LINKS Aug. 23, 2011

BORDER

Michigan governor confident Detroit-Windsor bridge on track [AP]

Vermont targets rail service to Montreal within 3 years [Burlington Free Press]

US-Canada relations are friendly, healthy: letter [Watertown Daily Times]

Cops join in fugitive hunt [Windsor Star]

Mock disaster, explosion planned in preparedness test [Detroit Free Press]

TRADE/ECONOMY

Canada losing its ‘wiggle room’ if US economy goes sour again [Globe and Mail]

Higher Canadian prices irk J. Crew customers [Guelph Mercury]

Electronics sales nosedive in Canada [Financial Post]

Ontario shoppers escape pesticide ban in US [Toronto Sun]

Supercommittee talks have begun [Politico]

Sunstein: Washington is eliminating red tape [Wall Street Journal]

US recession: merely very bad, or catastrophic? [Troy Media]

IRS must do its own dirty work to collect massive tax penalties in Canada [Vancouver Sun]

Border won’t stop Big Brother IRS [Lad du Bonnet Leader]

ARCTIC

North American caribou herds back from the brink [Anchorage Daily News]

Harper to mark Resolute crash on Arctic tour [CBC]

Canada escalates its Arctic presence [Wall Street Journal]

MILITARY

NATO bounces back in Libya but troubles remain [AP]

Hill: Libya redeemed NATO; now what? [CNN]

NATO’s Libya dillemma: you break it, you own it [The Independent]

ENERGY

Over 160 arrested in Keystone protests [democracynow.com]

TransCanada responds to protests [Calgary Sun]

TransCanada addresses concerns in Kansas [KSN.com]

Dozens arrested at Keystone XL pipeline protest [Postmedia News]

Actress Margot Kidder to join protests [i880news.com]

More arrested at oil protests [CTV]

Keystone protests get testy [UPI]

Nebraskans arrested at pipeline protests [Lincoln Journal Star]

Pipeline foes arrested in DC [Omaha World-Herald]

Arrests follow Washington oil protests [Financial Times]

Tar sands and the carbon numbers [New York Times]

What tar sands mean for climate change [The Guardian]

Oil sands anxiety is overblown [theenergycollective.com]

America’s love-hate with Canada’s oil [CBC]

Can protests stop the pipeline? [Triple Pundit]

If we’re going to protest something, protest coal [Time blog]

Canada under attack by environmental extremists [The Foundary, Heritage Foundation]

***

Twitter/luizachsavage

LINKS Aug. 5, 2011

BORDER

UBC prof wants $750 exemption for same day visits to US [Vancouver Sun]

Man who shone torch at US border chopper gets 60 days in jail [The Province]

Case spotlights tensions between residents, border guards [Seattle Post-Intelligencer]

TRADE/ECONOMY

Air Canada, WestJet upbeat despite economy [Reuters]

Toyota RAV4 will be built in Canada [AutoGuide.com]

US health care system less efficient: study [QMI]

Canadian jobless rate drops slightly [CP]

US unemployment dips [Washington Post]

Brace for the pain [Washington Post]

Economy stabilizes into a crisis [Washington Post]

MILITARY

Baird: World support lacking in action on Syria [CP]

Panetta warns against defense cuts [Washington Post]

Syria says it put down Hama revolt [NY Times]

ENERGY

Fake twitter accounts used to promote tar sands pipeline [The Guardian]

Series of Nebraska events draws attention to Keystone pipeline [AP]

NE government on Keystone pipeline: Talk to the feds [AP]

Scientific community urging Obama to shoot down pipeline [American Independent]

Clinton vows robust safety standards [The Hill]

Clinton: TransCanada to upgrade pipeline safety [AP]

Clinton gives no hint at Keystone decision [Reuters]

To truck or to pipeline natural gas across Canada? [Alaska Dispatch]

Many sides to Keystone debate [Canadian Business]

Oil sands pin hopes on innovation [Vancouver Sun]

North Dakotans describe Keystone spill [Lincoln Journal Star]

Unions confirm job cuts coming to Environment Canada [CTV]

***

Twitter/luizachsavage

2011-05-05 Canada crude to China?

April 20, 2011
By

From the Canada Institute at the Woodrow Wilson Center for Scholars:

Canada Crude to China? Prospects and Barriers of Increasing Chinese Imports of Canadian Oil

May 05 2011, 9:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.

Canada has emerged as the United States’ largest source of imported oil and is expected to increase its oil production over the next decade. Although 99 percent of Canada’s oil is currently exported to the Untied States, plans are underway to construct new pipelines that would enable Canada to export large quantities of its oil to the Asian market. Two of the most notable projects are Enbridge’s Northern Gateway Project and the expansion of Kinder Morgan’s TransMountain Pipeline.

Please join the Canada Institute and China Environment Forum for a program exploring the prospects for completing these projects, regulatory challenges, environmental concerns, and examination of what this might mean for North American energy security. In addition, the program will assess China’s need and desire to import heavy crude from Canada.

Confirmed panelists for the event include Nathan Lemphers, Oilsands policy analyst, Pembina Institute; Robert Johnston, director of global energy and natural resources, Eurasia Group; Norm Rinne, senior director, business development, Kinder Morgan Canada; and Kang Wu, Senior Fellow, East-West Center.

 

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