Monday, July 28, 2008

Alberta will change the face of Canada.

Alberta will change the face of Canada!

Alberta is raiding the USA for their H1B workers.
What is a US H1B worker?
W hat is a h1b worker permit? Like a green card but faster and easier.
To qualify, the visa holders must work in a profession in which Alberta foresees a labor crunch. The list includes computer and information systems engineers and managers. Meanwhile, Alberta continues to under fund education in Alberta and drop out's rush to labour jobs oil patch related.

Stelmach can’t sell this province out fast enough by sending the higher paying jobs south on pipelines. They are advertising all over the world for bodies; any body.

Full spreads of ads in places like Namibia “Alberta wants you” Now the USA are starting to wake up and people are citing their government for lack of action in not providing H1B workers and green card workers with full citizenship. It is these same people Alberta is trying to bring in with the promise of full citizenship in Canada.

In a few years the oil will be gone and we will have a ruined landscape in place of what was once a resource. We will have a new and diverse population and no jobs for them, or us.

We are being robbed at 19% royalty and despite the run on jobs right now, our future looks real bleak!

So much for your kids dream jobs when they graduate!

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Alberta sells the farm!

Alberta is raiding the USA for their H1B workers. What is a US H1B worker?
W hat is a h1b worker permit? Like a green card but faster and easier.

To qualify, the visa holders must work in a profession in which Alberta foresees a labor crunch. The list includes computer and information systems engineers and managers.

Stelmach can’t sell this province out fast enough by sending the higher paying jobs south on pipelines. They are advertising all over the world for bodies; any body. Full spreads of ads in places like Namibia “Alberta wants you”

Now the USA are starting to wake up and people are citing their government for lack of action in not providing H1B workers and green card workers with full citizenship. It is these people Alberta is trying to bring in with the promise of full citizenship in Canada.

In a few years the oil will be gone and we will have a ruined landscape in place of what was once a resource. We are being robbed at 19% royalty and despite the run on jobs right now, our future looks real bleak!

So much for your kids dream jobs when they graduate!

Monday, July 21, 2008

Alberta Jobs are going down the pipeline

The Edmonton Sun and Neil Waugh in particular is one of the consistently best reads in the province! nwaugh@edmsun.com

Premier Ed Stelmach did a good job promoting Alberta's economic interests at the Council of the Federation meeting in Quebec City last week.
He fought off attempts by eastern premiers, Ontario's Dalton McGuinty and Quebec's Jean Charest, in particular, to pressure Ottawa to set up a cap and trade scheme for greenhouse gases.

It's a "pay-to-pollute" boondoggle that would transfer billions of dollars out of the Alberta economy - not unlike Stephane Dion's suspicious Green Shift initiative designed to win votes in southern Ontario at the expense of our industry.

Stelmach did a good sales job for Alberta's own greenhouse-gas plan, stressing repeatedly that he has the only program that is up and running.

Meanwhile, the eastern premiers were simply posturing for all those TV cameras.
The trouble with the premiers' meeting is that it's largely all greenhouse gas - or hot air.
However, what was happening on the home front last week was for real.

And many Albertans must be asking, "Who's got our backs?"
Clearly not Alberta's struggling Energy Minister Mel Knight.
Knight was tasked by the premier over two years ago to come up with an effective strategy to get the best bang for our energy buck.

During the PC leadership campaign, Stelmach felt the issue was so important that he compared shipping raw oilsands bitumen to the United States to stripping the soil from a farm.

Now it appears that Knight has sold the farm because of his failure to produce an effective value-added strategy.

So far, all the minister and his failing bureaucrats have come up with is a minor royalty give-away.

In the meantime, more and more bitumen is moving over the border along with thousands of permanent jobs and construction work.
Last week, three disturbing events occurred that highlighted and exacerbated the PC party's lack of will and direction.

There's going to be a $10-billion upgrader and refinery in South Dakota, of all places, designed to exclusively process oilsands production.

There's a ludicrous proposal to ship Alberta bitumen to Portland, Maine, then tanker it to the U.S. Gulf Coast.

