Nuking the oilsands: Why Ernest Manning wanted nuclear weapons to jumpstart Alberta's oil industry

New book explores links between Christianity and oil industry, including Manning's role in Alberta

Image | E.C. MANNING

Caption: Ernest Manning was premier of Alberta from 1943 to 1968, and played a crucial role in securing investment to develop the Athabasca oilsands. (Canadian Press)

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The late Ernest Manning, a former Alberta premier, was so dedicated to opening up the oilsands for development that he considered detonating nuclear weapons in the province to do so, a new book chronicles.
"One of the challenges in the '50s was to find a better technology for extracting, and for refining this oil," said Darren Dochuk, an Edmonton native who is an associate professor of history at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana.
Dochuk explained that Manning's government considered something called Project Cauldron, the brainchild of a California company called Richfield Oil, which later became the ARCO chain of U.S. gas stations.
The project proposed "using the heat and shock energy of an underground nuclear explosion ... to raise the temperature and essentially liquefy the sands," he told The Current's(external link) guest host David Common.
Then, "more conventional extraction methods" would be possible, he added.
But the idea of using nuclear devices didn't work out.
"It never happened, they tested this in Nevada — and to rave reviews, by all accounts," Dochuk said.
But "the pressure against nuclear energy on both sides of the border was strong. That public concern … would really force the Alberta government, and Manning's team, to shelve the idea."
Manning was premier of Alberta from 1943 to 1968, and played a crucial role in securing investment to develop the Athabasca oilsands in the 1950s and 1960s.
Watch Ernest Manning announce the opening of Alberta's oilsands on Sept. 30, 1967

Media Video | CBC News Calgary : Hear Ernest Manning announce the opening of Alberta's oil sands 50 years ago on Sept. 30, 1967

Caption: Alberta's then premier, Ernest Manning, stood a podium and declared it was a "historic day for the province of Alberta."

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"The goal for Ernest Manning was to improve, advance, modernize the Alberta economy," Dochuk said.
"He saw oil very much as a way for Alberta to move past its dependency on agriculture."
Dochuk writes about the idea in his book Anointed with Oil: How Christianity and Crude Made Modern America. He explores the links between Christianity and the oil industry on both sides of the U.S.-Canada border.

Image | Darren Dochuk author of anointed with oil, book oilsands Christianity

Caption: Darren Dochuk's new book is called Anointed with Oil: How Christianity and Crude Made Modern America. (Hachette Book Group)

Manning's own faith heavily influenced how he approached the oilsands, Dochuk told Common.
"He saw oil as very much a gift from God. This was something bestowed on the Alberta people that could ensure their progress in the here and now."
The project was urgent for Manning because he believed that "Christ was returning at any time," Dochuk added.
There was a "sense that time was short, [and] man, humanity needed to make the most of its resources in this current moment."
Manning was concerned with religion, theology, and ideas around death and judgment, Dochuk said.
"Peak oil ... was always tied into his worldview."
Click 'listen' near the top of this page to hear the full conversation.

Written by Padraig Moran. Produced by Howard Goldenthal.

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