Teck oilsands mine.

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
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Decapoda's comment below is from two weeks ago:

Does anyone honestly believe this project is going to be approved? The Liberals have been clearly and concisely telegraphing their intent for the last two weeks with talks of aid packages for AB, headlines of Liberal MP's urging Trudeau to reject the mine....and now Liberal "special prairie representative" Jim Carr moving the goalposts by now declaring that the project must achieve zero emissions in order to be approved....a ridiculous and impossible requirement. Canadians are being played for fools by a circus clown who's currently on a world tour racking up the Canadian credit card, giving away millions of dollars we don't have to third world countries to promote gender equality.

My prediction...Trudeau and the Liberals will defer a decision and drag this out another couple of months, then they will kill it outright. Is there anyone out there who honestly believes this is going to go any other way? This country is being torn to shreds by Trudeau and his destructive foolishness.
http://thestarphoenix.com/opinion/columnists/gormley-in-trudeau-land-maybe-this-really-is-post-national-canada
In 2015, newly minted Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, in an unguarded moment with the New York Times, glibly declared “Canada is the world’s first post-national state.”

He described Canadians’ “core values” as openness, respect, compassion, willingness to work hard, “being there for each other,” and seeking equality and justice. But Trudeau stated “there is no core identity, no mainstream in Canada.”

At the time, and since, it was easy to dismiss this as the undisciplined and pseudo-intellectual ramblings of an unserious mind. But in recent days there is a darker edge to this.

Perhaps in Justin Trudeau-land there really is no core Canadian identity; particularly in Western Canada nothing that anchors us — from longtime to new Canadians — to a common purpose or strives to unify us behind an ideal.

Intermittently since 2012, near B.C.’s Morice River, blockades have been erected by a tiny group of Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs opposing Coastal GasLink’s natural gas pipeline, despite all 20 elected bands along the pipeline route supporting it, including the five Wet’suwet’en bands under the Indian Act. A band-owned business and many band members will work on the project.

In recent weeks, sympathy blockades have sprung up across the country. They invoke Indigenous rights and opposing pipelines in general, Coastal GasLink in particular and the shipment of liquid natural gas (LNG) to China. It is difficult to understand opposition to Canadian shipments to China of less carbon-dioxide intensive LNG to replace coal’s higher CO2 emissions and atmospheric pollution.

There are two reasons that Justin Trudeau bears responsibility for the growing activism, barricades and contempt for the law. First, his non-stop campaign of piety, virtue signalling, grandstanding and lecturing us on the holy troika of Indigenous reconciliation and “balancing the economy with the environment,” has been a green light for many activists to stop all oil and gas.

His second failing comes in his anemic response to the blockades, which have inconvenienced thousands of people and cost the Canadian economy billions of dollars. Absent in the early days while trolling for UN Security Council votes in Africa and Europe, Trudeau literally phoned in suggestions that the dispute be fixed by “dialogue, negotiation, alignment, engagement, and consultation.”



As the blockage of the CN mainline near Belleville, Ont., paralyzed passenger and freight service and resulted in many layoffs (1,500 railway employees alone), Trudeau supported the police decision to “keep the peace” by ignoring the enforcement of criminal, railway and trespass laws, and even allowing activists to flout court injunctions. What followed was the predictable deterioration of public order and respect for law.

Finally, Trudeau’s return to Canada was mired in inertia; the only decisive move was to bar Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer from a leaders’ meeting because of Scheer’s “unacceptable speech” which suggested blockades come down and the law be enforced. Three days later, a humbled Trudeau made the same decree but, as expected, it has since been largely ignored.



National Post columnist Jonathan Kay has observed that recently Canada’s identity has transformed to a country convinced that we are “a genocide state.” Canadian media, academic and political elites, Kay rightly points out, are obsessed with the narrative that we are “an ugly scar on traditional Indigenous lands,” and the “whole vocabulary — settler, neo-colonial, appropriation — declares that Canada is garbage, hoping that an attitude of self-abasement would somehow lead us to ‘reconciliation.’ We forgot that when garbage talks, no one listens.”



