
CALGARY — Alberta’s premier says staff in the province’s so-called energy “war room” will be able to quickly take on industry foes without government bureaucracy holding them back.
The office — to be based in Calgary with a $30 million budget — is meant to take on critics of Alberta’s oil and gas industry in real time.
Jason Kenney and Energy Minister Sonya Savage were meeting with industry players on Friday to get advice on how the war room should work.
He said he hopes to have it up and running by the end of the summer and that it will be staffed by government employees and potentially contractors.
Kenney shrugged off the notion that the operation will only serve to galvanize the environmental groups it’s meant to target, saying a defensive posture in the past hasn’t worked.
He said it will be tough to gauge the war room’s success, but one measure will be whether there is a shift in public opinion about Alberta’s energy industry.
Kenney said with the 24-hour news cycle being a thing of the past, the war room will have to shed some of the usual shackles of government communications.
Taking hours or even days to approve a message won’t cut it, he said.
“Government communications are by nature a little bureaucratic and tend to be a bit slow moving and risk averse,” he said.
“The energy war room will have a mandate to operate much more nimbly and much more quickly with a higher risk tolerance, quite frankly, than is normally the case for government communications.”
A war room leader has not been named yet.
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