The Official Contempt for Alberta Thread

CDNBear

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Sep 24, 2006
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Re: Alberta's economic diversification plan wins praise from industry

Oh oh, Flossy's using his favourite distraction method again.
 

Angstrom

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May 8, 2011
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Re: Alberta's economic diversification plan wins praise from industry

Now we just have to wait out the saudi's move to exhaust their surplus of American dollar's in reserve. ....... This could take a 5-10 years.
 

mentalfloss

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Jun 28, 2010
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Re: Alberta's economic diversification plan wins praise from industry

The saudis won't exhaust their supply until oil becomes a secondary industry to renewables.
 

Angstrom

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Re: Alberta's economic diversification plan wins praise from industry

How many trillions of American dollars do you think the Saudi's want to get rid of from their reserve?

The saudis won't exhaust their supply until oil becomes a secondary industry to renewables.

I'm talking about their supply of American dollars, used to trade for oil, in the Saudi's bank reserve

My question is: how many years of deficit can they run on their American dollar reserves.

My guess is 5 years

I wonder what Alberta will look like in 5 years

My guess is Canada won't be doing very good.
 

Bar Sinister

Executive Branch Member
Jan 17, 2010
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Re: Alberta's economic diversification plan wins praise from industry

Trust the CBC to put a positive spin on deficit spending and corporate bailouts. So when the dippers give money to industry it is no longer a subsidy but an economic plan.


Oh right, as in the case of the Harper government's record setting deficits.
 

mentalfloss

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Canada has energy export opportunities beyond pipelines

Canada has energy export opportunities beyond pipelines

The big energy story in Canada continues to be pipelines. Still.

Why? There’s controversy, for starters, but it’s also the fact that energy exports – especially oil – make up a big chunk of Canada’s exports, and we’re an export-driven economy.

Fair enough. But it’s time we started focusing more attention on the opportunity to export energy technologies and services, not just raw energy. As United Nations Environment Program chief Achim Steiner said the other day on CBC’s Power & Politics, “Whether you build the next pipeline or not … the economy of Canada will not be centred around a fossil-fuel-based extractive economy.”

That’s in no small part why Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne has been in India in recent days. There are always domestic politics tied to these trade missions, but there is both need and value for Canadian leaders – from government and clean-energy companies – to travel abroad, seeking out new business opportunities. If Canada is going to play in the increasingly competitive global clean-energy marketplace, we need to sell our industry and the climate solutions they offer.

Let’s unpack this.

Not two months ago, the world raised the bar on climate action by signing an agreement to replace fossil fuels and build a clean global economy. An unlikely leader at the forefront of that charge is India, with a commitment to install 175 gigawatts of renewable energy by 2022. India is a top-three player, according to Ernst & Young’s Renewable Energy Country Attractiveness Index, so it’s not surprising that clean-energy businesses are flocking there, including those based in Canada. Why? The size of the prize.

The reality is, for Canadian companies, prospects at home are looking lean, especially in the short term. While we’ve seen sizable renewable electricity targets from both Alberta and Saskatchewan, policy details have yet to be unveiled and even then it will take time for projects to get started. And, while Ontario has held the top spot in renewable electricity for the past few years, topping out at $12.7-billion in investment by the end of 2014, there are many unanswered questions as to what’s next for clean energy as the province considers its supply strategy.

For companies looking to grow, there is little choice but to look beyond our borders. Enter India – with the right mix of commitment, investment and policy – the next clean-energy frontier.

With a formal target of 100 GW of solar capacity (and 60 GW of wind) by 2022, India is a giant market for clean-energy companies. According to Bloomberg New Energy Finance data, the dollars are matching those commitments. In 2015, India saw $10.9-billion (U.S.) in clean-energy investment, a 22-per-cent increase over 2014, with nearly half ($5.2-billion) in solar. This is not to say that the clean-energy revolution in India is easy; finding land and the state of power transmission infrastructure have posed challenges for the country. But with policy approaches evolving to meet the country’s power needs, there’s no sign India is slowing down on its commitment any time soon.

In fact, many Canadian companies have already seized business opportunities in India. When Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited Canada last April, solar-power deals – one with AMP Solar Group and the other with Canadian Solar Inc., a big player on the Indian market – accounted for more than $1-billion (Canadian), 63 per cent of the value of the total agreements signed.

Another success story for Canadian solar in India is Sarus Solar, a joint venture comprising three Canadian firms that is planning a series of 500-megawatt solar parks, the first of which will be built in Maharashtra. According to Sarus Solar’s head of operations for India, Arun Agarwal, “The Canadian firm saw huge potential in the solar sector in India, especially after the government announced its target.”

Finally, let’s point to Canada’s SkyPower Global, which, last summer, made the lowest bid of 5.17 Indian rupees a kilowatt hour (10.6 cents) as part of the 2 GW solar tender in the Indian state of Telangana. Subsequent actions have secured even lower bids, yet Canadian companies are clearly in the game in India.

