2013年8月26日星期一

Slurry pump operation and maintenance


The following safety information relating to excellence slurry pump operation and maintenance should be carefully and seriously observed, and correct procedures followed, to avoid possible injuries to personnel, and possible damage to the equipment. All statutory requirements relating to this equipment must be complied with at all times.

Do not apply heat to the impeller hub or inlet eye to assist impeller removal. Application of heat may cause shattering of the impeller, leading to injury or equipment damage.

Do not operate the pump for an extended time with no or very low flowrate. Failure to notice this warning could result in overheating of the pump, and vaporisation of the pumped fluid, with generation of very high pressure. Such an action may cause serious injury serious injury to personnel, or damage to the equipment.

Check drive motor rotation prior to fitting of drive belts or couplings. Incorrect motor rotation may cause personnel injury or equipment damage.

Do not feed very hot or very cold fluid into a pump at ambient temperature. Thermal shock may cause fracture of pump wet-end parts.

Excellence pump must be regarded as both an item of rotating equipment, and pressure machinery. All relevant safety precautions and procedures for such equipment should be observed during pump installation, operation and maintenance.

Whatever auxiliary equipment is associated with a pump (motors, drive belts, drive couplings, speed reducers, variable speed drives, etc), all relevant instruction manuals should be consulted, and recommended procedures implemented, during installation, operation and maintenance of the pump system.

Do not work on the pump set until the electricity supply has been disconnected completely as the pump is a rotary object. It may cause accidents for personnel otherwise!

When the pump is in operation, hands should not get into or remove the protective shield of the slurry pump. It may cause accidents for personnel otherwise!can be stopped by closing the discharge valve as the pump is shut off. This will reduce backflow potential in the system.



This article come from:http://www.china-slurry-pump.com/slurry-pump-structure/Safety_information.html

