company:natural resources

  • The Government of Canada Approves Pacific NorthWest LNG Project - Canada News Centre

    http://news.gc.ca/web/article-en.do?nid=1130489&tp=1

    September 27, 2016 — Vancouver — Government of Canada

    The Government of Canada is working to grow our economy, create good jobs for the middle class and opportunities for Canadians while protecting the environment for future generations. As the Prime Minister has emphasized, the only way to get resources to market in the twenty-first century, is if it is done sustainably and responsibly. Today’s announcement reflects this commitment. It is also an example of the successful application of the Interim Principles for project assessments announced in January.

    Today, the Minister of the Environment and Climate Change, the Honourable Catherine McKenna, the Minister of Natural Resources, the Honourable Jim Carr, and the Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard, the Honourable Dominic LeBlanc, announced the Federal Cabinet’s decision to approve the $11 billion Pacific NorthWest LNG Project after a rigorous federal environmental assessment.

    –—

    Justin Trudeau approves $36-billion LNG ‘carbon bomb’ on B.C. coast | Ricochet
    https://ricochet.media/en/1434/justin-trudeau-approves-36-billion-lng-carbon-bomb-on-bc-coast

    Just a day after royals William and Kate visited and trumpeted new protections for the Great Bear Rainforest in B.C., the federal government has announced it’s giving the greenlight to a controversial fossil fuel mega-project that threatens both an ecologically sensitive stretch of the Pacific coast and any chance Canada has of meeting its international climate commitments under the Paris Agreement.

  • Turkish delegation in Gaza to discuss electricity crisis http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkish-delegation-in-gaza-to-discuss-electricity-crisis.aspx?pag

    delegation from Turkey’s Energy and Natural Resources Ministry is currently visiting the Gaza Strip to discuss means of meeting the coastal enclave’s demand for electricity.

    The visit came two weeks after Ankara and Tel Aviv agreed to normalize relations following a six-year hiatus.
    According to ministry sources, members of the delegation, which arrived in the strip late on July 10, will meet both Israeli officials and representatives of Gaza’s Hamas-run government to discuss means of resolving the problems facing the territory’s energy sector.

    Following its visit to Gaza, the Turkish delegation is expected to provide a report on its findings to Energy and Natural Resources Minister Berat Albayrak.

    The report will include an assessment of the strip’s energy needs, facts about local production, transmission and distribution of energy and recommendations for tackling the chronic problems plaguing Gaza’s electricity infrastructure.

    The report will also be submitted to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and the Turkish cabinet, after which a roadmap will be prepared on the means of implementing the report’s recommendations.

    A number of private Turkish companies have reportedly expressed interest in helping meet Gaza’s energy needs in terms of the production, transmission and distribution of energy.

    @rumor #Turquie #Gaza #Electricité

  • Energy minister’s comment on HDP voters draws criticism
    http://www.todayszaman.com/national_energy-ministers-comment-on-hdp-voters-draws-criticism_395523.

    Energy and Natural Resources Minister Taner Yıldız’s implication in a meeting that pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) voters will change their minds about the party if they are left without electricity for three days has drawn widespread criticism in the media.

    The minister was answering questions from members of the press after attending a meeting on Monday where the Turkish National Committee of the World Energy Council (WEC) report on energy sources and energy consumption was presented.

    Referring to the “strategic voters” of the HDP, Yıldız had said: “Our citizens realize that the actions of the HDP have been changing in the last two months. Whether there’s an early election or not, I believe the majority of the HDP’s strategic votes will disappear. I expect that when the voters are left without electricity for three days, they will begin to evaluate the situation properly.”

    The strategic voters of the HDP are composed mostly of liberals and leftists who supported the HDP in the recent general election not because of its political views but to prevent the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) from winning the majority in Parliament, which was accomplished when the HDP passed the election threshold.

    HDP voters perceived Yıldız’s statement to be a threat to leave them without electricity for three days so that they would vote for the AK Party if no coalition government is formed and an early election is held. Many Twitter users reacted to the minister’s statement, with one saying he will consider Yıldız responsible for any future power blackouts that take place in Turkey

    #Turquie #Electricité #Election

  • Pendant ce temps-là, en Ukraine…

    • démission de Kvitashvili, qui était, il y a 6 mois le futur sauveur du système de soins ukrainien
    • démission du ministre de l’Écologie, avec des relents d’hydrocarbures à la clé
    • tout cela dans des conditions opaques et une ambiance de bazar généralisé dans le « gouvernement »…

    In Ukraine, a political power struggle comes to a head | Europe | DW.COM | 04.07.2015
    http://www.dw.com/en/in-ukraine-a-political-power-struggle-comes-to-a-head/a-18561688

    Seven months after forming a coalition government in Ukraine, Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk lost two ministers in the space of a day. The first to go was Ecology and Natural Resources Minister Ihor Shevchenko. According to the government, a flight from Nice to Kyiv in a private jet with a controversial businessman was what tripped up the 44-year-old politician. Shevchenko himself vehemently denies any allegations of corruption. He was fired on July 2.

    Observers in Kyiv suspect that behind it all is a fight for political influence and access to natural resources, above all to natural gas. The Ukrainian media has described Shevchenko as having close ties to former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko. She says that, although it participates in the ruling coalition in parliament, her party has no ministerial appointments. On Thursday, the influential Kyiv online news outlet “Ukrainska Pravda” wrote that, “the split in the coalition has become visible.

