Ross Belot
About Ross Belot
Ross Belot is a retired senior manager with one of Canada’s largest energy companies. In over 30 years in the energy sector he has gained an in-depth understanding of global and Canadian crude oil, refining and petroleum products strategies, economics and logistics. As well as writing on energy and climate change policy he is a Hamilton Ontario based poet, photographer and film maker.
PM Trudeau, time to show us your cards
Canada's proposed cap on oil and gas emissions raises questions about the future of refineries and the Line 5 pipeline.
Make provinces pay for their emissions
Close to 50 per cent of our national emissions are produced by Alberta and Saskatchewan, writes Ross Belot, who refers to this composite region as Albertawan.
What carbon activists can learn from the campaign to end asbestos production in Canada
One of the difficulties of trying to stop fossil fuel production in Canada is many groups soft-pedal the real problem — the end use of the product, writes Ross Belot.
Trudeau's ambitious new climate target is unreachable
"We aren’t the U.S., and implementing their solutions doesn’t get us as far," writes energy-worker-turned-environmental-poet Ross Belot.
Sorry, Canada. The world doesn’t need Keystone XL
There is more than enough oil to go around without the TC Energy Corp. pipeline project, writes former oil industry executive Ross Belot.
The myth of the anti-Alberta Liberal
Oh, Canada. We may not have a national mythology built on a phrase like the American 'Life, liberty and the pursuit of Happiness,' but we do have a myth based on the refrain that 'Ottawa Liberals hate Alberta.'
Belot: Albertans have been fooled by a myth about pipelines and the oilsands
The oilsands golden years lasted about a decade, and they will never come back. Blaming that on a lack of pipelines just perpetuates a myth. Columnist Ross Belot examines what stopped the boom and investment trends since then.
Sloughing off the costs of environmental damage
In Alberta and other fossil fuel production jurisdictions there is a whole lot of externalizing going on. Ross Belot examines the corporate practice of pushing environmental liabilities off onto government and society.