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About to be “trumped” in Bismarck

A couple weeks ago, I got an email from a conference I will be attending at the end of May; an email that totally floored me.
Brian Zinchuk

A couple weeks ago, I got an email from a conference I will be attending at the end of May; an email that totally floored me.

Donald Trump, presumptive Republican candidate for president, would be the final speaker on the last day of the Williston Basin Petroleum Conference in Bismarck, N.D.

And if I can snag my usual seat at the front of the room, I’ll be sitting 30 feet from the podium.

The Williston Basin Petroleum Conference (WBPC) started as a gathering of geologists. It alternates between Regina and Bismarck. The conference is hosted by the Saskatchewan Ministry of Economy, the North Dakota Petroleum Council and the North Dakota Department of Mineral Resources, with each jurisdiction taking turns. Since the Bakken boom hit, North Dakota’s oil production rose from 90,000 barrels per day to 1,119,000 barrels per day today.

This conference has correspondingly grown in size. Two years ago there were over 4,200 attendees. It is the most important conference of its type for the oil business in southeast Saskatchewan and North Dakota.

As former Saskatchewan Party leader Elwin Hermanson used to say about Alberta and Saskatchewan, “Dinosaurs died on both sides of the border.”

Well, oil isn’t made of dead dinosaurs, but the point is the same. In fact, the accepted thinking among geologists is that all oil in southeast Saskatchewan was produced in the “kitchen” around Williston, and over millions of years it flowed north until it was caught in various traps from which we now produce it.

That’s a long way of saying that geology doesn’t care about current borders, which is why I have been attending these conferences, the same one that Donald Trump will now be attending.

I expect it might be the only time Donald Trump makes it to North Dakota, given its tiny population and even tinier electoral college impact. However, energy seems to be important to Trump, so it makes sense for him to attend.

It doesn’t look like there will be a media availability,

but if there is, I would like to ask him, “As one of the few Canadian journalists here, I’d like to ask if you would grant a presidential permit to the Keystone XL pipeline and invite TransCanada to go ahead with the project.”

Or if I am really feeling feisty, “I have been to almost every type of Canadian oil and gas facility, and I have yet to encounter an American soldier or marine necessary to guard it. Nor have American military personnel lost lives or limbs protecting American access to Canadian oil. What will you do about the Keystone XL project?”

In the States, security trumps all, (See what I did there?) so I would probably go with the second version.

This is a once-in-a-lifetime chance for me. I’m curious to see just what he’s like, and what he has to say. What will he say? Will he talk about energy independence? Or will he talk about building a wall while in a city where the foreigners are Canadians, not Mexicans? I’ve written before, harshly, about his views. Now I should get the chance to see him up close and almost-personal.

Donald Trump has upended the American political system like no other in generations. In a few weeks’ time, I’ll write here about what the experience was like.

I have chills in anticipation.

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