2013年8月25日星期日

Alberta releases long-awaited pipeline safety review


CALGARY — A long awaited report on pipeline safety commissioned by the Alberta government has taken an overall positive view of the province’s regulations.
But the study released Friday was quickly dismissed by critics as lacking in substance as it neither examined the effectiveness of enforcement nor drew lessons from specific spills in recent years.
The review, conducted by Group 10 Engineering, looked at rules around pipeline integrity, the safety of pipelines crossing water and spill response.
Among other things, Group 10 said regulations concerning pipelines near water need to be more consistent and clear — including a definition of what actually constitutes a water body — and urged more harmonization between government agencies both within Alberta and outside it.
But in general, Group 10 said Alberta’s regulations are strong and compare favourably with other jurisdictions it looked at.
“I’m pleased to say that the study has confirmed that Alberta leads in pipeline safety and has the most thorough overall regulatory regime of all assessed jurisdictions,” Energy Minister Ken Hughes said at a news conference.
As for the question of enforcement, Hughes said the Alberta Energy Regulator — formerly the Energy Resources Conservation Board — does a good job already.
“If pipeline companies do not comply, they will find Alberta to be a very difficult place in which to do business.”
Theo Abels, a principal at Group 10, said the report wasn’t meant to delve into the question of whether enforcement is up to snuff.
Industry players were consulted in the creation of the report, but not environmental organizations and other public interest groups. The public will, however, have the chance to give its view online during a 45-day comment period.
“I did not believe that approaching public organizations would contribute technically to the improvement of pipeline safety and I stand corrected on that one if that’s not the case,” said Abels.
Hughes announced the review more than a year ago following a spate of spills.
Group 10 submitted its work to Hughes last December, and the regulator submitted its response in March. For months, opposition politicians and other critics have been urging Hughes to make the results of the study public.
Jennifer Grant, with the Pembina Institute, an environmental think-tank, said the review looks at regulations “on paper only.”
“It’s premature for the minister to say Alberta’s a leader in pipeline safety without an evaluation of the data on the rate of incidents, compliance, enforcement, penalties, those sorts of things,” she said.
“We really need an assessment of the real-world performance to really understand to what extent Alberta is regulating this industry and where it can improve. This report falls short on that.”
Another report earlier this year, authored by biologist and environmental consultant Kevin Timoney and Peter Lee of Global Forest Watch, said fewer than one per cent of likely environmental infractions have led to any enforcement action.
Opposition politicians were also quick to criticize the report.
“It seems like there’s a whole bunch of feathers, not a lot of chicken there,” said Liberal MLA Kent Hehr.
“And by that I mean is we have 17 recommendations that have been given to the government that I don’t think go far enough in analyzing our pipeline safety in this province.”
Rachel Notley, environment critic with Alberta’s New Democrats, renewed calls for the province’s auditor general to conduct an unbiased review of pipeline safety.
“The huge gap in the report is its failure to evaluate how well the regulator enforces its own regulations,” said Notley.
“They can have all they want on paper, but if it’s never properly enforced, it’s meaningless to Albertans when they wake up to find a pool of oil in their backyard. Alison Redford’s government cannot be trusted to stand up for the health and safety of Alberta families when it comes to their friends and funders in the energy industry.”
Jason Hale, energy critic for the opposition Wildrose party, said a lot of the recommendations were “common sense” ideas that industry players would likely have thought of anyway.
“I’m not sure that we needed a year to come up with those recommendations,” he said.
The Alberta government commissioned the report last summer after a string of oil spills, including a 475,000-litre leak from a Plains Midstream Canada pipeline in Central Alberta in June 2012.
A pipeline owned by the same company spilled 4.5 million litres of oil in northwestern Alberta in April 2011. Earlier this year, the province slapped Plains with environmental charges in relation to that event.
And the pipeline spills continued in the spring of this year. An estimated 9.5 million litres of waste water leaked in northwestern Alberta from a pipeline owned by U.S. company Apache Corp.
As well, a Penn West pipeline spilled 5,000 litres of crude and up to 600,000 litres of wastewater. And an Enbridge Inc. pipeline near Fort McMurray, Alta., spilled about 200,000 litres.
Alberta has been pushing for new pipelines to be built in order to expand the market reach of the province’s crude, such as TransCanada Corp.’s Keystone XL pipeline in the United States and Enbridge Inc.’s Northern Gateway pipeline to the West Coast.
With environmental opposition threatening those controversial proposals, the province, the federal government and industry players have been seeking to assure the public that crude can be transported safely through pipelines.

Don Cayo: Opportunity abounds in Europe — although B.C. doesn’t always notice


It has been a slow, unsteady negotiating process, but a comprehensive trade agreement between Canada and the European Union is said to be close at hand, and it is likely to be about as big a deal as we’re ever likely to see.
But you would never know it from the scant attention being paid here in Canada and, especially, in B.C. to either the impediments that are slowing its conclusion or the potential when it is finally signed, sealed and delivered.

As things stand, countries in the EU constitute a small, though still significant, trading partner for British Columbia companies. Last year, our exports to this bloc totalled about $1.8 billion — a little less than six per cent of everything we sold to foreigners. This is down from almost seven per cent a decade ago.

And certainly B.C. is not as well located to ship traditional export products to Europe as we are to our usual markets in the U.S. or, increasingly, the Pacific Rim.

But trade agreements, especially those of this size and sco
pe, aren’t about business we already do with partners. They are about the things we could be doing, but aren’t.
This is a lot. The population of the EU may be small compared to Asia in general and China in particular, but it still has 500 million citizens, most of them as rich as we Canadians. Their collective buying power is the largest of any political jurisdiction on earth.

And, as Daniel Schwanen, C.D. Howe Institute’s vice-president of research, points out in a recent analysis, the best opportunities to be unlocked by a Canada-EU deal are not in the traditional commodities where ports and proximity are all-important. Rather, the future is in “trade in tasks” — complex international production networks of sophisticated players who all contribute the bits they’re best at.

