Environment a background issue in Alberta election but may play role, say observers
EDMONTON — Few governments have seen as many environmental dust-ups as Alberta’s United Conservatives in their four-year tenure.
They tried delisting parks and opening the Rocky Mountains to coal mining. They charged fees for a beloved alpine playground. They started an inquiry into whether environmental groups were “anti-Alberta.” They proposed dunning taxpayers for the cleanup costs of abandoned oil and gas facilities.
The list goes on.
But how those issues play in the upcoming provincial election is not a simple question, observers say. Albertans have a complicated and even contradictory relationship with the landscape in which they both play and make their living.