The planned redesign of Alberta's licence plates has been stopped, premier Jim Prentice announced Thursday afternoon.

The province plans to stick with the current plate.

“This is Alberta’s new licence plate,” Prentice said, while holding up the familiar red and white plate.

Albertans were given these three designs for a new provincial licence plate. Version 2 won in the vote, but it has since been scrapped. (Alberta Government)

In July, the government announced that for the first time in 30 years the province would get new licence plates.

Albertans were asked to vote on a new design, which did not include the current “Wild Rose Country” slogan.

However, the three designs that were released — all given to the provincial government for free by the American multi-national 3M — were quickly met with controversy.

CBC News reported that 3M hired heavyweight political insider Rod Love to lobby the government for new licence plates.

The provincial lobbyist registry shows Love, former premier Ralph Klein’s chief of staff, began lobbying the government as early as Jan. 29, 2013, in relation to “licence plate branding.”

'Albertans have spoken'

Many people were frustrated the government didn’t invite Alberta designers to submit their vision for the licence plates, something Graphos president Laurier Mandin called “the motivating insult.”

A graphic design firm in Edmonton was so underwhelmed by the proposed designs for the new licence plates that they even decided to make their own.

“Albertans have spoken very clearly that the priorities that they have identified are health education, taking care of seniors [and] infrastructure,” he said Thursday. “Changing the design of Alberta's license plates is not amongst those priorities, and so all further work on design to change the license plates will be terminated.”

He suggested that "not much money" has been spent on the redesign so far.

A spokesperson for the province said the former premier’s office spent $9,745 for initial work on the alternative design. An additional $800 was spent on the survey and original announcement made earlier this summer.

Had work started on the newly-designed places in the spring as planned, the cost would have been around $15 million.

One of the reasons behind the redesign was to increase visibility for police. Prentice says the government will work with law enforcement to make the current plates easier to see.