Advocatus Diaboli

This blog is about things, issues, ideas, and concepts on subjects focusing on Canada, Canadian Issues and Affairs and those that affect Canada and Canadians from afar.

Saturday, April 30, 2005

EnviroNewsandIssues Newsletter - Edition 8

April 24, 2005
Kyoto targets out of reach -
Calgary Sun
The federal government says Canada can and will meet its Kyoto targets.
Not to be indelicate, but that is a lie.


If Canada were to remove every plane, train and automobile from service and were to shut down every manufacturing plant in the country, we would still not meet our Kyoto target.


After waiting more than eight years for a plan from the dithering federal Liberal government on how Canada is going to meet the impossible targets set out in the Kyoto protocol, not surprisingly, the feds have come up with yet another incompetent and wildly costly plan.

U.S. Loan Proposed to Rescue Alaska Power Plant -
Washington Post
House Energy Bill Includes Help to Convert Experimental Coal Project That Failed
Years ago, the federal government spent $117 million on an experimental "clean coal" power plant in Alaska designed to generate electricity with a minimum of air pollution -- but the project never got up and running.


The plant, built in the late 1990s just outside Denali National Park and Preserve, never worked as it was supposed to, cost too much to operate and provided power only intermittently when it was tested, according to the utility company that was supposed to run it. Five years ago, the state closed it down.


Last week, the House came up with a solution: spend an additional $125 million in the form of government loans to convert the experimental "clean coal" facility into something that works.
Alaska officials say they expect that a retrofitted plant would spew no more air pollution than the original was designed to emit. But some environmentalists concerned about pollution in the park are skeptical.


April 23, 2005
Tories poised to win -
Windsor Star
Ontario backing Harper, poll shows
OTTAWA - The Conservative party, buoyed by a surge in support from Ontario voters unseen in 20 years, is poised to win an election if it is held now, a new poll has found.


The survey by Ipsos-Reid, provided exclusively to CanWest/Global, reveals Stephen Harper's Tories hold a "solid" five-point lead over the Liberals under Prime Minister Paul Martin. Thirty-five per cent would vote Conservative nationally, compared to 30 per cent for the Liberals, 18 per cent for the NDP, 12 per cent for the Bloc Quebecois, and five per cent for the Green Party.

Glaciers on Antarctic Peninsula shrinking -
Globe and Mail
London — The first comprehensive survey of glaciers on the Antarctic Peninsula has shown that the rivers of ice are shrinking, mostly because of warming of the local climate.


It is unclear, however, whether the increased temperature causing the shrinkage is a natural regional effect or a result of global warming, said the scientists who conducted the study, published this week in the journal Science.


Researchers from the British Antarctic Survey and the U.S. Geological Survey analyzed more than 2,000 aerial photographs dating from 1940 and more than 100 satellite images from the 1960s onward.

Ethanol plant has promise -
Saskatoon StarPhoenix

WEYBURN -- A former whisky distillery on the outskirts of Weyburn will be reborn as a $16-million ethanol plant this fall, NorAmera BioEnergy announced here Friday.


The facility is being retrofitted and expanded to allow for an ethanol facility that pumps out 25 million litres a year, said Brad Hill, NorAmera president and chief operating officer.
Hill said the plant expects to employ 20 people when it is completed this September.


Company Spin:
The City of Ottawa Receives $130,378 from the Green Municipal Funds for a Comparative Trial of Diesel-Electric Hybrid Technology
OTTAWA, April 22 - Mayor Bob Chiarelli of the City of Ottawa; Township of Lanark Highlands' Mayor Larry McDermott, representing the Federation of Canadian Municipalities; and the Honourable Mauril Bélanger, Deputy Leader of the Government in the House of Commons and MP for Ottawa-Vanier, on behalf of the Government of Canada, will announce a $130,378 Green Municipal Funds' grant for Ottawa. The grant will help the City undertake a feasibility study on diesel-electric hybrid bus technology with a view to reducing emissions generated by the City-owned fleet of transit buses.


Two diesel-electric hybrid buses will be on hand at the event, along with technical experts to answer questions about the technologies and their environmental benefits.

Earth Day - Environmental regulations are harming the environment
MONTREAL, April 22 - The best way to promote sustainable development is to remove barriers to free-market forces, according to an Economic Note published today by the Montreal Economic Institute (MEI). Price- distorting subsidies that favour the use of raw materials and environmentalregulations that prevent the development of by-products from waste are discouraging innovations in recycling, author Pierre Desrochers concludes.


The view that increased profitability is incompatible with environmental protection is "historically inaccurate ... not only are higher profits and a cleaner environment compatible, but much historical evidence suggests that industrial recycling is a long-practised, productive and, indeed, essential element of the market system," writes Desrochers, who is an assistant professor in the Department of Geography at the University of Toronto and Research Associate at the Montreal Economic Institute.

"As a society becomes more technologically and commercially advanced, the increased diversity of the technical, managerial and trading capacities of its members will provide for many different ways of turning residuals into resources. Meanwhile, many new and different potential markets for these resources will be created," writes Desrochers.


Titled Reconciling Profits and Sustainable Development: Industrial Waste Recycling in Market Economies, this Economic Note is available at
http://www.iedm.org/

Making a child's wish come true continues as Saskatchewan CPR employees recycle 100,000 water bottles
MOOSE JAW, SK, April 22 - A unique fundraiser that had more than 800 Canadian Pacific Railway employees in Saskatchewan recycling plastic water bottles in support of the province's Children's Wish Foundation has hit the 100,000-bottle mark, which means more dollars to make another child's wish come true.

CPR showcases success in greenhouse gas reductions
CALGARY, April 22 - Showcasing its commitment to the environmentduring Earth Day 2005, Canadian Pacific Railway outlined measures it has takento address climate change and greenhouse gas emissions as part of day-to-dayoperations.Notable CPR air emission reduction measures include the following: - The addition of new high-powered, energy-efficient AC traction road locomotives to its fleet of more than 1,600 locomotives - one of the youngest fleets in North America; - Increased use of distributed power, which involves putting locomotive units in the middle or rear of a train. The result has been more fuel-efficient trains operated when distributed power is used. - Majority of the locomotive fleet outfitted with fuel saving devices, such as stop/start technology that automatically shuts down and restarts locomotives within specified parameters - reducing emissions and fuel consumption. - The recent purchase of 35 hybrid yard locomotives known as the Green Goat(R), which reduce fuel consumption by up to 60 per cent and cut smog-causing oxides of nitrogen (NOx) and diesel particulates by as much as 90 per cent.


Nunavut Earth Day protest gets star support - CBC.ca
IQALUIT - Hollywood actors Selma Hayek and Jake Gyllenhaal joined hundreds of Canada's Inuit for a group photo-shoot in Iqaluit to protest against global warming.
It was part of the worldwide Earth Day celebrations.


The large crowd, which assembled on the frozen surface of Baffin Island's Frobisher Bay, formed the shape of a giant Inuit drum dancer and the words "Arctic Warning" for an aerial photograph.

INDEPTH: CLIMATE CHANGE
Global warming
CBC News Online
March 24, 2005

Switch on the TV or radio these days, and you'll learn about icebergs melting and be bombarded with ads for movies depicting catastrophic weather disasters.A hundred years ago, the phrase "climate change" would not likely have set anyone's spine tingling, but today it has become fodder for the latest thrillers and disaster scenarios. The reality is likely to be less sudden, but possibly no less dramatic.

Bad Weather Forces Change in Bush's Earth Day Plans - New York Times
KNOXVILLE, Tenn., April 22 - President Bush's plans to celebrate Earth Day in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park were undone by nature on Friday, as stormy weather in the area forced him to cancel and instead speak about the environment from inside a hangar here at the McGhee Tyson Airport.

Conservation by all -
Ottawa Citizen - Sound Off!
Recent government and court decisions affirming the right of aboriginal and Metis peoples to hunt and fish for subsistence, without regard for normal conservation practices or regulations, are troubling.


In October, the Alberta government passed its Metis Interim Harvesting Agreement, allowing the province's 31,200 registered Metis to harvest fish and game without the licences, quotas or seasonal restrictions that apply to non-native hunters and anglers. Conservationists are rightly worried the bill could devastate fish and wildlife populations, some of which, including grizzly bears and bighorn sheep, are already stressed. Metis Nation of Alberta president Audrey Poitras, rejected the concerns, stating that Metis are conservationists who "believe in the wise use of our natural resources."

Oil tapping out: Crude shortage looms - National/Financial Post
CALGARY - World oil production is set to peak in the next two years, at which point there will not be enough new projects coming on stream to offset global oilfield declines, according to a new study.


The report, by the London-based Oil Depletion Analysis Centre (ODAC), shows there are 73 major oil projects under development around the world -- 24 inside the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and 49 outside, including Canada's oilsands. These projects will boost oil production to a peak of 85 million barrels a day in 2007 to 2008, from 82.5 million barrels a day in 2004, when world oil producers were running flat out and used up all excess capacity.

Asia's gathering storm -
National Post
A long-festering Sino-Japanese rivalry is becoming increasingly apparent. If tensions between the Asian giants continue to increase, Northeast Asian peace and stability may crumble, provoking serious consequences for Western interests.


Long-standing territorial disputes are erupting, as well. Both Tokyo and Beijing claim a string of islands in the East China Sea, known as the Senkaku (in Japanese) or the Diaoyutai (in Chinese).
Though uninhabited, the islands are thought to shelter significant undersea gas (and possibly oil) reserves. With China and Japan being the world's second and fourth largest consumers of energy, control of this chain is a huge deal for both.


The U.S. returned the islands to Japan, along with Okinawa, in 1972. Despite Japanese complaints, China began drilling near the islands last year. Last November, a Chinese sub was also discovered in the area, within Japan's exclusive economic zone.

The situation worsened last week after Tokyo decided to retaliate, allowing Japanese companies to begin exploration in the same gas fields. Not surprisingly, Beijing denounced the move as a "serious provocation."

End of narcissism in foreign policy - Toronto Star
A good rule of thumb when reading some report, document, study or speech — even a newspaper column — is that if you come upon the phrase, "We must build today for the world of tomorrow," switch instantly to something more intellectually demanding, like American Idol on TV.


In a rare exception to this rule, the just-released Canada's International Policy Statement is still worth ploughing through.

Hookers are society's dirty little secret - Edmonton Sun
"I picked prostitutes as my victims because I hate most prostitutes and I did not want to pay them for sex. I also picked prostitutes as victims because they were easy to pick up without being noticed. I knew they would not be reported missing right away, and might never be reported missing. I picked prostitutes because I thought I could kill as many of them as I wanted without getting caught." - Green River Killer Gary Ridgway, convicted of murdering 48 prostitutes in the Seattle area over a period of two decades.


Charlene Gauld was a likable 20-year-old who desperately wanted to straighten her life around and get off the streets. Her drug addiction was the millstone that kept her mired in a spirit-draining quagmire.

She was the second local sex-trade worker to be found murdered in 2005, and the sixth whose body had been found dumped outside the city in the past two-and-a-half years.

To some people, she was just another throw-away junkie whore - another statistic to be clucked over before turning to the sports page, all but forgotten by the time the morning coffee is finished.

Kyoto should be more than a war of words -
Halifax Herald
By LEAH SANDALS
WHO KNEW that Kyoto itself could generate so much hot air?


The past few weeks have seen a 180-degree turn from Stephen Harper on the global warming accord - not that he would ever admit there's been a change, of course. With the opportunity to force an election well in sight, Harper has gone from climate-change naysayer to Mr. Wind Power in less than a month. Someone should really set up a turbine on his lower lip, so consistent and ardent are the gales of sensible (and, oh yes, poll-itically popular) quotes on climate change.

While some may be fooled by Harper's recent flip-flop, overshadowed as it currently is by the testimony at the Gomery inquiry, many are not - or at least, shouldn't be - after considering some of his past comments.

April 22, 2005

Netherlands reports first Creutzfeldt-Jakob case - Globe and Mail
Amsterdam — A 26-year-old Dutch woman has been diagnosed with variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease, health authorities said Thursday, the first known human case of the fatal disease in the Netherlands.


Seventy-seven Dutch cows are known to have been infected since 1997 with bovine spongiform encephalopathy, commonly called mad cow disease, which is believed to cause variant CJD in humans.

Poll: Conservatives would win in Canada
OTTAWA, April 11: Had an election been held in Canada Monday, Conservative leader Stephen Harper would have been prime minister, found an EKOS Research Associates poll.


The poll found that 25 percent of respondents nationwide would vote for Liberals, compared to 36.2 percent for the Conservatives, 20.5 percent for NDP -- Canada's social democratic party, the Bloc Quebecois -- running in Quebec only -- got 12.6 percent and the Green Party 5 percent.

EKOS surveyed 1,125 Canadians, 18 years and older, between Thursday and Saturday. The poll has a margin of error of 2.9 percentage points.The poll was conducted immediately after testimony at in inquiry last Thursday by former Montreal advertising executive Jean Brault, who alleged gross misconduct by the Quebec wing of the federal Liberal Party, reported the Toronto Star. In June 2004, the Liberal Party won a minority government with about 37 percent of the vote.

