An energy superpower or a super sales pitch? Building the case through an examination of

Authors

  • Laura Way University of Alberta

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24124/c677/2011175

Keywords:

oil sands, energy superpower, newspapers, media analysis

Abstract

In 2006, Stephen Harper boldly pronounced Canada as an “emerging energy superpower” to a variety of international audiences, including the G8 meeting. While this label is likely more representative of a marketing campaign than reality (Hester, 2007), it is important to understand the degree that the Canadian media have embraced it. This paper determines the extent to which Canada’s national newspapers, The Globe and Mail and the National Post, adopted the “energy superpower” frame in their reporting about Alberta’s oil sands over a 25 month time period. The oil sands were selected as a case study because proponents of Canada as an “energy superpower” cite the development of Alberta’s oil sands as a key component of the country’s new-found status. To discover how this new label was intertwined into the broader discourse on oil sands development, I used content and discourse analysis to examine newspaper stories over 300 words in length that contain “oil sands or tar sands” in the lead paragraph and/or headline. While my study found few instances of the national newspapers using the term, it did find the national newspapers more closely adopted Harper’s underlying ideas about what an energy superpower was than the more activist state traditionally associated with the term.

Author Biography

Laura Way, University of Alberta

PHD Candidate University of Alberta Contract Instructor Carleton University

Published

2011-10-22

How to Cite

Way, L. (2011). An energy superpower or a super sales pitch? Building the case through an examination of. Canadian Political Science Review, 5(1). https://doi.org/10.24124/c677/2011175

Issue

Section

Articles