And there's the plan for another $5-billion project to pipeline our bitumen from Nebraska to Texas.

Clearly, the Stelmach government is failing to promote long-term jobs in Alberta.
Once production leaves the province it may become problematic to get it back because of the provisions of the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Scoring some political points at the premiers' gab fest may be good for Stelmach's ego - but it will do nothing to stem the flow of jobs down the pipeline.

Albertans need a tough value-added strategy and they need it now. Get busy, Mel.
Have all the news delivered to your door 7 days a week.

Friday, July 18, 2008

Alberta to be a Major Exporter of Power to the USA

We all remember the outright lies of the past dozen or more months. “The power lines being built are not for the purpose of export of electricity” was shouted loud and clear by our “honest” politicians in Alberta.

At the crux of the issue is “Should Albertans pay for the power lines built to export electrical power?”

For proportion:
Alberta consumes 70,000 GW of Electrical Power in a year. Up-graders and oil project expansion will increase that to 100,000 Gwh.(Billions) (Lowball figure) or 240 Mwh per day.(Millions)

Nuclear Power in Peace River is expected to furnish part of the increase.

Applications to export power to the United States are now filed.
ENMAX - 11,000 Gwh per year over 10 Years.

Aquila – 10,000 Gwh per year over 10 years

Royal Bank of Canada – 4830 Gwh per year over 10 years

AVISTA -50,000 mwh per year over 10 years.

And, the list goes on.

EPCOR – 1200 Gwh per year over 10 years.

On the surface it would seem that EPCOR and ENMAX have an arrangement for EPCOR to keep the province accounts and ENMAX take the export market.

Alberta Carbon sequester is BS!

The Weyburn CO2 Monitoring and Storage Project is funded by several international energy companies, the U.S. and Canadian governments, and the European Union.

The main concern is whether the CO2 will stay in place.

Good information on how this works can be found here
http://www.seed.slb.com/en/scictr/watch/climate_change/weyburn.htm

and here
http://www.seed.slb.com/en/scictr/watch/climate_change/sleipner.htm

Stelmach’s program is no program at all; same as usual. Why would you put carbon dioxide into salt caverns for storage when you could pump it into the strata to scrub the older oil fields? This crew are all about flushing more money into buddies pockets and are after the publicity and don’t give a dam about the environment.

This whole program is about what is basically wrong with these guys!. There is no public disclosure of who gets what for a contact nor are there details of process. Bids are asked for but reesults are never revealed. Only the Governments “selected” winner gets the headline and no bid results are published nor are bidders advised of the details. The Government knows who they are going to give the contracts to before the bid is let. Why even bother going through the expense of bidding?

Cost plus contacts given out at every level with no due process! Pipelines, power line construction; you name it. Effectively this Government takes no responsibility for anything they do! They are at best, totally irresponsible. Always some one else’s fault and cost over runs are paid without a blink. And at the end of the day, no guarantees on anything.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Alberta Carbon Sequester Program-or not


Not all carbon sequester is equal! Mostly it will end up by design as being still another bonus to oil companies and the Tory elite.

Carbon Dioxide can be used as a solvent to free up or thin out oil trapped in shale formations (or any other formation as far as that goes) making the oil thinner so it is much easier to recover.
This is the case in Weyburn Saskatchan which has been doing this for a couple of years. As it stands the operators in Weyburn do not know where the carbon dioxide they pump down the hole goes to. It is acknowledged a large percentage of it come back out of the hole saturated in or adjacent to the oil which is freed up. Effervescent oil?

What percentages, no one knows. Where it ends up even partially; they are still looking.

Stelmach and company would have us believe he is out to save the world. Certainly you know him better than this; just about everything that comes out of his mouth is an outright lie.

Look to the announcements of pipelines going to the south and southeast. This is the territory of the huge shale oil deposits which will require a huge amount of carbon dioxide along with horizontal drilling to get the oil out. Most of it will be on the US side where the majority of the oil is. (Map at the start Bakken Formation)

The US is at a disadvantage in starting projects like this. Different states and the feds must agree. Alberta owns the resource to the Government can just say “do it” and, it is on the way to being done.