Kazakh Environmentalist Wins Goldman Prize
Kaisha Atakhanova, a Kazakh environmentalist who energized a campaign by 100 nongovernmental organizations in Kazakhstan to block the commercial importation and storage of nuclear waste, has been awarded the 2005 Goldman Environmental Prize.


Atakhanova, a biologist specializing in the genetic effects of radiation, is founder and director of the Karaganda Ecological Center, also known as EcoCenter. In 2001, she launched a public campaign to sink draft legislation which would have allowed commercial importation of nuclear waste into Kazakhstan. She won, and in 2003 the Parliament voted down the bill.

Kazakhstan, which was home to the Soviet nuclear testing site at Semipalatinsk, had endured almost 500 nuclear explosions at the site with a total impact equal to 2,500 Hiroshima sized bombs. More than 1.5 million people are believed to have suffered from the effects of radiation, producing high rates of cancer and birth defects. Lands the size of Germany are contaminated with radiation to one level or another.

The original reasoning for the proposal to bring in foreign nuclear waste to a country which already had 237 million tons of its own was the US$40 billion it could bring over several years which could be used to clean up the contamination left by the Soviets. Thousands of people across Kazakhstan, energized in a grassroots campaign, wanted none of it and got their way.


Atakhanova became one of the group of six individuals selected by an international jury from across world for the 16th annual Goldman Environmental Prize. The prize, including US$125,000, is the world’s largest for grassroots environmentalists and is sometimes referred to as the “environmentalist Nobel prize”.

The awards were presented in San Francisco on April 18, and two days later the National Geographic Society in Washington hosted a special program in the U.S. capital honoring the recipients.

Speaking at the Washington event, Mrs. Atakhanova said she and her colleagues in other Kazakh NGOs call themselves “Democracy in Action” and are keen to continue their work.

Moments later, visibly moved and joined by her husband, she said she had “unbelievable feelings of responsibility and pride for herself and her country.”

EnviroNewsandIssues Newsletter - Edition 6

An Interesting Look at the AdScam investigation in Ottawa
Women conspicuously absent from scandal - Toronto Star
'We do politics differently,' MP saysMore women, less corruption: Study

OTTAWA—Amid the large, sprawling cast of the federal Liberals' sponsorship saga, one group is hugely underrepresented — women.

In fact, some people are arguing that this whole sorry tale of public-trust abuse in Canada could become Exhibit A in arguing the case for more women's involvement in politics.

Certainly, it's become a subject that some women in the Liberal party are starting to discuss.

Françoise Boivin, a rookie MP from Quebec and chair of the Liberal women's caucus, said it just struck her yesterday, with some force, in fact. Apart from a prime ministerial niece here, an assistant or two there, the whole story of alleged kickbacks and corruption among advertising firms and the Quebec Liberal party is a tale about men, by men.

" It has to make you think," Boivin said. "Why is it? Maybe we're more grounded ... maybe we don't see politics so much as a game ... But we do do politics differently."

Editorial: Costly safety valve for Kyoto targets - Toronto Star

Most Canadians know that, on its own, this country will be hard pressed to meet its onerous target of cutting its emissions of greenhouse gases by at least 270 million tonnes over the next seven years, as set out in the Kyoto Protocol on climate change. To even try to cut such a stunning amount of greenhouse gases in such a short time span could impose an unacceptable economic cost on Canadians.

Ottawa knows it, too, which is readily apparent in the long-awaited implementation plan it released yesterday for combating global warming.

$10-billion Kyoto plan tabled in Parliament - Globe and Mail

The Liberal government finally revealed Wednesday its plan to meet Kyoto targets -- spending approximately $10-billion over the next seven years.

The plan requires annual reductions of 270 million tonnes a year within the next seven years, as reported by The Globe and Mail last month.

However, it does not specify how much of that will be obtained by cutting actual pollution and how much by purchasing emissions credits from poor countries.

Tories dance with Kyoto - Globe and Mail

Ottawa — The Conservative Party's sudden embrace of the Kyoto accord has astonished its supporters and critics, who see it as a flip-flop of historic proportions.

The move is seen as part of a wider shift that moves the party away from its the political right in an effort to court voters as an early federal election threatens.

The following is something I think is important for us to keep abreast of. So if you don't want to read it just skip it. I think it is important as a Canadian to know about.

Canada complicit in torture of deportees: rights group - Globe and Mail

Toronto — Governments that deport suspected terrorists to countries known to torture detainees are either breathtakingly naive or complicit in the abuse if they rely on promises of humane treatment, a new report concludes.

The report, by the non-partisan organization Human Rights Watch, says Western nations, including Canada, are increasingly turning to hollow diplomatic assurances of fair treatment from suspect governments.

CALGARY - Canadian pipeline giant Enbridge Inc. (TSX:ENB) announced Thursday it had
signed a preliminary deal with China's largest oil company, PetroChina, to anchor a new $2.5 billion pipeline to carry Canadian crude to the West Coast for shipment to Asia.

VANCOUVER The City of Kitimat has launched a legal challenge to force the British Columbia government to prevent aluminum giant Alcan Inc. from exporting power from its smelter in northwestern B.C. The city and community leaders filed the action in B.C. Supreme Court on Thursday, claiming that ministerial orders allowing for the power exports are illegal.

VANCOUVER _ A meeting between Canadian and U.S. forestry executives planned for next week to discuss renewed softwood lumber trade talks has been postponed indefinitely.
Editor's Comment: Do you think the people in the above story were going to discuss the stopping of the shipping of raw logs to the US saw mills from the forests of BC too?

CALGARY - Alberta Finance Minister Shirley McClellan speaks to Calgary Chamber of Commerce about 2005 provincial budget. (12:15 p.m. at Sheraton Eau Claire, 255 Barclay Parade SW)

April 13, 2005

Car pool, transit better than twinning Port Mann, group claims - Vancouver Sun

More than 60 per cent of motorists using the Port Mann bridge travel alone and steps should be taken to get them into public transit or car pools rather than twinning the bridge and widening the Trans-Canada Highway to ease congestion, says a group opposing the government's multi-million-dollar expansion plan.

The group says while the proposed expansion of the highway and bridge will alleviate congestion in the short term, the experience of other North American metropolitan areas is that congestion will be worse in the long term as more people take to the highways.

Members of the east-Vancouver-based group, called Citizens Concerned with Highway Expansion, are concerned that increased traffic will negatively affect their neighbourhood.

Green Party releases platform - Vancouver Sun

VICTORIA -- British Columbia's Green Party released its campaign promises at an outdoor news conference on the back steps of the legislature Wednesday.

Green Leader Adriane Carr, whose party has yet to elect a member to the legislature, said she expects party candidates to battle the Liberals and New Democrats for seats in several Vancouver-area ridings at the May 17 election.
Green promises:

1. The Green Party will remove junk food and corporate advertising from public schools.
2. The Green Party would re-establish BC Ferries as a Crown corporation.
3. The Green Party would establish the sale of marijuana to adults through outlets similar to liquor stores.
4. The Green Party would ban the sport and trophy hunting of grizzly bears.
5. The Green Party would change the B.C. Human Rights Code so clean drinking water, clean air and safe food are fundamental, guaranteed rights.
6. The Green Party would repeal the $6 training wage.

Carr is confident the Greens can break through this time and elect MLAs, saying her party has remained solid in the polls -- with between 12 and 19 per cent support -- since the last election in 2001.

Good news on Kyoto - Toronto Star

There is a lot of hot air being generated about the Kyoto Protocol these days. So much, in fact, that we are in danger of losing sight of the real objective, which is to reduce the amount of greenhouse gases that we emit as a result of our daily activities. We are so consumed in the debate about the target set by the federal government that we ignore the successes being made in lowering greenhouse gas emissions.

Government to buy greenhouse gas cuts - Toronto Star

OTTAWA—The ads may feature Rick Mercer but the government wasn't kidding about the One-Tonne Challenge.

Canada's latest climate change plan is going to shift much of the load of reducing greenhouse gas
emissions away from the 700 companies that produce half of those gases — and closer to you.

Kyoto may give voters another grievance against federals Liberals - Vancouver Sun

The federal government will reveal its Kyoto implementation plan Wednesday -- if it lasts that long.

In the event it isn't defeated by then, the Liberal government should reconsider its approach to reducing greenhouse gas emissions out of self-interest -- if not for the sake of sane public policy.

North Dakota considering piping water from Canada in dry times - Globe and Mail
OTTAWA -- North Dakota is considering a plan to transfer water by pipeline from Lake of the Woods, located on the Canadian-U.S. border, in the event of a severe drought, which it predicts will occur within the next 25 years.

The proposal is likely to fan Canadian-U.S. tensions already simmering over the Devil's Lake project, also in North Dakota, which would transfer poor-quality and parasite-infected water into the Red River running through Manitoba.

Timber Firms Reach Environment Deals - Reuters

VANCOUVER, British Columbia (Reuters) - Forestry firms Tembec Inc. and Domtar Inc. unveiled separate agreements with environmental groups on Tuesday, including one campaigning to curb logging in Canada's boreal forests.

Tembec has agreed with ForestEthics to identify and protect endangered areas in the boreal forest, a belt of an estimated 560 million hectares of pine, spruce, aspen, poplar and larch trees running from the Atlantic Ocean to the Alaska border.

High cost of fuel drives U.S. Army into hybrids - Windsor Star

DETROIT - The soaring cost of fuel has become such a burden to the American military, the U.S. army is getting into the hybrid vehicle business.

The army's vehicle development wing, the National Automotive Centre, Monday unveiled prototypes of a hybrid diesel-electric off-road vehicle capable of getting 60 miles per gallon.

The Ethical Funds Company(TM) Announces Portfolio Manager Change - http://www.ethicalfunds.com/

VANCOUVER, April 13 - The Ethical Funds Company today announced plans to change the portfolio manager of the Ethical(R) North American Equity Fund ("the Fund"). Effective May 13, 2005, the Fund will be managed by Manning & Napier Advisors, Inc., ("Manning & Napier") replacing Alliance Capital Management Canada, Inc. Following a formal review and an extensive search of qualified firms, Manning & Napier was selected for its proven track record of delivering consistent performance through varying market conditions. Manning & Napier'sapproach, adjusting portfolios to prevailing market conditions, is consistent with The Ethical Funds Company approach to fund management. Manning & Napier brings significant experience in successfully managing socially responsible investments in the United States. The Ethical Funds Company is the only mutual fund company in Canada offering Manning & Napierportfolio management to its clients.

See the entire media release here: HERE

Canada may need to buy Kyoto credits, Emerson concedes - Globe and Mail

OTTAWA -- Canada probably will have to spend money overseas to meet its own commitments under the Kyoto Protocol on climate change because incentives to Canadian enterprises may not get the job done, Industry Minister David Emerson says.

Even with federal tax incentives and other support for domestic heavy industry, Ottawa anticipates having to purchase so-called greenhouse-gas credits abroad five to seven years from now, Mr. Emerson told the House environment committee yesterday.

April 12, 2005

Chemical Producers to comment on Kyoto Plan

OTTAWA, April 12 - Canada's Chemical Producers will be responding to the Government of Canada's implementation plan for the Kyoto Protocol.

CCPA President Richard Paton will provide reaction to the report following the government lock-up on April 13 from 1:30 to 3:00 pm in Room 214, of the East Block of the Parliamentary Buildings. He will also be availablefor telephone interviews after 3pm. CCPA represents small, medium and large chemical companies representing over 90% of chemical production in Canada. CCPA will comment on the Plan, CEPA and industry agreements.

Environment Minister Announces Decision on the Beaufort Sea Exploration Drilling Program

OTTAWA, April 12 - The Honourable Stéphane Dion, Minister of the Environment, today announced that the proposed Beaufort Sea Exploration Drilling Program in the Northwest Territories does not require furtherassessment by a review panel or mediator under the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act. The Minister referred the project, proposed by Devon Canada Corporation, back to the lead responsible authority, the National Energy Board (NEB), as well as to Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Transport Canada, and Indian and Northern Affairs Canada for appropriate action. The Minister has determined that the project is not likely to cause significant adverse environmental effects with the implementation of the mitigation measures outlined in the comprehensive study report. The Ministerbased his decision on: - the comprehensive study report, including the conclusions and recommendations, submitted by the NEB; - public comments received during the 30-day consultation period, and the NEB's response to the comments; - the determination of the Environmental Impact Screening Committee for the Inuvialuit Settlement Region; - the implementation of mitigation measures; and - the implementation of a follow-up program. Devon Canada Corporation is proposing to conduct an exploratory drilling program to evaluate potential natural gas reservoirs in the southern Beaufort Sea, north of the Mackenzie River Delta. The exploration drilling would be conducted during the winter, within the landfast ice zone, from one of three potential drilling platform systems: a steel drilling caisson, a landfast tender-assist drill unit; or an ice island platform. Devon is currently planning to drill the first well during the winter of 2005-2006, and one well each subsequent winter season, completing the program in the winter of 2008-2009. The Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency administers the federal environmental assessment processes, which identify the environmental effects of proposed projects and measures to address those effects, in support of sustainable development.http://www.ceaa-acee.gc.ca/

April 11, 2005

Salmon fishery needs a strong DFO boss to stave off further disaster - Vancouver Sun

It wasn't obvious by the end of last week whether federal Fisheries Minister Geoff Regan had bothered to read a report that he commissioned detailing mismanagement of the Fraser River salmon fishery. If he had skimmed over the startling revelations about illegal fishing, black-market dealing and possible links to the drug trade outlined in the report released publicly Thursday, you'd think he'd have had something to say by now. After all, Regan has had the document in hand since March 31.