    Departure of the great Georgian hope
    The second departure created even more of a sensation: Alexander Kvitashvili of Georgia, one of three foreign-born ministers in Ukraine, was forced to step down from his post. On Tuesday, June 30, Ihor Kononenko, the acting parliamentary leader of Poroshenko’s BPP alliance announced, “We don’t have anything against the minister, but he can no longer lead this ministry.” He went on to say that the situation in the health ministry was “uncontrollable.” On Wednesday, Kvitashvili’s compatriot and Georgia’s former president, Mikheil Saakashvili, tossed more wood on the fire. Now governor of the southern Ukrainian region of Odessa, Saakashvili said, “I told him that it was time for him to go.” Indeed, Ukraine needs an “aggressive man” to fight corruption.

    Kvitashvili was brought in to reform Ukraine’s health system
    On Thursday, the president’s party tweeted that the health minister had turned in his resignation. But the ministry denied the claim. General confusion ensued in the media. It wasn’t until later that afternoon that Kvitashvili explained that he had in fact vacated his post. “When the alliance that invited me here mulls my resignation without consulting me, then the right thing to do is to go,” he told the press corps in Kyiv. Parliament agreed.

    Health care reform on paper
    This resignation had enormous symbolic power. Just six months ago, Kvitashvili had been celebrated as a figure of great hope. He was invited to Kyiv to radically reform the health care system. The man who had successfully introduced a health insurance program with western standards in Georgia was asked to do the same in Ukraine. At the beginning of the year, Kvitashvili estimated that bribes were costing the Ukrainian health care system between 8 and 10 billion US dollars annually (7-9 billion euros) - three times the ministry’s annual budget. “Doctors are simply stuffing this money in their pockets,” railed the minister.

    Kvitashvili did not manage to get much done during his brief tenure. He replaced all of the department heads in his ministry, did away with the opaque system of supplying medical drugs to state-run clinics and developed a plan for a fundamental overhaul of the health care system. He presented his plan to the government at the end of June. If and how it will be implemented is an open question after his de facto expulsion.

    Power play before bankruptcy?
    The dismissal of those two ministers is not the only sign of a rift within the governing coalition. Interior Minister Arsen Avakov and Defense Minister Stepan Poltorak have come under fire as well. At the end of June, caucus leader Yuriy Lutsenko said that the president’s party had asked the government to look into allegations of corruption against both of the ministers.

    Lutsenko himself surprised everyone by also announcing his own resignation on Thursday. Long seen as a close advisor to the president, he is also his party’s chairman. There is currently much speculation as to the reasons behind his resignation.

  • Minister: #Saakashvili will go from Georgian president to Odesa governor
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/kyiv-post-plus/minister-saakashvili-will-go-from-georgian-president-to-odesa-governor-389

    In another move to curtail the influence of billionaire oligarch Igor Kolomoisky, President Petro Poroshenko is expected to name ex-Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili as governor of Odesa Oblast.

    Ecology and Natural Resources Minister Ihor Shevchenko said in a Facebook post on May 29 that the Cabinet of Ministers recommended the appointment of Saakashvili to the strategic oblast. Saakashvili has been a top adviser to Poroshenko.

    The final decision is up to the president of Ukraine, as stipulated by the Constitution,” Shevchenko wrote. There was no official announcement from the president’s website late on May 29.

    Shevchenko told the Kyiv Post that Saakashvili would be a good appointment “in any place, because he is a meritocrat” and that the change is in the best interests of Ukraine.

    Odesa Oblast is one of Ukraine’s most difficult regions because of its history of corruption as well as its strategic location as the top Black Sea port, no doubt coveted by Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    #Odessa

    • Il se dit qu’ils l’ont choisi exprès parce qu’il n’a pas de « réseau » dans le secteur et donc pourra plus facilement échapper aux presions, et ne sera pas tenté de tomber dans le cycle de la « coruption » (c’est-à-dire soigner ses amis).

      Mais il va sans doute très vite avoir beaucoup de nouveaux amis". Il faudra qu’il choisisent bien !

  • Energy minister says will ask Russia to lower gas prices
    http://www.todayszaman.com/news-350810-energy-minister-says-will-ask-russia-to-lower-gas-prices.ht

    Energy and Natural Resources Minister Taner Yıldız said on Thursday that the existing natural gas sales contract between Russia and Turkey stipulates that prices can be revised at the start of 2015, and so Turkey will submit a request to Russians to adjust its gas prices downward.

    Turkey gets about 42 million cubic meters of natural gas daily from the pipeline in western Ukraine, and in the event of an interruption on this line due to the current political crisis, the amount of gas lost cannot be made up elsewhere. This means that Turkey’s commercial and industrial heartland, the Marmara region and İstanbul in particular, may face a natural gas shortage. The minister, however, added that he didn’t believe there would be a serious problem in gas flow that would shake Turkey.

    Prices unlikely to fall

    The energy minister commented on the domestic market prices of natural gas, too. There has been tremendous pressure to hike prices, especially due to the social turbulence and chaos in the region, particularly in Iraq, Yılmaz said. He added that domestic market prices are hard to bring down, even if Russia concedes to lowering the price of the natural gas it sell to Turkey. “We are struggling not to transfer the increasing costs to households and industries. If we can get a reduction [from Russia] and pull down our costs, this will be used to decrease the losses of BOTAŞ [the state-owned Turkish Pipeline Corporation],” Yıldız noted.

    #Géopolitque
    #Turquie
    #Ukraine
    #Irak
    #Russie
    #Gaz