Pipelines are being built to the south east and North Dakota who now sells Weyburn their clean carbon dioxide is looking closer to home.

When Getty shows up with his hand out you have to believe it is still another rip off!

John Clark

Alberta resource is lost to Texas at 19% royalty


Alberta to Port Arthur Texas
Highlights:
The expansion includes a 36-inch (91.4-centimeter) line that extends about 3,200 kilometers (1,989 miles) to Port Arthur, Texas, from Hardisty, Alberta. An 80-kilometer line may be built to deliver Canadian oil to refineries in the Houston area, the companies said.
TransCanada Corp., owner of Canada's largest pipeline system, and ConocoPhillips plan a $7 billion pipeline expansion to provide additional capacity to ship crude from western Canada to U.S. Gulf Coast refiners.

The $7 billion addition would allow Alberta oil- sands output to be processed by Gulf Coast oil refiners who represent almost half of the U.S.'s refining capacity

Texas Keystone project. Customers have signed contracts for 300,000 barrels a day.

Tuesday, July 08, 2008

Carbon Tax- I Agree for the right reasons

Stephen Dion has the correct idea with his Carbon Tax. Presented as a cure all for climate change it is ultimately a program for the redistribution of wealth in this country, something that Conservatives are dead set against.
Alberta can only be a better place to live if Stephen is allowed to bring his program forward! We are getting nothing of the Oil royalty now; it can only get better.

Take a moment to think here! Stelmach’s new royalty rates will not come into effect until after the next election! The Energy Minister Mel Knight pulled the royalty rate down to 19% from the already low of 25% prior to the last election then continued to lie about what the rate was.

As new production comes on the royalty rates will be dropped below 19%. The conservatives will continue to cut programs and public access to run the infrastructure while they further reduce the royalty percentage. That is the new future you are looking at from this Government!

Mr. Knight has said on any number of occasions nothing is in stone and there will be adjustments. And again, no adjustment until you elect him again. Just look to their track record of cut slash and lie.

Financial papers broadly heralded the 19% as a means to prop up profits of the oil companies in advance of a brutal royalty regime.

Royalty regimes around the world have increased with the exception of Alberta and Saskatchewan. Both conservative governments are playing one against the other in a public arena trying to create an atmosphere of fear in both provinces. There is a market for everything both provinces can produce.

The lowest rate in the world outside of Canada is 50% royalty! In Alberta we are collecting 19%! That numbers leaves us not only loosing money; we are paying them to take the oil away!

In Alberta our hospitals and schools are short funded. Revenues collected from income taxes are used to further support the energy industry rather than them supporting the tax base and the future of this province.

Oil companies are not going to abandon this province! If Alberta’s royalty rates go up Saskatchewan will soon follow. That is the fear of the oil companies.


The Carbon Tax will tax away some of the profits of the oil giants most of who are owned by foreign currency and most of their profits presently go to foreign currency.

This Carbon Tax will be in the public purse to support individuals in Canada who are not empowered by oil stocks.

Mr. Mandel has recently questioned the cost to EPCOR and to the consumers in Alberta and, he is correct in doing so. There will be a charge made on coal fired electricity at the source. However EPCOR has been increasing their rates and add in service charges almost whimsically collecting billions in profits. Mr. Mandel and the city of Edmonton council claim they treat this as a private company and don’t interfere but, they are quick to pocket the same billions.

Certainly losses in revenue in EPCOR will result in lower profits and perhaps property tax increases. It does not have to be an increase in power bills that is levied against 2/3rds of the province. Perhaps it is time to give Mr. Mandel his deal on service sharing and leave the power milking alone.

John Clark.

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

Alberta Conservatives pay off buddies with tax money.

Rebranding Alberta contract awarded to Tory-friendly ad firm
Link downplayed, but opposition parties say money best spent elsewhere
Published June 26, 2008 by Trevor Howell

There is no end to the crap this outfit goes into.