The Power of One: An Interview With Shukria Barakzai - http://www.worldpress.org/Asia/2047.cfm

Shukria Barakzai, founder and editor of Kabul’s Aina-E-Zan (Women’s Mirror), a newspaper for Afghan women, has been named Worldpress.org’s 2004 International Editor of the Year.

Worldpress.org presents this award each year to an editor or editors outside the United States in recognition of enterprise, courage, and leadership in advancing the freedom and responsibility of the press, enhancing human rights, and fostering excellence in journalism.

Oil, Geopolitics, and the Coming War with Iran - Mother Jones
By Michael Klare

As the United States gears up for an attack on Iran, one thing is certain: the Bush administration will never mention oil as a reason for going to war. As in the case of Iraq, weapons of mass destruction (WMD) will be cited as the principal justification for an American assault. "We will not tolerate the construction of a nuclear weapon [by Iran]," is the way President Bush put it in a much-quoted 2003 statement. But just as the failure to discover illicit weapons in Iraq undermined the administration's use of WMD as the paramount reason for its invasion, so its claim that an attack on Iran would be justified because of its alleged nuclear potential should invite widespread skepticism. More important, any serious assessment of Iran's strategic importance to the United States should focus on its role in the global energy equation.

UK Election Sites
* Major Media
BBC News - Election 2005 (plus election blog)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/vote_2005
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/vote_2005/blog/default.stm
BBC Radio 1 "Newsbeat" [youth-oriented news] - One Vote 2005
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio1/news/newsbeat/election
Channel 4 - Election 2005 (plus a blog round-up)
http://www.channel4.com/news/microsites/E/election2005
http://www.channel4.com/news/microsites/E/election2005_blogs/index.html
Sky News - Vote 05
http://www.sky.com/skynews/vote05
Financial Times - UK elections 2005
http://news.ft.com/cms/543e48fa-8727-11d9-9e3c-00000e2511c8.html
The Guardian - Election 2005 (plus an election blog)
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/election2005
http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/election2005
The Independent - Vote 2005
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/story.jsp?story=626724
The Times - General Election 2005
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/section/0,,19809,00.html
Daily Telegraph - Election countdown 2005
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/exclusions/election2005.xml
Scotsman.com - Election 2005
http://election.scotsman.com/
Yahoo (UK & Ireland) - Election 2005
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/promo/election05_index.html
News Now - Headlines
http://www.newsnow.co.uk/newsfeed/?name=Election+%28UK%29
* Unique Sites
Jamie's Big Voice - Former homeless person and former drug addict,
Jamie
McCoy, blogging for homeless people to make their views known and
give a
commentary on the General Election campaign.
http://jamiesbigvoice.blogspot.com/
Not Apathetic - Clever site where non-voters can explain why they
are not
voting from http://mysociety.org/
http://www.notapathetic.com/
FactCheck - run by the TV station Channel 4
http://www.channel4.com/news/factcheck/
Political Betting - blog that demonstrates the punters know more
than the
pundits or pollsters
http://www.politicalbetting.com/
UK Polling Report - summary of opinion polls, with its associated
blog
http://pollingreport.co.uk/voteALL.html
http://pollingreport.co.uk/blog/index.php
ePolitix.com Vote 2005 - election news and background
http://www.dodsparlicom.com/vote2005/default.htm
Y-Vote 2005 Mock Elections 2005 - resource (from the Hansard
Society) to
enable schools to stage mock elections
http://www.mockelections.co.uk/
Tactical voting sites - there are several online campaigns
advocating tactical voting of one sort or another
http://www.backingblair.co.uk/
http://www.vote4peace.org.uk/
http://www.strategicvoter.org.uk/
http://www.sonowwhodowevotefor.net/
Party 'watch' sites - each party has been targeted by a 'watch'
blog set up by opponents, to expose various gaffs, scandals and other
embarrassments
http://labour-watch.blogspot.com/
http://www.libdemwatch.co.uk/
http://www.torytrouble.org.uk/weblog
http://respectwatch.blogspot.com/
http://stopveritas.blogspot.com/
http://www.ukipwatch.org/
* Election Starting Points
Open Directory - Links via E-Democracy.Org
http://e-democracy.org/uk2005
Wikipedia - UK General Election 2005
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Kingdom_general_election_of_2005
Shared Bookmarks - Tags from Del.icio.us
http://del.icio.us/tag/ukelection
http://del.icio.us/tag/election2005
Election 2005 - comprehensive portal
http://www.psr.keele.ac.uk/area/uk/ge05.htm
Social Science Information Gateway
http://www.sosig.ac.uk/subject-news/index.php?cat=19
New sites
http://www.sosig.ac.uk/roads/subject-listing/World-cat/ukelect.html
Many sites
Google News - "Internet Election 2005"
http://news.google.com/news?&q=internet+election+2005
Government Election-related Sites
Electoral Commission
http://www.electoralcommission.org.uk/
About My Vote
http://www.aboutmyvote.co.uk/
DirectGov - Election 2005
http://www.direct.gov.uk/QuickFind/GuideToGovernment/Election2005/fs/en
Electoral Office for Northern Ireland
http://www.electoralofficeni.gov.uk/
* Satire and Humour
Mud Slinging game
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio1/news/newsbeat/election/newsbeatgame/
Deadbrain - Election 2005
http://deadbrain.co.uk/election2005/
Site Name - Description
Full URL
* Blogs About the Elections
2005 UK General Election - a blog of blogs
http://www.generalelection05.com/blog
The Returning Officers - political gossip from a consortium of
three of the
UK's leading political bloggers
http://returningofficers.blogspot.com/
LibDem Blogs Aggregated! - an aggregator of blogs by individual
Liberal
Democrats
http://www.libdemblogs.co.uk/
Independence - Scottish National Party-related Blog
http://scottish-independence.blogspot.com/
Political Betting Blog
http://politicalbetting.com/
* Blogging Candidates
List only those candidate sites updated most days.
Romseyredhead - Blog of Sandra Gidley (Liberal Democrat MP for
Romsey since 2000, standing for re-election), who's been blogging
since September 2004
http://romseyredhead.blogspot.com/
John Hemming's Web Log - Blog of the Liberal Democrat candidate in
Birmingham Yardley
http://johnhemming.blogspot.com/
Iain Dale for North Norfolk - Blog of Conservative candidate in
North Norfolk
http://www.iaindale.blogspot.com/
Tom Watson - Blog of the Labour MP standing for re-election in West
Bromwich East
http://www.tom-watson.co.uk/
Scottish National Party Candidates
http://www.snp.org/elections/diary/
Boris Johnson - Conservative MP
http://www.boris-johnson.com/

April 10, 2005

'Vague' Kyoto strategy panned - Calgary Sun

OTTAWA -- The government will release a Kyoto implementation plan next week that calls for federal spending of $10 billion to $12 billion over the next five years. But the plan will not answer the key question of how much Canada will have to spend on emissions credits purchased abroad.

Industrial polluters to get bigger break under new Kyoto plan - Toronto Star

OTTAWA—Industrial polluters get an even bigger break than before in the new Kyoto plan being unveiled next week by the federal government, according to several people who have received advance briefings.

EnviroNewsandIssues Newsletter - Edition 5


National Wildlife Week Urges Canadians to Embrace Protected Areas

OTTAWA, April 8 - Canadians are celebrating National Wildlife Week (NWW) from April 10 - 16, 2005 with wildlife festivals in communities across the country. Special NWW events will be taking place in countless schools, libraries, malls and museums - all focusing on this year's theme

"Explore and Embrace a Special Wild Place."

This year the theme focuses on Canada's special wild places where people connect with nature - whether it's a busy birdfeeder in your own backyard or an officially protected area like a national park. These places are asimportant to your well-being as they are to the survival of all the wild plants and animals that live there.

"For nearly 40 years NWW has been helping Canadians learn about wildlife and the environment. It's a time to celebrate Canada's rich natural heritage," said the Canadian Wildlife Federation Executive Vice President, Colin Maxwell.

"This year we're encouraging Canadians to familiarize themselves with a special wild place and learn why some areas need to be protected."

Protected areas are legally established areas on both land and in water that are regulated and managed for conservation objectives. They include parks, wildlife and forest reserves, wilderness and other areas designatedthrough federal, provincial, and territorial legislations.

During the week, Canadians will have an opportunity to learn about the importance of protected areas to themselves and the many species of wildlife that call it home. Protected areas not only represent important habitat for wildlife, they also provide Canadians with recreational opportunities and soulful natural encounters.

The CWF sponsors NWW each year in cooperation with federal, provincial, and territorial wildlife agencies, Parks Canada, and the Canadian Museum of Nature. "We are also pleased to welcome TD Bank Financial Group to this year's campaign," said Maxwell. "TD Bank has been a long time advocate for the environment through their TD Friends of the Environment Foundation which has over 120 local chapters across the country."

A contribution of $25,000 from TD Bank Financial Group will be used toward the production and distribution of National Wildlife Week educational kits. The CWF sends kits to Canadian schools as part of the NWW program. The kits contain lesson plans and resource materials focusing on the NWW theme.

Through this exciting education program, CWF is helping to raise young Canadians' awareness of the importance of wildlife conservation issues.

Schools and youth groups that initiate habitat improvement projects in their schoolyards or communities may also be eligible for funding. Judging by the number of projects and the thousands of hectares of habitat that have alreadybeen improved for wildlife in celebration of NWW, the future looks bright for many wild species and spaces.

For more information about National Wildlife Week, please call 1-800-563- WILD or visit CWF's Web site at www.cwf-fcf.org About Canadian Wildlife Federation: CWF is dedicated to fostering awareness and appreciation of our natural world. By spreading knowledge of human impacts on the environment, sponsoring research, promoting the sustainable use of natural resources, recommending legislative changes, and cooperating with like-minded partners, CWF encourages a future in which Canadians may live in harmony with nature.

Visit
www.cwf-fcf.org for more information.

FYI: Progress on Motion No. 170 - Alzheimer's Disease - Passed in House of Commons - April 22, 2005

The Motion #170:
That, in the opinion of the House, the government, in consultation with the provinces and territories, should develop a national strategy on Alzheimer's disease and related dementias to ensure a nationally coordinated and comprehensive approach to these health issues.
Passed in the House of Commons on April 22, 2005, with the government and its Parliamentary Secretary for the Minister of Health speaking in favour of the motion.

Tom Olsen - Too Many Seniors Doomed To Neglect

I doubt the column Tom Olsen wrote on the issues raised in the Legislature by the NDP's Brian Mason, was prompted and contributed to by his direct line to the cut and paste department of Public Affairs in Ralph's kingdom.

If Olsen had done any reporting and investigation past the media release and spin from Ralph, he would have found that there is more than a nugget of truth to what Mason has said.

What the story on the issue of the presented petition shows is that there are problems in the long term care area, but not all operators are guilty, and much of the trouble faced by the private nursing home providers is because of the political tinkering of the Premier in the run up to an election, and the fact playing field a nursing home operator is not level.

The private nursing homes live by rules set by the Health Region, and provincial government. The private nursing homes funding is set by the regions based on a nefarious one month snap shot of the entire health care needs of the residents in a nursing home.

The health region pays no taxes, and pays no profit to an owner, whether it is to the pockets of the owner or as retained earnings to be reinvested in new or renewed facilities or equipment. If a private nursing home like AgeCare runs a deficit just before an election it cannot expect to get bailed out like the Health Regions will.

The private nursing homes must employ nurses, both practical and registered, competing with the health region’s rates of pay. It does not have the deep pockets of that Klein has access to when the provincial government and nursing unions settle for wage and benefit increases just before an election.

There are more important questions to be asked by Olsen? All of which would have been more relevant and more important to the average Albertan who has or will have a loved on in a nursing home, private or not. They will not be found in the Public Affairs department of Klein's Kingdom.

Yes I have a vested interest in the private nursing home business. It is called my father. He now resides in a nursing home run by AgeCare and receives very good care, and care given because the staff want to and strive to be the best.

I took a course at university many moons ago, called Political Accounting One Oh One

I took a course at university many moons ago, called Political Accounting One Oh One. So please keep that in mind while I take you through my maze of questions I have with the upcoming election. First, Stephen Harper must be realistic and know that at best he can see 14 to 20 seats in Ontario come his way. Alberta will give him two new seats, as Saskatchewan and Manitoba. That means 18 to 24 seats to add to the 99 seats he has now. To beat the Liberals, he has had to make a deal with the Bloc (separatists). He will not win many if any seats in Quebec, unless there is one seat up for the taking in Montreal. Vancouver will not go Conservative more than it is. I see Vancouver going either to the NDP, Greens, or stay with the Liberals. So where will Harper get the majority? If he gets a minority he will not be forming friendships with the NDP. Will he do that with the Liberals? The Bloc? What I see is, if we have an election this spring, we then have another one next spring, with no real government business that is in the least bit substantive, being done for about 2 years, added to the last 2 years of the same.