“Trade in tasks relies on the cross-border exchange of services such as product assembly or design, software development, managerial, logistics, engineering, technical, financial, and cultural services,” he writes.

So, although the proposed deal would enhance access to EU markets for traditional products from our farms, forests or mines, the biggest opportunities involve things that will never see the inside of a shipping container. The future is in investment and foreign affiliate sales, intellectual property, skilled personnel working with consumers or partners in multiple countries, and the international transfer of information.

About 375,000 Canadian jobs now rely on this kind of trade with the EU, he reckons, and the potential is there for many, many more. The new agreement will facilitate this through things like public procurement policies, and common regulatory standards or rules of origins that can, if not addressed, get seriously in the way of commerce.

Of course there are naysayers, although their protestations seem pretty tepid to those of us who remember the froth generated by the Canada-U.S. FTA and NAFTA. But Schwanen says their fears of potential negative effects from the deal are exaggerated, and are greatly outweighed by the combined benefits of increased employment and lower prices for some goods or services.

B.C.’s export businesses have been, very sensibly, weaning themselves off their massive dependence on U.S. markets over the past decade or so — although some of the impetus for this has been the American economic woes that caused our sales there to drop sharply. But on the positive side, the percentage of our exports going to non-traditional Pacific Rim markets — that is, everywhere but Japan — has tripled from about 10 per cent to around 30 per cent.
The danger now, as I see it, is a temptation to substitute over-reliance on one market, the U.S., with too great a fixation on another — Asia or, most often, just China.

China and its neighbours are important, especially for our old commodity-driven economy, as Chinese firms alone now buy 18-plus per cent of our exports, up from just 3.3 per cent in 2003.

But Europe still holds more promise for the new economy, and B.C. can’t afford to be left out.

2013年8月22日星期四

Hazelwood takes ownership of Mt Mulgine


ASX-listed ferrotungsten producer Hazelwood Resources has taken full ownership of the Mt Mulgine tungsten project, in Western Australia, after purchasing a minority interest from fellow-listed Gindalbie Metals.
The 30% participating interest in the Mt Mulgine project was acquired for $500 000, and Hazelwood said that the acquisition was funded from operating cash flow from its ferrotungsten sales at the ATC ferrotungsten project, in Vietnam.
The Mt Mulgine project hosts an indicated and inferred resource of some 8.18-million tonnes, grading 0.21% tungsten.
Hazelwood said on Thursday that the project was compatible with the company’s speciality focus, with the project providing the potential for vertical integration with the downstream refining operations of the ATC ferrotungsten operation.
The company was currently in discussions with Minjar Gold, which owns the gold rights to the Mt Mulgine project, and operates the Minjar gold project and its 650 000 t/y mill and plant.
Minjar Gold has proposed to develop a number of openpit gold mines within the Mt Mulgine mining leases, and some of the proposed developments overlap with known areas of tungsten mineralisation.
The two companies were currently in discussions regarding the proposed development of the gold pits.

Guayana Precious Metals acquires DPG Resources


Guyana Precious Metals Inc. is acquiring DPG Resources Inc. in a stock deal.
Guyana (CVE:GPM) was up 27% to 7 cents a share during mid-morning trading.
DPG Resources shareholders will get 18.7 million common shares and 18.7 million share purchase warrants from Guyana.

No changes in management was announced after the deal. Peter Mullens, the President of DPG, has remained in that capacity and will continue to seek out acquisitions of mineral exploration properties.

Guyana Precious Metals is a Canadian-based mineral exploration company focused on acquiring key gold exploration and development properties in the country of Guyana, South America.

DPG is an Ontario-based private company engaged in the conduct of research and negotiations for the acquisition of properties which are prospective for mineral resources.