Exporting clean-energy solutions reaps benefits for Canadians and Canadian companies.

While pipeline controversies make headlines, an important Canadian success story is being written outside our borders. It’s a story worth telling here at home.

Canada has energy export opportunities beyond pipelines - The Globe and Mail
 

mentalfloss

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Jun 28, 2010
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Oil price drops below US$30, bringing down loonie and Toronto stock market

Oil price drops below US$30, bringing down loonie and Toronto stock market

TORONTO - Oil prices fell below US$30 a barrel Tuesday for the first time in nearly two weeks as North American markets posted steep losses and the Canadian dollar lost half a U.S. cent.

The March contract for benchmark U.S. crude fell US$1.74 to US$29.88 a barrel. Crude has lost nearly US$4 over two days, roiling markets worldwide.

"Everything is correlated to oil these days," said Michael Greenberg, portfolio manager at Franklin Templeton Solutions. "Markets that shouldn't be correlated to oil are correlated to oil."

The Toronto Stock Exchange's S&P/TSX index fell 232.11 points to 12,442.26, adding to a weak start to the month's trading. It has lost nearly 380 points over the first two days of February, a decline of close to three per cent.

New York indexes were also in full retreat, with the Dow Jones industrial average plummeting 295.64 points at 16,153.54, while the S&P 500 fell 36.35 points to 1,903.03 and the Nasdaq lost 103.42 points to 4,516.95.

The renewed downswing in the price of oil also dragged down the loonie, which dropped exactly half a cent to 71.29 cents US.

The slide in oil prices also brought down markets outside North America.

In Europe, Germany's DAX finished 1.8 per cent lower, while France's CAC-40 fell 2.5 per cent and Britain's FTSE 100 lost 2.7 per cent.

In Asia, Tokyo's Nikkei 225 earlier closed 0.6 per cent lower, South Korea's Kospi index fell one per cent and Hong Kong's Hang Seng was off 0.8 per cent. China's man index, the Shanghai composite, was an outlier, gaining 2.26 per cent.

"It seems, these days, as oil goes, so do broad markets," Greenberg said.

The price of oil last closed below US$30 a barrel on Jan. 21 when it settled at US$29.53 a barrel. It rallied back, hovering above US$33 late last week.

Those gains were spurred by rumours that Russia and OPEC would co-operate on a co-ordinated cut to production, Greenberg said.

"It's looking like that's maybe not as likely," he said.


Oil price drops below US$30, bringing down loonie and Toronto stock market
 

Walter

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Jan 28, 2007
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Re: Oil price drops below US$30, bringing down loonie and Toronto stock market

Low oil prices are good for the consumer.
 

Ron in Regina

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Apr 9, 2008
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Re: Oil price drops below US$30, bringing down loonie and Toronto stock market

Low oil prices in an oil exporting nation, who's national
economy is propped up by these oil exports....isn't good
for the national economy as a whole, and most comsumer's
will find their dollar worth less and their purchases costing
more....and the shortfall in gov't coffers will have to come
from somewhere.
 

Kreskin

Doctor of Thinkology
Feb 23, 2006
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Re: Oil price drops below US$30, bringing down loonie and Toronto stock market

It will be a tremendous year for Canadian tourism.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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Re: Oil price drops below US$30, bringing down loonie and Toronto stock market

We are lucky because we still have GDP growth but that will taper off if we don't stimulate the economy.
 

Walter

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Jan 28, 2007
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Re: Oil price drops below US$30, bringing down loonie and Toronto stock market

Low gas prices have put more money in m pocket to spend on other stuff.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
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Regina, Saskatchewan
Re: Oil price drops below US$30, bringing down loonie and Toronto stock market

Low gas prices have put more money in m pocket to spend on other stuff.

That other stuff is going to cost more as the money
in your pocket is worth less than it was, more than
balancing out the savings you might see at the pumps.

The Gov't is going to see less revenue, and is going to
need to recoup that missing revenue from somewhere,
and that is going to kick the little guys in the wallet too.
 

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
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Re: Oil price drops below US$30, bringing down loonie and Toronto stock market

What are all the blacksmiths and buggy-whip makers ding these days?
 

Rick A

Don’t presume… ask!
Jan 22, 2016
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Re: Oil price drops below US$30, bringing down loonie and Toronto stock market

Oil has finally played it last card. The oil sands are "dead" for the enforceable future.
 

captain morgan

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Mar 28, 2009
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Re: Oil price drops below US$30, bringing down loonie and Toronto stock market

Oil has finally played it last card. The oil sands are "dead" for the enforceable future.


Dead right up to the point where you run out and gas-up your car... Then it's resurrected until the next time, right?

PS - what the fukk is the enforceable future