Friday, April 29, 2005

June 7, 2004 FFWD Submission

June 7, 2004 FFWD Submission:


Not only is the 2004 Federal election going to be one of the missing generation for the electorate under not showing up to vote, it is to be sub-titled as the election where the real issues went missing.

It needs to be at the top of the media and political agenda can be easily explained by the how our political and media managers have dumbed down the process so that they can understand it, and hope that they can help the voters left in the process not to become confused with reality.

Hence, you always go to health care, crime, sex, and war to garner the best votes.

Until this week passed the issues such as same sex marriage, abortion and the environment were no-where to be seen. Not only is the countries fourth national party being shunned by the staid and gray mass media outlets, but the New Democrats were looking as it they had abrogated their genetically inherited position in Canada’s election map of being the party of the conscience.

Preston Manning sees the environment as an issue that can make or break a party’s success and is at the top of the agenda of many people who vote. If you believe what David R. Boyd writes in his recent book, Unnatural Law (U.B.C. Press), none of the two major parties, Liberals or Conservatives, have done much of anything to move environmental law to an enlightened stage, and where we as Canadians could be confident that we have had a government that is actually making progress with proactive actions with regards to our deteriating environment. Another book I would recommend you read and put beside the Unnatural Law, if you are a true environmentalist that wants to keep informed on the issues is ''The Empty Ocean,'' by Richard Ellis.

Dr. David Schindler of the University of Alberta, a world renowned biologist, has issued a warning that we have an impending water crisis in the west that governments have yet to realize and this is leading us down a path of no return. We need only see the methods that the provincial government are approving water use applications at a break neck speed for the oil and gas industry. His findings are showing that river flows have decreased by 30% for northern rivers in Alberta like the Athabasca and 80% for south Alberta rivers like the Oldman. This is a trend he say only to continue due to the shrinking of the glaciers and their water supply, which is a symptom that can only be attributed to global warming. Alberta farmers already knew this, it seems our political leaders don’t.

Why talk of clean air, potable water, and some far off sess pool at the bottom of the Pacific or Atlantic Oceans?

Why talk of the salmon farming on the west coast and the part it is playing on the decimation of the world anchovie population half a world away?

Do we really want to wait to find out why breast milk of Canadian women contains the second-highest levels in the world of polybrominated diphenyl ethers, or PBDEs and what affect it will have or has had on the children of Canada.

Do want to know why the European Union has taken steps to issue restrictions on the substances and Health Canada is still at the stage of not allowing interviews with Mr. Ryan (a research scientist at Health Canada) about his findings? Why does Health Canada cite confidentiality reasons prevented it from seeking clues on why concentrations seem to vary so wildly or why it is prepared to let the levels of the chemical rise in breast milk because, ‘human exposure from sources such as breast milk had not yet reached harmful levels?’

Canadian scientist Simon Donner feels the question we must ask ourselves and the politico’s who want us to vote for them is, ‘will Canada become a leader in preventing dangerous climate change, in promoting new energy technologies, higher fuel efficiency, improved urban infrastructure and sustainable international development?’

Recently the Globe and Mail reported that one of the environment intitiatives proposed by Jack Layton, leader of the New Democrats’ would be to increase the use of alternative energy sources, pledging to see 10,000 wind turbines built across Canada.

In the whole environmental policy plank of the New Democrats you find some interesting ideas. Such as: Establish a university degree program in green technology Transportation; Share half of the federal gas tax to improve public transit, cycling and pedestrian infrastructure in urban areas, and freight rail and rural roads in rural communities; Provide GST rebates on greener cars; and Make public transit passes to employees a tax deduction for employers.

One further policy the NDP could adopt is the refusal to give any urban centre any funding support unless it is used for mass transit purposes and project. That means no ring road, no new asphalt, no new roads for more cars to spew more polution.

The Green Party seems to have become a true Canadian Party.

In its policy platform it has tried to balance the environment with reality in Canada and has proposed many very well thought out policies, that are a balance between cleaning the environment by using a carrot instead of a stick, and propose tax changes and incentives where prudent to do so.

As an example they propose to: Remove tax breaks on pesticides; Implement a carbon tax on gasoline, diesel and coal but exclude ethanol blends and biodiesel from fuel tax increases; Establish a special five-year tax break on energy efficiency retrofits in commercial and residential buildings; and Seek intervener status in legal actions that impact the health of the ecosystem.

The last issue is one where I happen to agree and would go farther by using the Constitution to base Federal Government’s intervention in provincial enviromental practices.

An argument for this can be based on the fact that the air and water in our ecosystem do cross provincial and international borders and therefore the federal government has a responsibilty to step in and make the decisions are made in the best interest of the country’s enivronment health.

Can we afford to vote for the Conservative Party when as one of its firewall bricks to protect the energy industry in Alberta from reality it will scrap the Kyoto plan, but have no concrete ideas or plans to deal with the very real issues of climate change, water shortages, biodiversity problems, and problems of missing fish both on the east and west coasts?

Why is it a policy of the new Conservative Party to abolish the Kyoto Accord and replace it with what?

Since we do not know with what, can we draw a line from that decision and the needs and wants of those that invested in Stephen Harper’s campaign to become the new leader of the new Alliance entity, the Conservative Party of Canada? After all why would someone or entity like Trib-L Limited Partnership give Stephen Harper $35,000 for his latest leadership bid?

Review: Ego and Ink – June 12, 2004

Review: Ego and Ink – June 12, 2004

People who know me, know I live for newspapers, and have worked for newspapers in Southam, Thompson, Calgary Sun, Georgia Straight, and Vancouver Sun, you will not find it hard to see. In fact newspapers have been at my core since I was 8 years old.

Hence the enjoyment I got out of reading, Ego and Ink: The Inside Story of Canada’s National Newspaper War.

Since the beginning, the newspaper industry in Canada has been political, incestuous, poorly paying, romanticized, and a part of our history.

Figuring that since Chris Cobb works at the Asper-owned Ottawa Citizen, and was a sports columnist for the National Post, I assumed Ego and Ink would be more of a rear end kissing account of a rather risky and daring gamble taken by Conrad Black.

It isn’t.

I will warn you that this book is written by a newspaper person and maybe devoid of the emotional blood and guts that were spilled in the battle to get the National Post launched, but it does show the warts of the people behind the idea, as well as the complacency of the publishers of the Toronto Sun, Toronto Star, and Globe and Mail.

Cobb talks about the giddiness in the run up to the creation of the National Post and its first edition in 1998, as well as the background as to why and how the rest of the Southam newspapers dumbed down to the point they are now, and how this lead to the creation of another voice in Canada from the right of the spectrum.

The book points out that Conrad Black bought the Southam chain of daily newspapers and needed a newspaper in Toronto, thus the beginning of the earthquake of change to shake the placid newspaper industry in Canada.

Cobb shows how people were chosen, who moved from which paper for what, and how they were poached, and then shown the door when the dream came to crashing halt when reality reared its ugly head.

There are the dead, living and those barely surviving in the newspaper wars the Black began with precision of determination in Toronto, and shows how the newspaper industry rose to a pinnacle for all too short of a time showing the excellence of newspaper reporting and producing that Canadians are known around the world for.

Unfortunately the bleeding of the talent from the dailies in the Southam chain to feed the National Post beast, we are still experiencing the anaemia it caused in good and intelligent newspaper reporting here in the provinces.

What the upcoming Canadian Federal election should be about

What the upcoming Canadian Federal election should be about

By the time you read this the Prime Minister will have an election on the spiral downwards so fast and so far he will have to raise his head to see over the curb. It is due solely to his lack of vision for the country and pure lust for the desk in the Prime Minister’s Office.visited the Governor General to ask that the current Parliament of Canada be disolved in order that a Federal election be held.

This will be an election that the half of you reading this column who will vote, will have a potential of actually deciding who will become Prime Minister in an unprecented way. It will also be an election that the other half could care less about and not participate in.

The status quo in the upcoming election is not the answer, nor should it be part of any conversation in the upcoming election. The status quo is why over 50% of Canadians, and over 80% of Canadians under 30 do not vote, do not want to vote, and will not vote unless there are fundamental changes to those that are our politicians, and those who want to be our political leaders.

Given that the Prime Minister’s brain trust, the PMOer’s, have pretty well managed to upset people in all of the traditional strong holds of a Liberal government as well as in areas such as Alberta, when the polls close in Ontario the voters in Western Canada may just hold the outcome of the election in their hands.

What this means, is that the half of you who might vote and the half of you who won’t have a good reason to steer the agenda of the election and the party who wants your vote.

Most of you reading this article have stopped at this point, as you have no interest in the political process as it sits. It is not unusual to have people stop paying attention to me when I start talking about Canadian politics unless I am buying the beer.

What you must not do is walk away from the process, turn and engage the political process like you have never done before and like it has never been done to before.

Engage the people who are asking you to hire them for a position that pays about $120,000 per year with great travel benefits, pensions, and perks.

Last year at a Stampede Breakfast in Calgary, Prime Minister Martin, wanted to be Prime Minister so bad he promised everything to everybody but did not write down the promises, spoke of the greatness that awaits Canada and Canadians. There was and has been the talk about changing the way the Federal Government operates. Now it is time for the Prime Minister and his cabinet, whoever that is and to what every party they belong, to put actions to those words, and know that there is a very real chance to win in Calgary.

Canada’s leaders must have a bold new vision of Canada, one that looks past the horizon, about bringing Canadians back into the political and democratic processes that affect their lives, and about ending the very real alienation each and every Western Canadian experiences when dealing with the Federal government, at every level. The Prime Minister must resist the typical Reform/Alliance/Conservative policy of using the rear view mirror of steering the country into the future.


Jon Lord, Alberta MLA for Calgary-Currie says that the Federal election should be about; ethics, integrity, tolerance, social capital, peace, order and good government, social inclusiveness, economic opportunity for all, innovation, infrastructure and individual liberty. Instead he thinks it will probably be about; Anger, jealousy, negativity, Western Separation, gun control, scandal, accusations, misrepresentation, money, opportunism, argument, pandering and the ends justifying the means.

We should demand that our politicians to start talking about the possible.

o Canada will find a cure to the major Cancers in the next ten years, as well as a cure and prevention of AIDS/HIV worldwide.

o Canada will rebuild its international spot on the world stage with a modern military designed to take advantage of its unique set of abilities it has come to do the best in the world ready to go where people need peace, health, and protection from war. Create a secure perimeter around Canada, for Canadian purposes and protect Canada's sovereignty, but maintain Canada as a place of last resort for many fleeing oppression and death. Make Canada an independent country that can work in the world on world issues with independence and trust much like Switzerland does, and do not tie its sled to the American’s tired team of horses.

o Every Canadian child will have access to the high speed Internet before the end of this decade, with proper computers, programs, and electronic infrastructure.

o Canada can feed the hungry, with food from the land and sea, without changing the delicate balance that exists between a health evnironment and a dead earth.

o Canada will become the place in the world that the creative and innovative researchers in high technology want to come, for the freedom to pursue their ideas for new products for the betterment of the world.

o Create duty free zones in the country at the major import gateways where businesses can import and process and export the value added products that incorporate Canadian raw resources. A good example of this is our softwood, beef, and steel. Its been reported by Statistics Canada that Canadian wood exports are at record levels to the United States’ home building industry. So why should we change our forest management systems to suit a foreign government? Stop relying on the American market, and start looking to the world as a market.

o Create a government that is fully accessible by Canadians through E-Government, E-Democracy, and E-Literacy and make it an example and centre of excellence with which to export to the world what we have learned and developed.

o Go to the bottom of the oceans, not Mars, and set up operations to clean up the oceans and rebuild some of the dead zones in the seas of the world created by man. Leave Mars to the USA.

o Create a Canada that will not turn its back on any Canadian citizen anywhere in the world, for any reason. Make a Canada that Canadians are proud of, and proud to be a Canadian, with Canadian values, and have that elusive Canadian identity, so that Canadians traveling the world carry one passport, that of Canada.

o Create an atmosphere in Government that the people working in the government and their associated agencies are working for the people of Canada, and serve at the pleasure of the voter.

o Create policy changes to the National Building codes that will allow for basement suites to be built in homes, so that CMHC can insure the mortgages, property insurers will right home policies for them as well, as well landlords and homeowners can know that the investment they put into the homes will not be illegal and taken away from them. It is one way of helping with the affordable housing crisis in Alberta, and it will not cost one dollar.

Are the above bold and daring? Yes.

We need a Prime Minister that has not hung his political hat on the building of walls around Alberta, or Canada, but someone who has the vision and courage to steer a bold and new course for Canada in to the future, and not while holding the hand of the U.S.A, but a future that is created and determined by Canadians for Canadians.

We need a Prime Minister that knows he is Canadian, and is working to keep Canada Canadian and for Canadians for centuries to come.

Coercive Powers, what does that mean?

Coercive Powers, what does that mean?

Laws are the legal embodiment of the opinions of the consensus as to what is right and proper behavior, with the coercive powers endowed by the government to the police being the physical embodiment of the "or else."

When you put the phrase, ‘coercive powers,’ in context with the legitimate writing and teaching of the Catholic Church, you start to wonder, if it is written somewhere that whenever Mr. Henry’s persuasion fails on an issue he does not approve of, coercion could be brought to bear?
With no qualifying, ‘or else?’