In the midst of this, just hours before it was expected to be axed by the Trudeau cabinet, Teck Resources withdrew its Frontier oilsands expansion, along with $21 billion in spending, 2,500 permanent jobs, and $70 billion in tax revenue. This pushes to $120 billion the value of resource projects cancelled in the last three years.

Given the events of recent days, who does not believe this is merely a rehearsal for the anarchy that will come if the Trudeau government-owned Trans Mountain pipeline extension ever tries to lay pipe?





 

taxslave

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Nov 25, 2008
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U.S. West Texas Intermediate fell 4% to trade at $46.91 per barrel, bringing the week’s decline to more than 12%, and the year-to-date loss to more than 23%. WTI is pacing for its fifth straight session of losses, and has tumbled even deeper into bear market territory, sitting 29% below its 52-week intraday high level of $66.60, reached last April.https://www.cnbc.com/2020/02/27/oil...-breaking-below-47-as-collapse-continues.html
Not bad. Still not as good as Tesla losing 15% overnight.
 

Twin_Moose

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Apr 17, 2017
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Teck Frontier cancellation should be ‘wake-up call’ for Canada: Freeland

Teck Resource's decision to withdraw its Frontier mine application should be a "wake-up call" for Canadians, says Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland.
In an interview with The West Block's Mercedes Stephenson, Freeland said the country needs to take the decision as a turning point for a crucial conversation about the future of resource development in Canada.
“I think we need to treat Teck’s withdrawal as a wake up-call for our country and say, now is the time to do that hard work and actually face up to the fact that it’s a challenge — it’s a real challenge — to reconcile ambitious action on climate change and a strong economy and a strong oil and gas sector," she said.
"But we can do it and I think now is the moment for us to do that work."

Teck abandoned its bid to get federal cabinet approval for a proposed oilsands mining project worth roughly $20 billion last week.
Its CEO, Don Lindsay, wrote a public letter outlining the reasons for the decision, saying the company's application had "surfaced a broader debate over climate change and Canada’s role in addressing

"It is our hope that withdrawing from the process will allow Canadians to shift to a larger and more positive discussion about the path forward. Ultimately, that should take place without a looming regulatory deadline," he wrote.
The project had been billed by proponents as a litmus test of sorts for whether large-scale natural resource projects — specifically, those in the oil and gas sector — can get built under a government that has made tackling climate change a major part of their political agenda.

Teck's withdrawal prompted fierce criticism of the government from conservatives across the country who linked the uncertainty around the future of addressing climate change with the government's handling of three weeks of nationwide blockades.

Those were sparked by activists who declared themselves as acting in solidarity with the Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs in B.C., who oppose a natural gas pipeline set to be built through their traditional territory with the consent of all elected chiefs from the impacted region.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has faced criticism for not condemning the blockades more quickly.
He only said they needed to come down roughly two weeks after the blockades had intermittently shut down railways, border crossings, roads and access to government buildings across the country.
Freeland said that decision was important.
“That was a crucial moment," she said of the statement by Trudeau calling for the blockades to come down.
"It was essential for him to say that and since then, what we have been seeing is progress — by no means concluded — but progress in getting the blockades dismantled.”
She said the challenge now must be addressing how to move forward.
“The tensions and the strains are absolutely real and now is the time for us to put our shoulder to the wheel and knit our country together," she said.
“What I think we need to do now is have a very urgent, very serious conversation between the federal government, the provincial government, the oil sector and indeed, the whole country talking about how do we achieve both of these perspectives.”

Can someone interpret for me what she is trying to say? All I got is blah, blah, blah Justin was right, blah, blah blah
 

taxslave

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Nov 25, 2008
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The first sentence is the only part that made any sense.It should serve as a wakeup call for everyone that cares about the future of our country. It is obvious that anyone on the left is not fit to govern the country.