.  

Such ill considered classless nonsense by the CPC leadership is driven by a greater consideration, to be popular with the emotional and radicalized environmental “left” that gives scant attention to the realities of the Canadian economy.  

In failing to consider a working-class response to the complexities of the energy needs of Canada we leave a clear field to the apologists of Big Oil and their think tanks and abandon energy sector workers to the populist rhetoric of the reactionary right.

The History of Pipelines

The CPC seems to have forgotten about the struggles it led for an all-Canadian natural gas pipeline in the mid-1950’s.  Some of us still alive, participated and are not inclined to recant or explain anything preferring to let history speak.  

The Canadian public intervened in the great natural gas pipeline debate that rocked the country and Parliament and in 1954-55 and after a bitter struggle compelled the natural gas profiteers to retreat ensuring that Trans Canada Line One, was built on an all-Canadian route.  Cosmopolitan financiers who didn’t give a damn about Canada, wanted the line to go south of Superior and market Alberta gas to the USA for a fast buck.  That struggle was won and for over 60 years Canadian communities from Alberta to Quebec have enjoyed an assured supply of natural gas from Line One.

The CPC’s no pipelines of any kind, anywhere at anytime prevents it from even discussing a proposal for an all-Canadian route for Alberta crude to reach Canadian refineries and assure energy self sufficiency for eastern Canada and the employment of millions of Ontario and Quebec industrial, manufacturing and service workers.

The CPC by its quest for popularity has set aside its own history on the struggle for Canadian independent economic development and energy self sufficiency relinquishing the ground to the likes of Dianne Francis and the National Post.

Similarly, there is silence from the CPC on refining capacity in Ontario, Alberta, Saskatchewan or BC.  The CPC has no position on expanding Canadian refineries and the fact that without increasing such capacity Canada will be totally dependent on US and off shore supplies for refined petroleum products.

At the same time the CPC leadership claims to uphold Canadian sovereignty and economic independence. Presumably with the caveat that so long as Canadian economic independence can be achieved without contributing to global warming.

What Is to Be Done?

What is to be done now, about the stubborn realities of Canadian energy needs and use as the transition to alternative sources of energy evolves?  Those who consider global warming as the primary existential threat to humanity refuse to discuss it.

Such is the measure used by a classless thinking to decide what is moral, what is ethical, what is liberating, what is progressive, what is futuristic, what is scientific, what is revolutionary and what is counter-revolutionary.

Ardent environmentalists believe it is possible, by an act of will, to leap from the present dependency on fossil fuels to a new “green economy” that it cannot clearly define and is powerless to build.

Should anyone be so impertinent as to point out such basic realities the response is to sulk, express outrage, anger, despair, lash out, or lapse into elegant discourse in learned halls or into absurd 21st century Owenist attempts to live off-grid primitive life-styles.

When slogans do not align with facts the answer to the problem according to the CPC and all passionate environmentalists is to demand that facts be adjusted to satisfy the slogan.  The possibility that a higher-level discussion is upon us, that new slogans are needed that reflect more accurately new problems, that strategy and tactics must include solving dire problems faced by working class families today would involve a self-critical approach.  Such a novel idea is an uncomfortable challenge to notions of leadership infallibility.    

Global warming is NOT the greatest existential threat to human survival

Consistent activists for peace and socialism and human survival are guided by the truth that the greatest immediate threat to humanity and all life on the planet is the threat of imperialist instigated nuclear war. It is not global warming.  A nuclear war will decide definitively the issue of global warming since there will be no life to overcome it and the world would be plunged into a global nuclear winter – thus solving global warming.  The struggle against global warming is inseparable from winning the struggle for nuclear disarmament and the latter leads the former.

That is the starting point for a Marxist discourse with environmentalism if there is to be any hope of uniting with it in a serious struggle for human survival.

Science is a category of human creativity existing at all stages of class society and historical materialist development, neither intrinsically good nor bad but a ground of class struggle for its service to progressive development and to the needs of the people and their vital interests.

Marx, Engels and Lenin and all of their consistent adherents accepted and studied science so that it served the cause of the working class and its struggle for a new society socialism.  They were exacting in its study, measured and precise in the language they used in polemics, statements and programs.  They were temperate and sober and realistic as to what was necessary always assuming full responsibility for the consequences of what they advised and quick to revise any outmoded proposals and demands.

That is the measure today for anyone who believes that monopoly capitalism is the final rung of capitalism beyond which there is only socialism.

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