The paragraph in the ‘Pastoral Letter,’ published on the web site of the Calgary Diocese of the Catholic Church over the name of F. B. Henry, Bishop of Calgary January 21,2005 I find disturbing is, ‘Since homosexuality, adultery, prostitution and pornography undermine the foundations of the family, the basis of society, then the State must use its coercive power to proscribe or curtail them in the interests of the common good.’

What is Mr. Henry’s "or else?"

The same Charter of Rights that protects Mr. Henry's right to speak his mind, practice his religion, also protects people who want to be married, or joined in a same sex union to be treated equal under the law.

This is the same Constitution that is at the basis of Canadian law that has allowed religious organizations to marry who and how they want to.

It is also the same document that is purported to protect all in Canada, from our government’s use of excessive coercive powers. It also tries to separate the state from the church, except the part where it allows the Catholic Church to have its own schools.

You cannot cherry pick the parts you like and pause the ones you don’t, until you get what you want.

Despite what politicians like Art Hanger or Ralph Klein might want to do, so they can play the game of ‘Hot Button, politics.

Does Mr. Henry wants the state to help him enforce his church’s current definition of marriage? Or does Mr. Henry consider this a one-way gate, and the government will do his bidding on his chosen sins, but not want something in return for doing that bidding?

Is it a ‘Henryism,’ that where ever his or his church’s persuasion fail, he wants the government to step in with its coercion to be brought to bear?

The call for the use of government coercive powers has no basis in fact from the teachings of Jesus.

Mr. Henry should be prepared to defend and define the words and terms he uses, and just what they may mean to people inside his church, and the majority of Canadians who are not Catholic.
Especially when they are asking the state to use their coercive powers to right a wrong.

Especially in the special place that Mr. Henry finds himself in.

Are we talking about the government using some sort of ‘coercive power’ to adopt a ‘Mr. Henry Egalitarianism,’ as the moral doctrine which all Canadian laws will be based?

This ‘Mr. Henry Egalitarianism,’ will say that equality is to prevail, as long as the Catholic Church approves of the groups to be treated equal, and by how much are to be equal?

Pure egalitarianism is as close to ‘pure Jesus,’ as a Christian can get.

Now that Ralph Klein is on Mr. Henry’s side thanks to my use of the provincial government’s ‘coercive powers,’ is he meaning the sort of ‘coercive powers’ that Ralph Klein’s government has used to keep the homeless, and poor a growth industry in Calgary, even during Alberta Advantage?

Or does Mr. Henry want the Provincial government to use its, ‘coercive powers,’ similar to those it will try to enact in Bill 24, entitled the Fatalities Enquiries Act, to allow the Minister to decide whether, or what in the report is released to the media?

Does Mr. Henry want the Premier to violate Section 15 of the Charter of Rights, namely the right to being treated equal under the law, along with Albertan’s rights to have a free press?
Maybe there is a third basic human right, and we can make this a trifecta.

How far is Premier Klein prepared to go in his jumping on the ‘Rights Sell Off,’ Bandwagon? What is Mr. Klein’s "or else?" Or is this just, ‘good old Ralph,’ trying to hold on to the reins of power until his legaxy is established?

If the Premier goes ahead with his idea of imposing some sort of coercive action and does ban same-sex marriages as Mr. Henry seems to be asking for, who will pay for the legal costs of the Province when it is overturned in the Supreme Court of Canada, as advised by his Justice Minister?

If Mr. Klein exempts the provinces Justices of the Peace, Licence Registry personnel from performing same sex marriages because it is against their religious beliefs, where does it end? Police don’t have to enforce the laws that do not agree with their religious beliefs? Judges? Crown Prosecutors?

Is that an acceptable ‘or else?’ It is the start of the slippery slope?

The Canadian government of 1896 found itself able to use its, ‘coercive powers,’ to “persuade” Indians to give up their ceremonial practices and surrender ceremonial objects often for a few dollars to offset hunger

Is that an acceptable ‘or else?’

They Canadian government has seemed to be able to use its ‘coercive powers,’ against many different kinds of Canadians throughout our history.

As Rev. Bonnie Arends of Camrose said in a recent letter to the Camrose Booster’s editor, ‘ One of the reasons Jesus was killed was that he offended many of the religious people of his day by welcoming sinners and tax collectors, women, traitors, foreigners, prostitutes, children and slaves. Who knows, maybe there were a few homosexuals in the mix also.’

Mr. Henry has said he wants the government to use its coercive powers to put a fence around the traditional definition of marriage. I think it is the responsibility of the Bishop to put a fence around the definition and limits he would see applied to the term, ‘coercive powers,’ as used in his Pastoral Letter.

Maybe Mr. Henry is looking so hard for a sliver in the eyes of those of us who endorse the plan to allow same sex marriages or union, that he has over looked the wall he is building up around himself and shrinking number of Canadians who really don’t have a problem with same sex unions.

Saturday, April 23, 2005

EnviroNewsandIssues Newsletter - Edition 7

April 21, 2005
Chinook salmon collapse alarms West Coast - Globe and Mail

Portland, Ore. � An agency that regulates the U.S. West Coast's biggest river has halted sport and commercial fishing for three kinds of fish after scientists became alarmed about a
mysterious collapse in the population of salmon.

The Columbia River Compact voted this week to shut down sport fishing for salmon, steelhead trout and shad to avoid losing too many salmon that are preparing to spawn. Officials also s
uspended commercial fishing on selective stocks of hatchery fish.

The Columbia River and its tributaries in Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana have historically been the world's largest producer of Chinook, the biggest of the Pacific salmon species.

Scientists had predicted that more than 200,000 Chinook salmon would return to the Bonneville Dam east of Portland. As of Tuesday, however, only 2,030 had shown up.

Darfur: I know this is not environmental in the strictest sense, but it is about the human environment, and something Canada should be working on instead of the rush to another expensive election. Imagine what the upcoming $200 million dollars to be used for the next election, could be used for in Darfur?

Sudan discovers �abundant� oil in war-torn Darfur - AlJazeera
Geological studies and surveys proved that there are �abundant� quantities of oil in the western region of Darfur, Sudan�s Energy and Mining Ministry said.

Energy and Mining Minister, Awad Ahmed al-Jazz, said that the newly discovered oil field is expected to generate 500,000 barrels of crude oil per day by August this year.

Mohamed Siddig, a spokesman for the energy ministry also announced that drilling for oil has
started in Darfur �on the basis of the geological studies and surveys which proved the presence of oil in abundant quantities in Darfur,"

Australian troops in Sudan to stay clear of Dafur - Radio Australia
Australia's Foreign Minister says Australian troops being sent to Sudan as part of a humanitarian aid mission won't be working in the troubled region of Darfur.The 15 soldiers will be involved in the United Nations' operation in southern Sudan, which has been troubled by civil war for more than 20 years.The government is sending logistics experts and military observers to help with the mission.Foreign Minister, Alexander Downer, says Australia remains concerned about the situation in Darfur."It's been heading towards Rwanda proportions as a humanitarian catastrophe, and the international community's response has been very slow. And we look forward to a much stronger response now from the United Nations to dealing with the problem of Darfur."

Politically Active Teens Campaign Nationwide to Bring Justice to the People of Darfur
On April 22, 2005 at 4 p.m., Teens 4 Peace and Amnesty International USA will sponsor a rally by youth activists to express outrage at the indifference to the atrocities being committed in Darfur Sudan.

Jaime Bergerson, with Teens 4 Peace said, "We call for the immediate enforcement of the UN Arms embargo, implementation of a no-fly zone across Darfur and increased support for the African Union mission in Darfur that will enable it to protect the citizens of Darfur.

"The rally will start in Dupont Circle, where we will have speakers from Amnesty International, Africa Action, and the Institute for Policy Studies. We will march to the Embassy of Sudan in commemoration of those murdered, tortured, and raped at the hands of the Sudanese government and their proxy militia, the Janjaweed.

"We must speak out on behalf of the 70,000 people who have lost their lives and the nearly 2 million who have been forced to leave their homes. The Sudanese government must know that the world is watching and will NOT allow the atrocities in Darfur to continue. We, as teens, will not sit by idly and bear 1/4 witness to this senseless brutality."

Teens 4 Peace aims to:
-- Empower teenagers across the nation and utilize their energy, interest and resources to fight social injustices such as the one in Darfur.
-- Build an ongoing organization of young people to address ongoing issues of social justice.
-- Clearly articulate issues of social injustice and work toward their resolution.
-- Educate teenagers as well as the general public about these issues.
-- Raise consciousness and become involved in providing solutions to these issues.
For more information about this topic, or to schedule an interview email Jaime at Jaime(at)teens4peace.net .

Looking beyond the bottom line - Toronto Star

Most of the corporate leaders Roger Martin meets would like to make the world a better place. But they're not prepared to jeopardize their company's health, their workers' jobs or their shareholders' money to do it.
What they need, the dean of the Rotman School of Management says, is a way of thinking about their role in society as rigorously as they think about making profits.

April 20, 2005
Inuit leader wins environment prize - Globe and Mail

Oslo � Canadian Inuit leader Sheila Watt-Cloutier won the 2005 Sophia environment prize Wednesday for drawing attention to the impact of climate change and pollution on the traditional lifestyles of the Arctic's indigenous people and others.

The $100,000 (U.S.) prize was created in 1997 by Norwegian author Jostein Gaarder and his wife, Siri Dannevig. It is named after Mr. Gaarder's book Sophie's World, a surprise international best-selling novel based on philosophy for young people.

'Ballast-free' ships threaten Great Lakes - Globe and Mail
Muskegon, Mich. � Ocean-going freighters that claim to be empty of ballast water before entering the Great Lakes routinely carry dangerous foreign organisms, including saltwater algae, invertebrates and deadly bacteria, a new report says.

The University of Michigan and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration conducted a five-year study of freighters that enter the lakes through the St. Lawrence Seaway.

The study found that ships that register as having no ballast on board routinely carry thousands of viable organisms in muddy water that sloshes around in empty ballast tanks.

STEINBACH, Man. -- Manitobans will have the opportunity to discuss strategies to improve water quality in Lake Winnipeg at public meetings organized by the Lake Winnipeg Stewardship Board.
Meetings run at six different locations in the province between April 19 and May 17, starting in Brandon and ending in Norway House. (3 p.m. at Legion Hall, 294 Lumber Ave.)

WASHINGTON -- Dr. Ed Trippel, a biologist with Canada's Fisheries Department, receives an award from the International Smart Gear Competition for his invention to help prevent wildlife from dying in commercial fishing gear.

Provincial park added to Lois Hole's legacy - Edmonton Journal
ST. ALBERT - The province of Alberta will dedicate the 1,420-hectare natural area around Big Lake to former lieutenant-governor Lois Hole, cabinet documents confirm.

The Klein government agreed with a plan submitted by Community Development Minister Gary Mar to name the planned park the Lois Hole Centennial Provincial Park.

School's unique program gets green thumbs-up - CBC.ca
WINNIPEG - A one-of-a-kind horticulture program is getting some high marks in a North End school in Winnipeg.

Horticulture students at R.B. Russell Vocational High have transformed the courtyard of the Dufferin Avenue school into a garden with pathways, stonework, flowers and trees.

When teacher Louise Shachtay took over the program four years ago, she says, boys cut the lawn and girls planted seeds, and that was it.

Top environmentalist may quit over colleague's extremist comments - CBC.ca
OTTAWA - Elizabeth May, one of Canada's leading environmentalists, is threatening to resign from an animal rights group over comments made by a senior member threatening assassination as a valid means to protect animals.

Dr. Jerry Vlasak of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society was recently arrested in Canada during protests at the East Coast seal hunt.

Lots of reasons to vote May 17 - Times-Colonist
Fixed election dates don't make campaigns more exciting -- just longer. The starting gun went off Tuesday, but the politicians have been running for weeks.

Kyoto delays unacceptable - Canoe-CNews
Looking at the media coverage of Canada's recently announced Kyoto plan, you'd be forgiven for thinking that the country's biggest polluters and environmental groups are on same side - but nothing could be further from the truth.

GOVERNMENT OF CANADA RELEASES INTERNATIONAL POLICY STATEMENT

http://www.dfait-maeci.gc.ca/cip-pic/ips/ips-en.asp

(government spin -----> This document articulates a vision for Canada's global engagement. Our first comprehensive, integrated international policy framework, the Statement delivers on the Government's commitment to invest in our international role.The Statement sets out an action plan for transforming Canadian diplomacy, to better serve Canada and Canadians.The new diplomacy is about opportunity, empowerment and vision, enabling Canadians to create the society they want-safe, prosperous and proud of its role in the world.

Announcement of new Canada Research Chairs highlights research to fight obesity, keep rivers clean, prevent outbreaks of new disease and make cities safer.

WINNIPEG, MB, April 20 - On Friday, April 22, at 15:45 p.m. Central Daylight Time, Industry Minister David L. Emerson will announce the next round of Chairs appointments. These prestigious faculty positions at universities across the country will contribute to world-class expertise to research in such areas as ecosystem pollution, animal and human diseases, and safety in large Canadian cities.

