As the U.S. election campaign kicks into overdrive, Canadian politicians and oil executives are stepping up lobbying efforts to make sure whoever controls the White House keeps purchasing notoriously dirty oil from the Alberta tar sands.

Executives from Nexen energy, which has major investments in northern Alberta’s heavy oil industry, and Tony Clement, chair of a cabinet committee on energy security, met with Democratic candidate Barack Obama’s top energy advisor Jason Grumet late last month to cement the âeoeenergy partnershipâe during the Democratic National Convention in Denver, Colorado.

The closed-door meeting comes on the heels of comments made by Grumet and other Obama officials which sent shivers through board rooms in Calgary and backhoes in Ft. MacMurray, the epicentres of Canada’s oil industry.

In June, Grumet told reporters, âeoeThe amount of energy that you have to use to get that [tar sands] oil out of the ground is such that it actually creates a much greater impact on climate change.âe

âeoeWe [Obama’s team] are going to support resources … that meet our long-term obligations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. And I think it’s an open question as to whether or not the Canadian resources are going to meet those tests,âe said Grumet, prior to meeting the Canadian delegation at the DNC.

Currently, Canada is the largest foreign supplier of oil to the United States, sending more than one million barrels of oil per day to its southern neighbour, about half of which originates from Alberta’s tar sands.

âeoeClearly the oil sands is the most high-impact oil available,âe says Simon Dyer of the Pembina Institute. âeoeThe oil sands are three times as greenhouse gas-intensive as regular oil,âe said Dyer, adding that roughly three barrels of water are required to process one barrel of heavy oil.

Tar sands production is set to increase from its current 1.2 million barrels of oil per day, to some 3.0 million barrels per day by 2018, most of which is slated for export to the United States.

Tony Clement, the Canadian cabinet minister, told reporters at the Democratic National Convention that: âeoeWe [the Conservative government] have to be more aggressive in representing Canadian values and interests in the American political scene.âe

Spokespersons for Nexen Energy and Minister Clement’s office did not return phone calls requesting comment.

âeoeThe Canadian government is trying to deal through the back room rather than dealing with the environmental impacts of the oil sands,âe says Dyer. âeoeEmissions from the oil sands are going to triple [by 2020] and that’s inconsistent with the world’s desire to lessen climate change.âe

In addition to official political pressure from Canadian cabinet ministers attempting to force Obama’s hand on the tar sands, the oil industry has hired high-powered lobbyists of its own. Gordon Giffin, a former U.S. ambassador to Canada, is now a registered lobbyist in Washington for the energy firm Nexen.

Canadian oil executives attending the Democratic National Convention issued thinly veiled threats to the Obama campaign, stating that tar sands oil would be shipped to China if a new administration in Washington imposed restrictions.

âeoeIf you don’t like the oil sands oil, what companies will do [in Canada] is build a bigger pipeline to the west coast and export it to China and India,âe stated Nexen Energy’s Dwain Lingenfelter, the company’s vice president of government relations and a former deputy premier of Saskatchewan.

âeoeIf the U.S. didn’t want the oil, it’ll go into the oil market anyway. So they have to be very careful about looking at the whole picture,âe Lingenfelter, the politician turned oil industry lobbyist, told the Toronto Star.

As competition for energy resources between China and the United States intensifies, Lingenfelter’s lobbying may sound convincing, but his analysis shouldn’t be taken seriously, according to the Pembina Institute’s Dyer.

âeoeA potential pipeline to Asia [via the Pacific] would have to cross the territory of 40 First Nations, where land claims and treaty rights are still hotly contested,âe said Dyer. âeoeThere is growing opposition to pipelines and growing oil sands opposition across the country, so those pipelines [to China] are by no means a done deal.âe

While pipeline routes out of Alberta will be a major topic of controversy for years to come, there is no doubt that Canadian oil is among the world’s most climate unfriendly fuels.

During his acceptance speech at the Democratic Convention, Obama promised to end U.S. dependence on Middle East oil within 10 years, while stating that âeoegovernment must lead on energy independence.âe

Environmentalists in Canada and the U.S. contend that closed-door meetings with oil executives aren’t the best way to foster energy independence.

As Canada enters an election, it’s doubtful the Alberta tar sands will become a major issue, but that hasn’t stopped the oil companies from exerting pressure. In July alone, oil sands companies held a total of 36 meetings with Canadian ministers and government officials, according to recently disclosed lobbying reports. Meanwhile, environmental groups only held seven lobbying sessions and these were usually with ministerial assistants and other lower officials.

As the U.S. election enters its final stretch, Americans seem to be demanding change; if Canadian oil tycoons have their way, it won’t be change they can believe in.