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WATER WORLD
NYT rapped over Malaysia clean-energy conference
by Staff Writers
Kuala Lumpur (AFP) Nov 18, 2014


Greenpeace accuses Canada pipeline firm of 'dirty tricks'
Montreal (AFP) Nov 18, 2014 - Environmental pressure group Greenpeace accused pipeline firm TransCanada of "dirty tricks" Tuesday, publishing leaked documents it said showed it plans to smear opponents of one of its projects.

TransCanada, the company behind the controversial Keystone XL pipeline to take oil to the United States, also plans to connect Alberta's oil sands to refineries and ports in eastern Canada.

It hired Edelman, one of the world's largest public relations firms, for strategic advice on the project and got back recommendations which "borrowed a page from the modern political playbook," according to Greenpeace.

The plan, written between May and August, warns TransCanada that winning public support is as important as winning regulatory approval, given Canadians' low level of trust in government.

In the plan, Edelman accuses "well-funded" environmentalist opponents of using opposition to specific pipeline projects as "proxies" for a broader debate about climate change.

To win approval for its Canadian Energy East project, Edelman urges TransCanada to try to discredit critics by questioning their motives and by providing discreet advice to opponents.

This could be achieved by recruiting third parties -- including landowners, unions, aboriginal tribes, businessmen and "credible community voices" -- to lobby on the pipeline's behalf.

These third party supporters should "put the pressure on, especially when TransCanada can't."

"Add layers of difficulty for our opponents, distracting them from their mission and causing them to redirect their resources," one of the leaked documents recommends.

Supporters should pressure politicians and regulatory agencies for project approval, and author op-ed pieces, blog posts or letters to newspapers to build public support for the project.

Greenpeace's Keith Stewart said: "These documents show that TransCanada is planning a secret dirty tricks campaign, using third parties to attack and smear its critics."

"When oil companies create front groups to smear their opponents, they degrade democratic debate.

"Greenpeace may be fierce in the defense of our environment, but we put our names to our statements and publish the research to back them up. We expect oil companies to do the same."

TransCanada spokesman Shawn Howard told media the company has simply provided Canadians with "the facts to make an informed decision about Energy East.

"Part of that includes ensuring that we understand what organized opponents are saying about our project," he said, adding that not all of Edelman's recommendations had been followed.

Malaysian activists criticised the New York Times on Tuesday for organising a sustainable-energy conference that includes a company spearheading a dam-building drive which native tribes say is uprooting them from ancestral lands.

The company, Sarawak Energy Bhd (SEB), is listed as one of two "gold sponsors" of the "Energy for Tomorrow" conference set for Wednesday-Thursday in the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur and organised by the New York Times' international edition.

Thomas Jalong, president of Malaysian indigenous peoples' network Jaringan Orang Asal SeMalaysia (JOAS), said it was "disappointing that a reputable organisation like the International New York Times would not have considered the implications of featuring SEB" as a top sponsor and its CEO as a panelist.

SEB is at the forefront of plans by authorities in the rugged state of Sarawak on Borneo island to build up to a dozen hydroelectric dams, in the hopes that cheap electricity will lure foreign industrial investment to the underdeveloped state.

But environmentalists warn that the project threatens one of the world's last great rain forests at the heart of Borneo, an island shared by Malaysia, Brunei and Indonesia, and say native rights are being trampled.

"SEB's total disregard for Sarawak's vast biological diversity, ecologically and culturally significant places, and indigenous peoples' rights... should not be overlooked by conference participants and organisers," Jalong said in a statement by activist groups.

The International New York Times did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

For the past three decades, Sarawak's chief minister was Taib Mahmud, one of Malaysia's most powerful politicians and the mastermind of the dam campaign.

Taib, 78, who moved up to state governor this year, and his family are accused by critics of running indigenous people off ancestral lands and plundering Sarawak's rich timber resources, charges that he denies.

Swiss environmental group Bruno Manser Fund has estimated Taib's wealth at $15 billion, citing financial records, which would make him Malaysia's richest person.

Sarawak dam projects have been plagued by allegations of corruption and mismanagement, and many relocated villagers complain of broken resettlement promises by state authorities and SEB. The company has previously denied such allegations.

The dam plans have sparked protests and road blockades by natives.

"SEB is prepared to destroy our collective heritage: our rivers, the land and our livelihoods," Peter Kallang of the Save Sarawak Rivers Network said in the joint statement.


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