The event will also highlight research conducted at the University of Manitoba to develop healthier versions of common foods that help fight obesity and heart disease. The Honourable David L. Emerson, Minister of Industry and Minister responsible for the Canada Research Chairs program will be joined by the Honourable Reg Alcock, President of the Treasury Board and Minister responsible for the Canadian Wheat Board, and other distinguished guests. DATE: April 22, 2005 TIME: 15:45 p.m., Central Daylight Time PLACE: Agriculture Building Atrium 66 Dafoe Road University of Manitoba Winnipeg, Manitoba

April 19. 2005
Study election issues carefully, then make the most of your vote - Vancouver Sun
Elections are by definition crossroads in history. Over the next four weeks, Liberals will be asking you not to turn back and New Democrats and the Green Party under leader Adriane Carr will try to lead you off in a new direction.

Conservatives won't say whether they would withdraw from Kyoto treaty - The Recorder
The Conservatives say they don't support the Kyoto treaty but won't say if they'll withdraw from it, a stand that has environmentalists scratching their heads.

"I've been noticing what seems to be some contradictory positions being taken in the last few days," Matthew Bramley of the Pembina Institute said Monday. "The impression is that the Conservatives are bit unclear themselves as to what their position is," he said in an interview.

"That needs to be cleared up before the election. If they don't intend to implement (Kyoto), they need to say that clearly to the international community."

Termite guts can save the planet - EurekAlert
The way termite guts process food could teach scientists how to produce pollution-free energy and help solve the world's imminent energy crisis. Speaking at the Institute of Physics conference Physics 2005 in Warwick today, Nobel laureate Steven Chu urged scientists to turn their attention to finding an environmentally friendly form of fuel. In an impassioned plea to some of the world's brightest minds, he explained how he's leading by example, and encouraged others to join the effort which "may already be too late."

Chu, who shared the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1997, has begun studying termite guts in one place in nature, where a key hurdle for a carbon-neutral energy supply has already been solved.

Termite guts take indigestible cellulose, which makes up the bulk of all plant material grown on earth, and convert it to ethanol, which even today is a versatile and popular fuel.

April 18, 2005
Climate of Denial - MoJo Journal
One morning in Kyoto, we won a round in the battle against global warming. Then special interests and pseudoscience snatched the truth away. What happened?

It was around eight in the morning in the vast convention hall in Kyoto. The negotiations over a worldwide treaty to limit global warming gases, which were supposed to have ended the evening before, had gone on through the night. Drifts of paper�treaty drafts, industry talking points, environmentalist press releases�overflowed every wastebasket. Delegates in suits and ties were passed out on couches, noisily mouth breathing. And polite squadrons of workers were shooing people out of the hall so that some trade show�tool and die makers, I think�could set up its displays.

Some Like It Hot - MoJo Journal
Forty public policy groups have this in common: They seek to undermine the scientific consensus that humans are causing the earth to overheat. And they all get money from ExxonMobil.

WHEN NOVELIST MICHAEL CRICHTON took the stage before a lunchtime crowd in Washington, D.C., one Friday in late January, the event might have seemed, at first, like one more unremarkable appearance by a popular author with a book to sell. Indeed, Crichton had just such a book, his new thriller, State of Fear. But the content of the novel, the setting of the talk, and the audience who came to listen transformed the Crichton event into something closer to a hybrid of campaign rally and undergraduate seminar. State of Fear is an anti-environmentalist page-turner in which shady ecoterrorists plot catastrophic weather disruptions to stoke unfounded fears about global climate change. However fantastical the book�s story line, its author was received as an expert by the sharply dressed policy wonks crowding into the plush Wohlstetter Conference Center of the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research (AEI). In his introduction, AEI president and former Reagan budget official Christopher DeMuth praised the author for conveying �serious science with a sense of drama to a popular audience.� The title of the lecture was �Science Policy in the 21st Century.�

This is not strictly an Environmental issue, but is something that we need to look at as a country, as it is related to the Environment of the Human body. I am also a Vancouver native boy.
North America�s First Heroin Prescription Program Introduced in Canada - World Press Organization
In February, Vancouver became the first city in North America to begin clinical trials for heroin prescription. This step, which required an exemption of Section 56 of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, came a year and a half after Vancouver had opened North America�s first safe injection site.

Dr. David Marsh, a clinical associate professor in the Department of Healthcare and Epidemiology at the University of British Columbia, says, �Each research subject will be on either heroin or another approved treatment substitute such as methadone.� According to him, Switzerland and the Netherlands have already approved regular treatment with heroin maintenance as part of the continuum of care after over 20,000 patient years of research.

Marsh himself has worked for eight years in Canada to have the North American Opiate Medication Initiative (Naomi) study approved.

Writing in the Vancouver Sun, some addicts in the community have criticized parts of the study, which requires participants to give urine samples and reveal their medical histories and criminal records if they have one. They feel that there are too many barriers to enter the program and that it does not include enough participants.

Parks Canada Announces Funding for Cooperating Associations Program
OTTAWA, April 18 - The Honourable St�phane Dion, Minister ofthe Environment, today announced that Parks Canada will contribute $177,175 toits Cooperating Associations Program in 2005-2006. Sixteen associations willreceive funding to undertake projects ranging from developing sales outlets, creating publications, developing audio guides and numerous other activitiesand services.

"The more Canadians know about Canada's national parks, national historic sites and national marine conservation areas, the more they are motivated tosupport their protection," said Minister Dion. "Cooperating associations acton Parks Canada's behalf by undertaking projects and activities in direct support of the Parks Canada mandate." Cooperating associations are non-profit charitable organizations whoseactivities complement national park and/or national historic site themes.

These "Friends" organizations run gift shops and other retail operations within national parks and national historic sites. They organize historical re-enactments and festivals, develop publications that educate the public onecological and cultural elements within the parks and sites, administer restoration projects, and more.

The revenues generated in the sales outlets and through various programs and special events organized by the cooperating associations enable them toemploy staff and to engage well-trained, highly motivated volunteers whoassist the parks and sites in carrying out their mandate. A portion of these revenues are directed back, in an agreed upon way, to the parks and sites. As non-profit organizations, the associations can utilize government grants tohire staff, and accept donations for parks/site projects from the private sector.

Parks Canada's Cooperating Associations Program was established in 1981.

There are currently 55 cooperating associations in the program, working withnational parks and national historic sites in every province. Using Parks Canada facilities, often under a lease arrangement, the cooperatingassociations annually generate an estimated $10 million in revenue and provide approximately 60,000 hours of volunteer effort which supports their ongoing contribution to Canada's national parks and national historic sites.

April 17, 2005

U.S. energy study finds greenhouse gas limits affordable - Globe and Mail
Washington � Mandatory limits on all U.S. emissions of carbon dioxide and other "greenhouse" gases would not significantly affect average economic growth rates across the country through 2025, the government said.

That finding by the Energy Information Administration, an independent arm of the Energy Department, runs counter to President George W. Bush's repeated pronouncements that limits on carbon dioxide and other gases that warm the atmosphere like a greenhouse would seriously harm the U.S. economy.

Power Play: Enron Canada found the loopholes in Alberta's power market -- and used them. Are other companies plugging in to the same opportunities? - Calgary Herald

In the spring of 1999, with power prices in Alberta approaching record heights, a senior executive at Enron Canada Corp. couldn't help but be frustrated.

"I'm so pissed," John Lavorato told a colleague at Enron in May, 1999, peppering his sentences with expletives as he watched Alberta's hourly power prices climb.

It wasn't the soaring cost of electricity that bothered him. After all, Enron was secretly manipulating those prices, at times inflating them to four and five times their normal levels.

Kyotoi: Where to now? - Winnipeg Free PressThe light is now 'Green'

With the launch of Project Green last week and February's federal budget, Canadians now have the fullest picture of how the Martin government proposes to meet Canada's Kyoto commitment to reduce its greenhouse-gas emissions by six per cent from 1990 levels for 2008-2012.

While the plan does have some regulatory and fiscal features, it relies most heavily on incentives to deliver on its commitment.

A Time for Action, or More Debate? - Winnipeg Free Press
ALMOST three years ago I wrote an opinion piece for View from the West on whether Canada should ratify the Kyoto treaty. I wondered aloud whether this was actually the right question, or whether we should be focused on this one:

What innovative approaches can Canadians develop to reduce greenhouse gases both in the short and long term?

Has a lot changed since then, or not?

Canada ratified Kyoto at the end of 2002 and, last week, after many delays, the federal government put forward a Kyoto plan, renewing the debate over what Canada can and cannot afford to do to address the climate-change issue. Canadians are good at debating.

Liberal's Kyoto plan full of hot air - Edmonton Journal
Remember those souvenir shirts that read "My parents went to (Vegas/Hawaii/Disneyland) and all I got was this lousy T-shirt?" Well, if Ottawa's Project Green plan for meeting Canada's Kyoto emission-reduction commitments were a souvenir, it would have to read "My government spent eight years designing this plan, and all it came up with is this lousy mirage."

Moving Forward on Climate Change: A Plan for Honouring Our Kyoto Commitment isn't a plan
so much as it is a wisp of smoke that seems to have shape until you actually try to touch it.

It's full of talk of reducing Canada's so-called greenhouse emissions by 270 megatonnes by 2012, just seven years from now -- a one-third reduction from current levels. It puts numbers on
where Ottawa intends to achieve reductions -- a 75-to-115 megatonne reduction from the climate fund, 55 to 85 megatonnes from the partnership fund, 45 megatonnes from large final emitters, GHG reduction programs (up to 40 megatonnes), carbon sinks (30 megatonnes), renewable energy (15) and so on.

BARRY COOPER - professor of political science at the University of Calgary and director of the Alberta Policy Research Centre at The Fraser Institute in Calgary.

OPPONENTS of Kyoto have long argued there are three things wrong with it: junk science, computer modelling based on wishful thinking, and huge expenditures for nothing.
At long last, the third objection, costs without benefits, has penetrated the ice fog that semi-permanently engulfs the bureaucratic minds of Ottawa.

On the first issue, the notorious hockey-stick graph -- which purports to show a rapid increase in mean global temperature -- has been replaced with a pie plate. That is, there were higher temperatures at the early end of the stick handle when Greenland was green and the Vikings named their Newfoundland landfall "Vinland" because of the grapes they discovered, but that no longer grow there. The handle may be flat, but there are "blades" at either end. Normal people would conclude that such science is anything but settled, and so the rhetorical power of the hockey stick is extinguished.

Fiction fuels global warming - Calgary Sun
Myth of Jurassic proportions has world mired in false State of Fear

Since facts and science can't seem to debunk the faulty notion of global warming being caused by humans, perhaps fiction can.

Virtually every month, new reports by the world's top climate scientists debunk the correlation between increasing CO2 emissions and the warming of the Earth.

Just this past week, as the federal Liberal government announced its plan (if you can call it that) to meet its impossible Kyoto targets, a weighty group of North America's top climatologists, paleoclimatologists, astrophysicists and oceanographers launched a video that points out the scientific flaws behind the premise that so-called greenhouse gases (GHGs) are behind global warming.

Kyoto plan lots of hot air - Edmonton Sun
Mere moments after the Liberals finally released their long-delayed plan to implement the Kyoto accord, Industry Minister David Emerson said that an early election could "knock things off the rails completely."

Well, sir, that's a risk we're willing to take. Emerson's protests are nonsense, of course, if we consider that the Kyoto accord has been around since 1997 and so the Liberals have had lots of time since then to bring forward an implementation plan.

Now that the scandal-plagued Grits have an imperilled minority government, though, suddenly everything that the Liberals have dithered on for years now is in jeopardy unless the opposition parties, in the Liberal view, do their duty to Canada and continue to let the Grits, who are plummeting in the polls with every new revelation at the Gomery inquiry, do whatever they want.

This newspaper has always been of two minds on the Kyoto accord, which is supposed to compel Canada to reduce its current levels of greenhouse gases by more than one-third.

On the one hand, we've never thought that the Grits were particularly serious about implementing the accord, hence the long delays in bringing forward a plan.

Deep down the Liberals know that any real effort to cut greenhouse gas emissions to actually meet our treaty commitments would be economic suicide that would cost the party dearly in Ontario's automobile-building heartland. (It wouldn't cost them much, if anything, in oil-rich Alberta only because they never get more than a handful of MPs elected in these parts anyway.)
But the Liberals put a premium on symbolism and rhetoric, so we've always figured that any implementation of the Kyoto accord would be the typical half-hearted, all-talk-and-no-action, money-wasting Liberal approach that the party seems to take on any and every issue, from health care to foreign policy, defence spending, aboriginal issues, national unity and on and on it goes.

Considering that the big complaint that followed the release of the Kyoto plan last week was that the thick document was too vague and lacked detail, it's apparent that the Grits are sticking with style over substance.

Just don't expect us to applaud. It would take courage for the Liberals to say that the Kyoto accord is an utterly ineffective way of reducing global greenhouse gases when China, India and the United States, which produce 40% of the world's emissions, aren't signatories.

It would be gutsy for the Grits to say that spending $10 billion (and, in reality, it's going to be way more than that) isn't worth it when Canada only accounts for 2% of global greenhouse gas emissions.

Instead, we're going to get the usual blundering approach from the Grits that, mark our words, will one day be considered a boondoggle of greater proportions than the gun registry.

Really, now. If the Grits can't take something as relatively simple as registering a firearm and doing that properly, then what hope is there that they'll be able to do something as complex as cajole, encourage and compel millions of Canadians and untold tens of thousands of businesses and industries to reduce their greenhouse emissions?