Read more: Harper announces funding for mining school at Yukon College


Prime Minister Stephen Harper continued his six-day Northern Tour Monday by announcing federal funding for a new mining education and jobs program at Yukon College in Whitehorse.
Speaking at the local Quantum Machine Works factory, Harper announced $5.6 million in funding over four years to contribute to the construction of the Centre for Northern Innovation in Mining at Yukon College's Ayamdigut Campus in Whitehorse.
The centre will be a "one-stop state-of-the-art education, training and research facility for people looking to begin a career in the mining industry as well as for those who want to improve their skills," a government-issued press release outlining the funding reads.

Northern Tour continues

At the event on Monday the prime minister was joined by Environment Minister Leona Aglukkaq, Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver, Minister of Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Bernard Valcourt, Senator Daniel Lang and Ryan Leef, Conservative MP for Yukon.
The centre is expected to create 40 construction jobs and generate up to 520 trades, mining and apprenticeship graduates over the next five years, the federal government said. Hundreds of other students are expected to take credit courses at the centre, the government said.
Yukon's mining industry is expected to need up to 1,700 new workers to meet its needs by 2022, the Prime Minister said in prepared remarks.
Harper is on his eighth annual Northern Tour. He will spend the next six days touring various communities, from Yukon to Northern Quebec. After events in Whitehorse are completed, he is expected to speak in Hay River, N.W.T. on Tuesday.

2013年8月21日星期三

At midday: TSX lower as mining stocks sink


Sliding mining stocks helped push the Toronto stock market lower Wednesday while traders looked to a release of information that could signal what the U.S. Federal Reserve plans to do about winding up a key economic stimulus program.
The S&P/TSX composite index lost 73.49 points to 12,596.62 with weakness spread across all sectors save for a slight rise in consumer staples.
The Canadian dollar also headed lower, down 0.51 of a cent to 95.75 cents US as the U.S. greenback strengthened and traders looked to the mid-afternoon release of the minutes of the latest Fed meeting late last month.
Many analysts think the Fed judges the economy is strong enough to start to let up on its monthly purchase of $85-billion in bonds, a program which has kept rates low and helped stimulate investment.
But there is nervousness surrounding the tapering of these purchases since the latest bond-buying program, known as quantitative easing, has also fuelled a strong rally on the U.S. equity markets this year.
“I think the reality is the Fed has assisted in the growth, I think it’s been well-telegraphed that they intend to withdraw stimulus at some point,” said John Stephenson, portfolio manager at First Asset Funds Inc.
“But I think that stimulus being withdrawn should have been factored into the market by now. It’s actually surprising.”
He thinks much of the downward pressure on U.S. markets recently is due to the fact that that indexes “have come pretty far and maybe it’s time to lighten up.”
New York markets were weak ahead of the release of the Fed minutes at 2 p.m. (ET).