On June 20, an advertising firm with ties to Premier Ed Stelmach’s campaign team was awarded a $25-million contract to “rebrand” Alberta. With little fanfare and no official announcement by the Alberta government, Calder Bateman Communications and Identica (a division of Cossette Communications Group) were given the lucrative contract. Margaret Bateman, a co-founder of Calder Bateman, is a former managing director of the government’s Public Affairs Bureau, the department that awarded the contract. She is also listed as a member of Stelmach’s election campaign team.

The awarding of the contract comes just six months after the NDP requested the Alberta auditor general investigate another Tory-connected ad firm. Highwood Communications Ltd., owned by Barry Styles, has received more than $41 million in government-related advertising contracts in the past decade. Styles is also listed as a member of the Conservative election campaign team.
According to Public Affairs Bureau spokesperson Sonia Piano, a committee of representatives from different government ministries and members of the Public Affairs Bureau conduct the selection process. More than 80 advertising firms initially applied for the new $25-million contract that will see $5 million paid out the first year and $10 million the following two years.
Frank Calder, co-founder of Calder Bateman Communications, downplayed the link between Bateman and the premier as a reason for being awarded the contract, adding other firms with “very strong Tory associations” were unsuccessful with their own bids. He was unable to provide any specific details on how the campaign will be run by the two ad firms, saying, “It’s generally not our place to discuss what priorities the government might have.”

According to NDP leader Brian Mason, while there is no doubt Calder Bateman has connections to the Conservative party, he says the ad firm is very reputable. What concerns him is that the government is ignoring the impact of the oilsands on the environment, which leaves Alberta’s economy vulnerable to an environmental backlash that may result in fewer investments in the province. “Unless there’s a real effort on the government’s part to actually clean up the tar sands and adopt more environmentally friendly practices [the rebranding campaign] is not going to work,” says Mason. “It’s like the tobacco companies taking out ads to convince people that cigarettes are safe. People just won’t buy it.”

“It’s business as usual with our provincial government,” says Liberal MLA Hugh McDonald. “They think they can buy political goodwill through public relations and this is another example of it.”

According to the government, the $25-million, three-year campaign is intended to promote the province as a “great place to live, work, visit and invest in,” and to polish Alberta’s environmental record. The premier rationalized the need for the rebranding campaign because of “misinformation” spread by the opposition parties and environmental groups like Greenpeace and the Sierra Club about Alberta’s environmental record. He also accused the opposition of trying to damage the reputation of the Department of Environment and oil companies after being asked if the money could not be better spent protecting the environment. “Twenty-five million dollars is well spent in ensuring that we protect the integrity of this province not only within Canada but within North America and around the world,” said Stelmach in the legislature on April 30.

The opposition Liberals labelled the campaign as nothing more than taxpayer-funded propaganda. With U.S. politicians increasingly opposed to the use of fuel derived from Alberta’s oilsands, McDonald says taxpayer money would be better invested in new technologies like carbon capture and storage.

“The $25 million could be spent actually cleaning up the environment, rather than this propaganda campaign to convince people there’s no problem, when everyone knows there’s a problem” says McDonald.

U.S. politicians are increasingly opposed to the use of unconventional energy sources that emit large amounts of greenhouse gases. Regarding Alberta’s oilsands, Henry Waxman, U.S. congressman and co-author of the U.S. Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, was quoted as saying, “It is important to ensure that the [U.S.] federal government does not subsidize or promote the expanded use of these fuels through government purchasing decisions.” Earlier this week, the oilsands were the target of U.S. presidential candidate Barak Obama and a number of big city U.S. mayors. Both called for the U.S. to reduce its addiction to “dirty oil.”
“American consumers are going to be quite skeptical because they already know our environmental track record,” says McDonald. “And it hasn’t been a good one.” He adds that taxpayer money would be better invested in new technologies like carbon capture and storage. “The last thing we need in this province is another propaganda campaign funded by the taxpayer.”
Newer Posts Older Posts a> Home