Good luck on that.

But the only thing worse than an incompetent government is one that regularly plays regions against one another to maintain its electoral dominance.

As we're well aware of in this part of the world, Alberta is usually the target of the Liberal government's wrath.

And Alberta will never forget the national energy program.

When it comes to Kyoto, then, this province is just a little jumpier than normal, particularly if the Ottawa rumour mill is to be believed that, in the mid-1990s, Anne McLellan stopped the cabinet from raiding our resource revenue again.

These are Liberals we're talking about. They may be profoundly incompetent most of the time, but the last thing we want them to do is actually find some focus and ensure that Canada does meet its Kyoto accord goals by nailing Alberta's petro-economy to the wall.

Of course, the best way to avoid even the possibility of that is to have Conservative Leader Stephen Harper capitalize on the current Liberal scandals by pulling the plug on Parliament and letting Canadians send the Grits to the opposition backbenches where they belong.

Kyoto is now a $10B boondoggle - Toronto Star
Canada's plan to comply with the Kyoto "hot air" accord now has all the makings of a $10-billion boondoggle.

That's the price tag Prime Minister Paul Martin's Liberal government officially put on meeting Canada's Kyoto targets last week, double previous estimates.

The even worse news is that few familiar with the plan seriously believe Canada can meet its Kyoto commitments.

And the worst news is that if, by some miracle, Canada did, the actual effect on global warming would be almost undetectable.

That's because Canada produces less than 2% of the world's greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and methane.

The U.S., the world's biggest emitter (23%), has refused to sign on to Kyoto, citing the potentially devastating effect on its economy. Other big emitters such as China (13%) and India (5.5%), are exempt because they're developing nations.

Indeed, complying with Kyoto may see us paying $1 billion (or more, no one knows) to buy hot air from Russia -- literally!

Under Kyoto -- Canada, which must reduce greenhouse gas emissions to 6% below 1990 levels by 2012 -- can purchase emission "credits" from Russia. Russia has lots of room to pollute under Kyoto because it has far less industry now than in 1990, due to the economic collapse of the Soviet Union.

By contrast, Canada's greenhouse gas emissions rose by 24% between 1990 and 2003. It's now estimated we will have to cut current emissions by 270 megatonnes by 2012, up from the original estimate of 240 to comply with Kyoto.

The Canadian Chamber of Commerce fears that will cripple business while the Canadian Taxpayers Federation warns it will cost the average Canadian family at least $3,000 a year by 2010 in such things as drastically higher fuel prices and taxes.

Meanwhile, environmentalists complain the government has gone easy on big-time greenhouse gas emitters -- oil refineries and the like -- which produce half of all greenhouse gas emissions.

Under the latest Canadian plan, these 700 companies will only be responsible for doing 12% of the work needed to meet Kyoto's targets. Their earlier emission reduction target of 55 megatonnes has now been reduced to 36.

In addition, the feds have admitted their original predictions of how much greenhouse gas emissions could be reduced were too optimistic, including the "One Tonne Challenge" aimed at ordinary Canadians. It was supposed to reduce emissions by 7 million tonnes annually. Now that's been cut back to 5 million.

Finally, the credibility of the research on which Kyoto was based is under assault. Far from there being a consensus in the scientific community that global warning is mainly caused by man-made greenhouse gases, a growing number of scientists and experts -- 18,000 at last count -- have signed petitions opposing Kyoto.

Many argue the treaty is based on junk science, using flawed research that even failed to take into account that the Earth's climate has naturally heated up and cooled down over millions of years. Some contend the Earth's climate was actually warmer a few hundred years ago, long before large-scale industrialization became a reality.

Surely there are better ways to spend tax money cleaning up our environment than by throwing it down Kyoto's black hole.

Kyoto beyond Grits - Calgary Sun
Half-hearted plan sure to be another Liberal blunder

Mere moments after the Liberals released their long-delayed plan to implement the Kyoto accord, Industry Minister David Emerson said that an early election could "knock things off the rails completely." Well, sir, that's a risk we're willing to take. Emerson's protests are nonsense, of course, if we consider the Kyoto accord has been around since 1997 giving the Liberals lots of time -- eight long years -- to bring forward an implementation plan. Now that the scandal-plagued Grits have an imperilled minority government, though, suddenly everything the Liberals have dithered on for years is in jeopardy unless the opposition parties, in the Liberal view, do their duty to Canada and continue to let the Grits, who are plummeting in the polls with every new revelation at the Gomery inquiry, do whatever they want. This newspaper has always been of two minds on the Kyoto accord, which is supposed to compel Canada to reduce its current levels of greenhouse gases by more than one-third. On the one hand, we've never thought the Grits were particularly serious about implementing the accord, hence the long delays in bringing forward a plan. Deep down, the Liberals know any real effort to cut greenhouse gas emissions to actually meet our treaty commitments would be economic suicide that would cost the party dearly in Ontario's automobile-building heartland. (It wouldn't cost them much, if anything, in oil-rich Alberta only because they never get more than a handful of MPs elected in these parts anyway.) But the Liberals put a premium on symbolism and rhetoric, so we've always figured any implementation of the Kyoto accord would be the typical half-hearted, all-talk-and-no-action, money-wasting Liberal approach that the party seems to take on any and every issue, from health care to foreign policy, defence spending, aboriginal issues, national unity and on it goes. Considering the complaint that followed the release of the Kyoto plan last week was that the thick document was too vague and lacked detail, it's apparent the Grits are sticking with style over substance. Just don't expect us to applaud. It would take courage for the Liberals to say the Kyoto accord is an utterly ineffective way of reducing global greenhouse gases when China, India and the U.S., which produce 40% of the world's emissions, aren't signatories. It would be gutsy for the Grits to say that spending $10 billion (and, in reality, it's going to be way more than that) isn't worth it when Canada only accounts for 2% of global greenhouse gas emissions. Instead, we're going to get the usual blundering approach from the Grits that will one day be considered a boondoggle of greater proportions than the gun registry. If the Grits can't take something as relatively simple as registering a firearm and do that properly, what hope is there they'll be able to do something as complex as cajole and compel millions of Canadians and untold tens of thousands of businesses and industries to reduce their greenhouse emissions? Good luck on that. But the only thing worse than an incompetent government is one that regularly plays regions against one another to maintain its electoral dominance and as we're well aware of in this part of the world, Alberta is usually the target of the Liberal government's wrath. And Alberta will never forget the national energy program. When it comes to Kyoto, then, this province is just a little jumpier than normal, particularly if the Ottawa rumour mill is to be believed that in the mid-1990s, Anne McLellan stopped the cabinet from raiding our resource revenue again. These are Liberals we're talking about. They may be profoundly incompetent most of the time, but the last thing we want them to do is actually find some focus and ensure that Canada does meet its Kyoto accord goals by nailing Alberta's petro-economy to the wall. Of course, the best way to avoid even the possibility of that is to have Conservative Leader Stephen Harper capitalize on the current Liberal scandals by pulling the plug on Parliament and letting Canadians send the Grits to the opposition backbenches where they belong.
mailto:callet@calgarysun.com

B.B. King to get statue in his name - CBC Arts <---- The Editor is a big BB King fan LITTLE ROCK, ARK. - The Arkansas legislature has approved a motion to erect a statue in honour of B.B. King. King, 79, is the legendary bluesman known for songs like his 1970 version of The Thrill is Gone, as well as for naming his guitar Lucille. The legislature allocated $5,000 US for a monument that will commemorate King's lifetime of singing the blues. It will be located in the tiny town of Twist � the place where his guitar got its name. "B.B. put Twist, Ark., on the map," Allan Hammons, interim director of the planned B.B. King Museum in Indianola, Miss., told The Associated Press. "I think it's very important that the state of Arkansas took the opportunity to memorialize that great American story."

Change to the Clean Air Act Is Built Into New Energy Bill - New York Times
WASHINGTON, April 15 - Deep in the energy bill that was approved by a House committee this week, under a section titled "Miscellaneous," is a brief provision that could have major consequences for communities struggling to clean up their dirty air.

If it becomes law, it would make one of the most significant changes to the Clean Air Act in 15 years, allowing communities whose air pollution comes from hundreds of miles away to delay meeting national air quality standards until their offending neighbors clean up their own air.

The provision could especially affect states like New York, which has some of the nation's dirtiest air, and other Northeastern states that have always had difficulty meeting federal standards for ozone, a leading cause of smog, because much of any state's pollution originates in states to the south and west.

China's Problem With 'Anti-Pest' Rice - New York Times
UHAN, China, April 14 - The farmer reaches down into a sack he keeps stored on the second floor of his house in a small farming village south of here and pulls up a fistful of rice that he says has no equal.

"This is really remarkable rice," he says, forcing it into the hands of his guests. "All you do is plant it and it grows. You don't need to use all those chemicals any more."

The farmer and other crop growers in this area call this unique variety "anti-pest rice" because it acts as its own insect repellent in the rice paddies. But some Chinese growers and foreign specialists say they suspect much of this region's rice has been genetically modified.

And in China, it is illegal to sell genetically modified rice on the open market.

The environmental group Greenpeace, which had rice in this area tested by an independent lab in Germany, says the results show that some of the rice was altered with a gene that creates resistance to pests.

Strains on Nature Are Growing, Report Says - New York Times
OSLO, March 30 -- Humans are damaging the planet at a rapid rate and raising risks of abrupt collapses in nature that could spur disease, deforestation or ''dead zones'' in the seas, an international report said Wednesday.

The study, by 1,360 researchers in 95 nations, the biggest review of the planet's life support systems ever, said that in the last 50 years a rising human population had polluted or overexploited two-thirds of the ecological systems on which life depends, including clean air and fresh water. ''At the heart of this assessment is a stark warning,'' said the 45-member board of the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment. ''Human activity is putting such strain on the natural functions of earth that the ability of the planet's ecosystems to sustain future generations can no longer be taken for granted.''

Fish Farms Tied in Study To Imperiling Wild Salmon By CORNELIA DEAN (NYT) 523 words Late Edition - Final , Section A , Page 11 , Column 6
ABSTRACT - Canadian researchers suggest that fish farms are such prodigious producers of parasites that juvenile fish become very heavily infested just by swimming near them; their model suggest that young fish are so heavily affected that they may turn into secondary sources of infestation for other wild fish out at sea; findings add more fuel to intense debate over wisdom of turning to aquaculture to replace stocks of wild fish, many of which have crashed in recent decades under pressure of commercial and even recreational fishing (M)

April 16, 2005
U.S. judge says N.D. pipeline may continue - C-NEWS
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) - North Dakota may go ahead with plans to lay 24 kilometres of pipeline between Minot and Lake Sakakawea as part of an effort to supply lake water to northwestern North Dakota, a U.S. federal judge ruled.

In a decision filed Friday, U.S. District Judge Rosemary Collyer said North Dakota's Water Commission may continue building elements of the Northwest Area Water Supply project, if it can show the work will not affect the project's water-sanitizing options.

The natural solution to greenhouse gases - Edmonton Journal
OTTAWA - Although Canada will explain today how it plans to meet its Kyoto Protocol targets, scientists have already been working tirelessly in the background to find ways to cut this country's greenhouse-gas emissions.

While Canadians are waiting to find out what impact the protocol will have on their lives, researchers at the University of Western Ontario have been mapping ways to harness nature's immense power to correct errors made by man.

Construction will begin next month on a $30-million experimental climate-change research facility at the university, which received core funding from the federal government's Canada Foundation for Innovation.

Green Party in the news...

Conservatives up to 36% support in latest poll - CTV.ca
If an election were held today, 36 per cent of decided voters in Canada would cast their ballot in support of the Conservative Party, according to a new Ipsos-Reid poll.

... The Green Party is seeing its support unchanged on a national level at seven per cent
Third place in Alberta right now would be a tie between the Green Party , and the Liberals both at nine per cent. The Liberals have dropped by 12 points, while the Greens have gone up by three.

In Saskatchewan and Manitoba, the Conservatives also have a commanding lead, at 44 per cent.

Here, too, the Tories have seen their support go up, by 13 per cent.

The Liberals, meanwhile are at 25 (a drop of five points), the NDP at 15 (a drop of eight) and the Green Party at three per cent (down one).

In Quebec,... the Green Party's support is unchanged at six per cent.
...in Atlantic Canada, the Green Party have seen their fortunes rise by four points to six per cent.

Liberals challenged over Duke Point - The Abbostford News (BC)

Chilliwack-Sumas Green Party candidate Norm Siefken is challenging the B.C. Liberal Party to scrap the controversial Duke Point power plant in Nanaimo.

The B.C. Court of Appeal this week upheld the approval of the 252-megawatt natural gas fired Duke Point power plant, which is to be constructed by Pristine Power.

The Liberals, however, aren't taking the Green Party's challenge too seriously.

Pettigrew eyed to lead Americas bloc - Toronto Star
WASHINGTON�A deadlocked Organization of American States is looking to Foreign Affairs Minister Pierre Pettigrew as a compromise choice for its next secretary-general.

Pettigrew's office issued a statement yesterday that left the door open for the minister to take the job if his potential candidacy gains momentum. And it would doubtless be an intriguing option for a Liberal whose prospects for re-election appear dim.

