From Canada's The National Post:
Faced with an unflattering image as a global environmental disaster area, the oil sands sector is stepping up its offensive to counteract critics. The sector has re-branded the Oil Sands Developers Group, a Fort McMurraybased coalition of 28 companies developing the business, and put forward its president, Don Thompson, to get out the message that reality on the ground is different from that portrayed by green groups and others who want development stopped...
...Negative perceptions of the oil sands as a big engine of global warming have resulted in a series of U. S. policies to discourage their use. That, too, has been blown out of proportion, Mr. Thompson said. The oil sands account for 4% of Canada's greenhouse gas emissions, while Canada's emissions are 2% of the world's total. "We have not been communicating enough with our key public," he acknowledged. "That is something that we want to change. We want to reengage and understand all the issues that people have with the oil sands  and we want to make changes where they are required to ensure we have dealt with issues."
According to the article, main points of emphasis in the campaign will include:
The air quality in Fort McMurray is as good as anywhere in Alberta - Oil sands companies employ 1,500 aboriginals and have awarded aboriginal enterprises $2-billion in contracts - The oil sands account for only 4% of Canada's greenhouse gas emissions - Oil sands mining operations affect 0.01% of the boreal forest - Projects to improve roads and bridges worth $600-million are under way right now in Fort McMurray - Two new subdivisions, each with the potential to house 20,000 people, are under construction.
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Ethanol... corn fields... more than enough power?...
fool...
Here's an idea -- Instead of dredging up the soil, which is one of the most environmentally destructive forms of gaining energy, why don't we grow clean, renewable crops that can be used to create ethanol? Canada has plenty of corn farms. If a fraction of those were used to create ethanol, Canada would have more than enough power and wouldn't need to dredge and destroy the wilderness of Alberta.
Right on. Glad the misconception is being cleared up. In any case, investing in biofuels and alternative energies are the way to go in this time of energy uncertainty.