Energy Security

Energy Security

Author: Barry Barton

Publisher: OUP Oxford

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 522

ISBN-13: 9780199271610

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This volume examines energy security in a privatized, liberalized, and increasingly global energy market, in which the concept of sustainability has developed together with a higher awareness of environmental issues, but where the potential for supply disruptions, price fluctuation, and threats to infrastructure safety must also be considered.


Alberta Benefits

Alberta Benefits

Author: Nataliya Leonidivina Rylska

Publisher:

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 94

ISBN-13:

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Sectoral increases in GDP/GSP and employment are the result of the indirect influence of the AHP and the MVP on sectors other than oil and gas facility construction, natural gas pipeline transportation, and oil and gas production. [...] However, it is uncertain which option for the connection between the MVP and the existing Alberta pipeline system will be chosen: extending the Alberta system to the NWT boundary or constructing the Alberta segment of the MVP down to the Alberta terminus. [...] The Government of the Northwest Territories and TransCanada PipeLines Limited signed a Memorandum of Understanding in July 1999 identifying "an alignment of interests and a mutual desire to encourage the timely development of the natural gas reserves of the NWT and the construction of an economic, competitively priced, natural gas transmission infrastructure."11 The Mackenzie Delta producers, who [...] APG represents the interests of aboriginal groups of the NWT in the Mackenzie Gas Project and has a share in the MVP. [...] Summary of the Major Economic Impacts of the MGP Table 3.1 below summarizes the major economic impacts from the MGP for Canada, the Rest of Canada and Alberta.


Prophets, Pastors and Public Choices

Prophets, Pastors and Public Choices

Author: Roger Hutchinson

Publisher: Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press

Published: 2006-01-01

Total Pages: 159

ISBN-13: 0889207631

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The Mackenzie Valley natural gas pipeline debate included many actors. This is the first in-depth study in comparative religious ethics to examine the debate with a particular focus on the role of the Canadian churches. In 1974 twenty-seven of the world’s largest oil and natural gas companies applied for permission to build a pipeline through the Mackenzie Valley to transport Alaskan and northern Canadian gas to large southern markets. Many northern native peoples opposed the proposal and called for a moratorium on major northern development projects until native land claims had been settled. The mainline Canadian Christian churches supported the call for a moratorium and, through the interchurch coalition, Project North, campaigned against the pipeline. However, some native peoples supported the proposal to build the pipeline, and many of the pipeline’s proponents were members of churches that called for a moratorium on the project. This case study in comparative religious ethics, though written from a pro-moratorium stand, attempts to clarify the debate. Conflicting responses to the pipeline proposal are assessed in relation to “hard facts” concerning the need for northern gas in the South, social-scientific findings regarding the impact of the pipeline on native communities, the rights of native peoples to participate in decisions affecting their lives, assumptions about the way of life of non-native people in the South and the role of religious convictions in public choices. This thoroughly researched study reveals the inner workings and influences of the Canadian churches involved and illustrates their commitment on behalf of the northern natives opposed to the project.