Poll: Albertans Split on Chinese Investment in the Province

The University of Alberta’s China Institute polled 1,210 people just days before China National Offshore Oil Co. announced its controversial $15.1-billion deal to take over Calgary-based Nexen Inc..

“On balance, it’s a mix of positive negative. Albertans are quite conflicted in their views of China,” said institute director Gordon Houlden in an interview.

The survey, which is conducted annually, found 37 per cent of those polled agreed partial Chinese investment in Alberta is acceptable, with 36 per cent disagreeing and 27 per cent undecided.

But the numbers were much more extreme when it came to full ownership — only 15 per cent agreed it is acceptable, 64 per cent disagreed and 21 per cent neither agreed nor disagreed.

Attitudes in the survey were divided starkly along political lines, with supporters of the right-wing Wildrose Party much less enthusiastic about Chinese investment than voters further left on the political spectrum.

“I think that the wariness of China has an ideological dimension as well as an economic dimension,” said Houlden.

On the more positive side, the poll suggested Albertans are not particularly threatened by China’s rise as an economic power, are in favour of exporting oil and gas to China and view China as a stable trading partner.

But Houlden said he was disappointed that only 32 per cent of those polls agreed the ability to speak Chinese will become important to Albertans.

“If only Chinese learn English and our culture, we’re really at a disadvantage. And that’s one that I think we need to redress,” he said.

The telephone poll’s estimated sampling error is plus or minus 2.8 percentage points at 95 per cent confidence.

– The Canadian Press

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.