The Dow Jones industrials dropped 51.65 points to 14,951.34, the Nasdaq was 1.88 points lower to 3,611.71 and the S&P 500 index was down 4.82 points to 1,647.53.
Analysts believe the Fed could start tapering its asset purchases as early as September.
Strong housing data out Wednesday bolstered that point of view as the National Association of Realtors said that sales of existing U.S. houses ran ahead 6.5 per cent during July, much higher than the 0.4 per cent rise that economists had expected. That translated into sales at an annual rate of 5.39 million.
The base metals sector led TSX declines, down 1.7 per cent and September copper slipped three cents to $3.30 a pound. Teck Resources (TSX:TCK.B) lost 68 cents to $26.90.
Turquoise Hill Resources Ltd. is reported to be conditionally in favour of accepting a Chinese coal company’s offer for its majority stake in Inova Resources Ltd. (TSX:IVA), an Australian mining company listed in Toronto and Sydney. Inova says Shanxi Donghui Coal Coking & Chemicals Group Co., Ltd. is offering 22 cents Aus per Inova share and Vancouver-based Turquoise Hill (TSX:TRQ) has agreed to tender it shares, unless a better offer comes forward. Turquoise Hill rose nine cents to $5.39. Inova hasn’t traded since Aug. 2, when it closed at 16 cents.
The gold sector was down 0.8 per cent while December bullion lost $5.20 to $1,367.40 an ounce. Goldcorp Inc. (TSX:G) faded 37 cents to $32.52.
The industrials group was also a weight, down almost one per cent as transport giant Bombardier Inc. (TSX:BBD.B) gave back 11 cents to $4.58.
The energy sector was slightly lower while the October crude contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange moved down 50 cents to $104.61 a barrel. Canadian Oil Sands (TSX:COS) fell 48 cents to $20.21.
Investors also considered earnings reports from the Canadian and U.S. retail sectors.
Sears Canada (TSX:SCC) posted net income of $152.8-million or $1.50 per share, including an after-tax gain of $164.0-million. Ex-items, Sears lost 11 cents per share. Second-quarter revenue was down 9.6 per cent from the same time last year. Its shares slipped 13 cents to $12.14.
Home improvement retailer Lowe’s said second-quarter net income rose 26 per cent to $941-million, or 88 cents per share. That’s up from $747-million, or 64 cents per share, a year ago. Revenue increased 10 per cent to $15.71-billion from $14.25-billion. Analysts surveyed by FactSet expected earnings of 79 cents per share on revenue of $15.07-billion and its shares ran up $2.55 to $46.63.
Target Corp. is reporting a 13 per cent drop in second-quarter earnings as the discounter spent money on opening stores in Canada and dealt with cautious shoppers in the U.S. Target earned $611-million, or 95 cents per share. Ex-items, the retailer earned $1.19 per share. Revenue reached $17.12-billion, up two per cent. Analysts were expecting earnings of 96 cents per share on revenue of $17.28-billion, according to FactSet and its shares fell $2.01 to $65.94.
Another big disappointment was Staples. Its stock plunged $2.17, or 12.9 per cent, to $14.66 after the office supplies chain reported earnings and sales that missed analysts’ expectations. The company also slashed its full-year profit forecast.
European bourses were mixed as London’s FTSE 100 index lost 0.61 per cent while Frankfurt’s DAX and the Paris CAC 40 edged up 0.02 per cent.

