Sadly you are correct , and sadly most east of the lake head have no clue .Every other option has been tried for decades, distancing from the ROC if not outright separation is the only option remaining
Sadly you are correct , and sadly most east of the lake head have no clue .Every other option has been tried for decades, distancing from the ROC if not outright separation is the only option remaining
Sadly you are correct , and sadly most east of the lake head have no clue .
Weren't you the guy that claimed oil is dead? Now you say there is a shortage.Crude Oil Shortages Beginning To Bite In Key Markets
The coronavirus pandemic has caused global oil demand to fall off a cliff, with U.S. consumption falling to levels last seen nearly four decades ago. With global oil production at record highs, supply quickly overwhelmed demand leading to an acute storage crunch that triggered the historic oil price crash into negative territory.
Oil prices have recovered ever since but remain a long way off the $60/bbl level they were trading at last December. The current oil price of ~$40/bbl could be around the breakeven that Russia needs to balance its books but far from satisfactory for Saudi Arabia, which needs ~80/bbl or majority of U.S. shale producers who need $50-$55 per barrel to break even.
https://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/Crude-Oil-Shortages-Beginning-To-Bite-In-Key-Markets.amp.html
If the east votes turdOWE in again there will be significant growth in western separation.I'm not saying it is achievable, I'm just saying it's more achievable than Western Separation.
And to be clear, it's not that I don't or wouldn't support the idea of separation, but I would like to try other options first so we might at least have some semblance of a chance.
He saying conventional oil jackpumps arent pumping fast enough. This will spark a drilling boom.Weren't you the guy that claimed oil is dead? Now you say there is a shortage.
The west has the East by the balls when it comes to Green Energy.I disagree on the fairy tale element, AB/SK are already landlocked and can't get our goods to market so why pay Fed taxes for, ummm, exactly what again?
I'm not saying it is achievable, I'm just saying it's more achievable than Western Separation.
And to be clear, it's not that I don't or wouldn't support the idea of separation, but I would like to try other options first so we might at least have some semblance of a chance.
True if Alberta and Saskatchewan turn there backs on Peter MacKay and his red Conservative party and elect a passel of separatists we may see some movement . Imagine that two separatist parties holding the balance of power in a minority parliament.IMO we need to be serious about separation to get a real seat at the National table
It's "their backs".True if Alberta and Saskatchewan turn there backs on Peter MacKay and his red Conservative party and elect a passel of separatists we may see some movement . Imagine that two separatist parties holding the balance of power in a minority parliament.
You've never heard of the Prince Albert riding? 4 PMs have come out of that riding.It's "their backs".
Alberta and Saskatchewan will never hold the balance of power in parliament and they would be further ahead to try to grow their alliances than to destroy them.
It's future in Canada is in doubt because of asswipes like you. Yep, the oil industry is pretty much dead. Which is why Norway issued 68 oil exploration licences this year with at least 1/3 of them having licence to begin drilling if/when they find a pocket. They also just recently announced it will be exploring the Arctic for oil deposits. Yep, sounds like a real dead industry.Pipeline Project Losses Raise Questions About Industry's Future
The setbacks for the oil and gas industry come during a time when its future is increasingly unclear due to the coronavirus pandemic and public pressure over climate change.
https://www.usnews.com/news/nationa...losses-raise-questions-about-industrys-future
"We are in the midst of an energy shift," Hammond says. "Watching the energy companies navigate that shift, the ones who may survive, I think, are the ones that view the future as one of renewable energy and energy solutions as opposed to relying on fossil fuels simply as long as they can."
Hammond believes the projects need to also answer calls for environmental and social justice as well as corporate accountability.
"It's not just that the oil and gas industry is vulnerable to a pandemic," Hammond says. "It's that a pandemic might have been the final straw, given its other vulnerabilities on the bases of justice and accountability."