No Canadian has ever led the 34-member hemispheric organization and Pettigrew has indicated he would be agreeable to some type of international posting after his tenure at Foreign Affairs.

Pumping CO{-2} down, not up - (interesting to note where this is published and where it is not) - Toronto Star
OTTAWA�As the province responsible for producing nearly one-third of Canada's greenhouse gases, Alberta has led the fight against the emissions reductions proposed in the Kyoto climate change plan.

Yet, paradoxically, Alberta may also lead the way in demonstrating that it's possible for Canadians to have their cake and eat some of it, too � to generate electricity by burning coal without also pouring carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, and to reduce greatly the climate change price of extracting oil products from the tar sands.

The secret lies in carbon capture and storage (CCS), an approach long advocated by some experts and finally embraced in the new federal Kyoto plan unveiled this week.

Italian scientists clone second horse - Toronto Star
CREMONA, Italy � Italian scientists have reported cloning a horse for the second time, a new foal created from the DNA of a throroughbred Arabian gelding that was twice world endurance champion.

The foal, named Pieraz-Cryozootech-Stallion, was born Feb. 25, weighed 93 pounds and was pronounced "in excellent health" in a statement from scientists at the Laboratory of Reproductive Technology in the northern Italian city of Cremona, which claimed the cloning was only the second-ever of a horse.

The young stallion was cloned from Pieraz, retired to a stable in the United States after winning world endurance championships in 1994 and 1996.

The hunt for 7,500 megawatts - Toronto Star
Of all the Liberals' many election promises in 2003, perhaps the boldest � some might say the rashest � was the commitment to close the province's coal-fired generating plants by the end of 2007.

No one (except the coal industry and the union representing the workers in the targeted plants) questions the need to get the province off coal. Even the previous Conservative regime agreed that the generating plants are a major source of air pollution and must be shut down.

Rather, the question is one of timing.

Taxpayers bear brunt of weak Kyoto plan - Green Party of Canada

(Montreal, 15 April, 2005) -- The federal government should be ashamed to have called its Kyoto plan the "Green Project" as there is little of anything "green" about it, said Green Party of Canada deputy leader Tom Manley today.The Government of Canada has slated $10 billion of the public purse for a program to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in a document entitled, "Moving forward on Climate Change: A Plan for Honouring our Kyoto Commitment" released yesterday on Parliament Hill. Despite costing billions, the plan will do little to lower emissions without stronger penalties and incentives."It's great to see the government showing a commitment to reduce emissions," said Manley. "But the logical first step is to stop subsidizing the industries that are contributing the most to health and environmental hazards. The Liberal path is leading to a dead end. And in the end, the economy and the environment will pay the price."

The government spends at least $1.5 billion every year in direct subsidies to the oil and gas sector – the single largest contributor of carbon emissions in Canada. Rather than reducing emissions by 6 per cent as laid out in the Kyoto Accord, Canadian emissions have soared to more than 20 per cent above 1990 levels.

Green party also sees boost in polls - Green Party
As the NDP woos disenchanted Liberals, party leader Jack Layton should keep an eye on his rear-view mirror. The Green party got a boost as well ? it's at 5 per cent nationwide, according to a Toronto Star poll conducted by EKOS Research ? and an influx of cash thanks to new election financing rules. And in the battle for environmentally conscious voters, each party is trying to paint itself as the greenest.

Aussie elected under STV says the system is fairer - Green Party

British Columbians shouldn't pass up a rare chance to change the way they elect their government, says a high-profile Australian politician elected four times under the single transferable vote system being proposed for this province.Senator Bob Brown, who gained global attention in 2003 when he booed George W. Bush during the U.S. president's address to the Australian parliament, said the system creates fairer, more representative government.The Australian Greens politician urged B.C. voters to adopt the system, known as STV, on May 17."Options for electoral change don't come very often, because the big parties don't like it," Brown said during a meeting Monday with the Times Colonist editorial board. "And so I think [B.C.] voters should seize an opportunity for a fairer system when it comes, even if they don't think it's the best system."My experience is that STV, where it's been implemented, is complicated but it is extremely popular."

Editor's Note: There is an article in the September 2005 edition of the Canadian Journal of Political Science on the above issue. It is titled: The Political Consequences of the Alternative Vote: Lessons from Western Canada by Harold J. Jansen who is in the Department of Political Science at the University of Lethbridge.

Huge development proposed for Whistler - Vancouver Sun

little-known group of offshore investors has acquired the last large chunk of undeveloped private land in Whistler, with ambitious hopes of building an international college, multi-family housing and a golf course.

But the project appears to be on a collision course with Whistler's official community plan, and could become a test of the resort's commitment to controlling growth.

In a deal that closed this month, Chateau Nova Whistler Development Ltd. bought 113 hectares at the northwest end of Green Lake, on the resort municipality's northern boundary about a 10-minute drive from Whistler Village. The site of an old sawmill, the forested property was held for a number of years by B.C.-based owners and was on the market for about a year at a list price of $12.9 million, said listing agent and former mayor Drew Meredith of Whistler Real Estate Ltd.

Not so pretty: Most beauty routines include the use of carcinogens, allergens and other harmful substances - Ottawa Citizen
By the time the average woman grabs her morning coffee, she has spritzed, sprayed and lathered with 126 different chemicals in nine different products, everything from shampoo and hair gel to skin toner, foundation and perfume. Tweens and teenagers, just beginning a lifelong regimen, might use fewer products, while heavy-handed glamour queens will have lacquered themselves with even more chemicals.

But here's a beauty tip: far from being youth-giving lotions and elixirs, science is now telling us that some of the products we use to enhance our appearance can actually cause harm.

Conservation Voters snub Liberals' 'green' MLA - Vancouver Sun
GREEN APPLES AND ORANGES? Earlier this month, the Conservation Voters of BC endorsed five provincial election candidates as the most electable, environmentally responsible politicians in the province. But one surprising omission from that list was MLA Barry Penner, a former park ranger who occupies the Liberal safe seat of Chilliwack-Kent.

Penner is perhaps the greenest member of the Liberal caucus, having led the campaign against Sumas Energy 2 Inc.'s power plant project in Washington state and having introduced a private member's bill making it easier to collect park and wildlife infraction fines. As a result of those initiatives, the Conservation Voters informed Penner he was being considered for an endorsement. But, in the end, the organization decided against giving Penner, the government's alternative energy task force chairman, their stamp of approval.

The reason? Well, Conservation Voters founder and coordinator Matt Price was tight-lipped about that decision saying, "We don't talk about that stuff. All our conversations with our potential endorsees are not public." But those in the know say the organization took issue with Penner's support for selective helicopter logging in the Elk Creek area, east of Chilliwack.


April 15, 2005

Hydrogen fuel cell cars debut in Vancouver - Saskatoon Star-Phoenix
VANCOUVER -- To a world just getting used to the concept of buying hybrid-powered vehicles, the understanding of the whole hydrogen fuel cell thing lies somewhere between quasars and quantum physics for most of us. There just isn't a lot of that familiar internal combustion process going on under the hood -- none at all, in fact.

This consumer learning curve took a significant step forward last week, when the first factory-produced hydrogen fuel cell vehicles (FCV) for public use were delivered to Vancouver. The five Ford Focus FCVs took their place on a stage at Vancouver's Plaza of Nations and were feted by federal, provincial and municipal representatives. They were then delivered to various corporate, institutional and public service "customers," each of whom will log hundreds of driving hours in the unique cars over the next three years.

McKenna calls for intensified softwood fight - Vancouver Sun
Canada's lumber producers must launch a never-ending American softwood lobbying campaign designed to win the current $4-billion trade war and prevent another one from ever starting, Frank McKenna, Canada's ambassador to the United States, said Thursday.

Bigger oilsands deals ahead, Chinese executive predicts - Calgary Herald
Two of China's largest state-owned oil companies will soon follow the lead of counterpart China National Offshore Oil Corp. into the Canadian oilsands -- and with bigger deals -- aiming to satisfy the Asian country's mushrooming need for both oil imports and domestic development of its oil industry, according to a senior executive with one of the firms.

"This is just the first deal, I think, for the oilsands and China," Hou Hongbin, vice-president of Sinopec International Petroleum Exploration and Production Corp. said after a speech to a group of high-powered money managers and investment lawyers in Calgary.

"The second one will be bigger, the third one much bigger."

Funding hike for parks applauded - Calgary Herald
'I can't buy a park, or maintain it, with my own money'

Kananaskis Country enthusiasts are applauding the province for a significant funding boost into parks and protected areas, stressing the increased level of funding needs to be maintained to save Alberta's unique environment.

"Some Albertans wanted to see provincial money go back into their pockets. But I can't buy a park, or maintain it, with my own money -- that's something the government has to do," said Linda Vaxvick, spokeswoman for the Kananaskis Trail Users Association.

As part of the $247-million community development budget, parks and protected areas will get $36 million in operating money for refurbishing and maintenance, 35 per cent more than they received last year.

Opponents challenge exports of power from Alcan smelter - Calgary Herald
ELECTRICITY - The City of Kitimat has launched a legal challenge to force the British Columbia government to prevent aluminum giant Alcan Inc. from exporting power from its smelter in northwestern B.C.

The city and community leaders filed the action in B.C. Supreme Court on Thursday, claiming that ministerial orders allowing for the power exports are illegal.


Fighting bad trade rules - Calgary Herald
This week, 10 million people in 70 countries are taking to the streets to protest unfair trade rules.

The Global Week of Action is the largest ever mobilization for trade justice. Campaigners and people living in poverty will join forces to demand changes to the trade rules that force the world's poorest people further into poverty and deny them the right to defend themselves.

A Dirty Little Footnote to the Energy Bill - New York Times
WOODBURY, Conn., April 12 - A freshly painted, six-foot-high steel tank is this rural town's hope for cleaning up a smelly gasoline additive that is fouling its water system. The additive, methyl tertiary butyl ether, has seeped into two of three wells that supply water for 2,000 residents.

In a few weeks, the carbon filtration system housed by the tank will begin treating the well water. The water company plans to expand treatment to a reserve well, 1,000 feet away, where the level of the chemical tested last September at more than twice the federal recommended limit. The filtration unit is expected to cost about $1 million the first year and $250,000 to operate each year afterward, said Rich Henning, a spokesman for United Water, a private company that supplies Woodbury and three other communities in Connecticut.

The question is who will pay for the cleanup. United Water, a subsidiary of Suez S.A., has sued the manufacturers of MTBE to recover its costs. And as hundreds of communities from coast to coast are finding the additive in their water systems, the issue of paying for the cleanup is becoming increasingly contentious.

If oil and chemical companies have their way, a majority of lawsuits like United Water's will be thrown out by Congress as part of the energy bill backed by the Bush administration. The bill, which won easy approval from the House Energy and Commerce Committee late Wednesday, includes a waiver that would protect the chemical makers, which are some of the biggest oil giants in the United States, from all MTBE liability lawsuits filed since September 2003.

The House majority leader, Tom DeLay, and Representative Joe L. Barton, who heads the Energy and Commerce Committee, are staunch supporters of the waiver. Both are Republicans from Texas, where more than a dozen MTBE manufacturers are based.

Canadian economy more dependent on oil, China - Ottawa Citizen

Canadians had better hope the price of oil stays high and the Chinese economy remains strong, because their economy has become increasingly dependent on both, a new Statistics Canada
study suggests.

"Canada's surplus in trade in energy is now almost as large as all other resource exports combined, including forestry -- for long our largest export -- food and metals," it said, crediting the surge in world oil prices.

Energy now accounts for more than 16 per cent of Canada's exports, more than double the 7.3 per cent in 1998, an increase that has mostly been at the expense of exports of autos, machinery and equipment.

Acadian forest vanishing, N.B. group warns - Globe and Mail

Fredericton � An environmental group is warning that New Brunswick's ancient and unique Acadian forest is vanishing because of overcutting and government indifference.

The Conservation Council of New Brunswick, a non-profit environmental lobby group, said Thursday in a new report that the province must act quickly and decisively to stop the loss of old-growth forest and with it, numerous wildlife species.

�Mature Acadian forest is disappearing at a frightening rate, and along with it the habitat of a large number of species,� said Karen DeWolfe, co-ordinator of the council's Campaign to Save the Acadian Forest.

It's Not Easy Being 'Green' - New York Times
In his Saturday column in The New York Times, Nicholas Kristof promoted nuclear power as the "green" solution to our energy woes. In addition to the risks of fatal accidents and terrorist attacks, he also left out the not-so-green hidden environmental damages -- and risks to human health. In his April 9 column in The New York Times, Nicholas Kristof claimed it was time for environmentalists to �drop the hostility to nuclear power� because it is relatively clean when compared to the greenhouse gases produced by burning coal. His article, coupled with Judith Miller�s recent piece in the Times about the new Atomic Testing Museum in Las Vegas, took me back more than 25 years, to when I lived in northern New Mexico and reported on one legacy of the nuclear age that was -- and apparently still is -- greatly overlooked, and which was deadlier to Americans than the radiation exposure from the atomic bomb tests of the 1950s. An editorial in the Times on December 23, 1979, addressing the safe production of nuclear power, perhaps offers an explanation as to why this aspect of the industry -� uranium mining and milling and the many disasters associated with it -- remained virtually unknown nationally.