Verde Potash Announces New Strategy


Verde Potash (TSX: "NPK") ("Verde" or the "Company") is pleased to announce the Company's new strategic plan to advance the Cerrado Verde Potash Project. This new strategy replaces the Company's previous plan to proceed directly towards the implementation of a capital intensive, larger scale, production facility.  Verde's new plan is premised on the technical practicality of the project's staged scale-up in order to reduce risk and to accelerate cash flow generation from its large potash resource in Brazil. The new strategy will comprise two phases. In Phase 1 the Company intends to build a plant (the 'Flex Plant') with a capacity of approximately 1,000 tonnes per day ("tpd") for the production of ThermoPotash.  The Flex Plant will also be operated to process KCl in order to further develop scale-up and commercialization of the process and with the intent of securing performance guarantees on a 12,000 tpd kiln for KCl production. Phase 2, developed in parallel with Phase 1, would focus on large scale KCl production. This two-phased strategy expects to reduce up front capex by initially establishing the less capital intensive ThermoPotash product.
Next Steps
The Company and its engineering partners are moving forward with a Flex Plant design for Phase 1. The proposed Flex Plant would have a capacity of approximately 1,000 tpd and the capability of both producing ThermoPotash and running the pyro stage of a KCl production route. The successful operation of the pyro stage of KCl production seeks to obtain the desired performance guarantees for Phase 2. By ramping-up production with ThermoPotash in Phase 1, the Company (i) expects a lower initial capital cost compared to the previous strategy to go directly to a large scale production facility, (ii) anticipates cash generation from the sale of ThermoPotash and (iii) expects a reduction in the scale-up risk of KCl production from its potassium silicate resource. The Company expects to publish a prefeasibility study ("PFS") in Q1 2014 for Phase 1 and Phase 2.
ThermoPotash
ThermoPotash is a controlled-release, non-chloride, multi-nutrient fertilizer that is ideally suited for Brazilian soils. It is a new product, which is expected to compete with other premium, multi-nutrient, non-chloride fertilizers currently in the Brazilian market, such as potassium sulphate (SOP) and potassium nitrate (NOP). ThermoPotash delivers potassium without the negative effects of chlorine, while the limestone content addresses the high acidity of Brazil'ssoils.
Research on the use of Cerrado Verde's potassium silicate rock to produce ThermoPotash began in the early 1980s by academics. Since 2009, with the help of a multitude of parties, Verde built on that earlier research through its own studies, development and successful agronomic field trials. Agronomic trials have been conducted in conjunction with the University of Uberlândia, the University of Lavras, the University of São Paulo, Empresa de Pesquisa Agropecuária de Minas Gerais (EPAMIG), ArcelorMittal BioFlorestas and a number of large corporate growers in Brazil. The production process for ThermoPotash is similar to the pyro portion of the production process the Company has developed for KCl. The Company's potassium silicate rock is heated in a rotary kiln along with limestone to produce ThermoPotash. Given that a ThermoPotash production facility requires a rotary kiln but no evaporation or crystallization equipment, capex for a ThermoPotash plant is expected to be materially lower than that for a KCl plant producing equivalent tonnage.
ThermoPotash was approved for use as a potash fertilizer by the Brazilian Ministry of Agriculture ("MAPA") on June 24, 2013 - its registration number is MG - 90. 773 10000-3. The product is now eligible for sale in Brazil. Over the past four years the Company and a number of research partners have conducted 41 lab tests and 15 field tests with 12 different crops on more than 23 hectares (230,000m2). The results of these tests have demonstrated the product's efficacy as a source of potassium, silicon and calcium, as well as its ability to address the acidity of Brazilian soils.
Balance sheet
The Company's balance sheet remains strong with $13.3 million in cash as of June 30, 2013. The Company's burn rate in recent months has been approximately $600,000 per month. Management is confident that cash on hand is sufficient to allow the Company to complete its PFS and a Definitive Feasibility Study without raising additional equity.
Verde has been engaged in discussions with Brazilian institutions regarding debt finance for Phase 1 and continues to believe that Brazilian federal and state development banks will play an important role in funding Cerrado Verde. Securing debt finance for the project is important as it can allow the Company to continue to advance the project with minimal or no shareholder dilution - a goal to which management remains committed.
Environmental permit
The Company will provide supplementary information to SUPRAM (Superintendências Regionais de Regularização Ambiental), the state environmental agency for Minas Gerais state, to reflect revisions to the project. Verde is undertaking to meet the demands of the regulator in order to receive all necessary environmental approvals in a timely manner so that permitting will not act to delay the project. The Company will first request an environmental permit for a rotary kiln Flex Plant (i.e. Phase 1 of the project) with a capacity of approximately 1,000 tpd because the reduced environmental impact for this phase allows for an accelerated application process.
Project background
On February 28, 2012, the Company published a PEA for the Cerrado Verde Project focusing on KCl production. The February PEA structured the project in three phases: Phase 1, 600,000 tonnes of KCl production; Phase 2, an incremental 1.0 million tonnes of KCl production; Phase 3, an incremental 1.4 million tonnes of KCl production. Total plant capacity at the conclusion of Phase 3 was planned as 3.0 million tonnes of KCl production. The Company currently expects to complete a PFS that will include Phase 1 ThermoPotash production and Phase 2 KCl production.
About Verde Potash
Verde Potash, a Brazilian fertilizer development company, is focused on advancing the Cerrado Verde project located in the heart of Brazil's largest agriculture market. Cerrado Verde is the source of a potash-rich deposit from which the Company intends to produce both ThermoPotash and potassium chloride (KCl). ThermoPotash is a controlled-release, non-chloride, multi-nutrient fertilizer that is ideally suited for Brazilian soils. In addition, the Company is developing its Calcario limestone project, limestone being a key raw material in the Company's process to produce both ThermoPotash and KCl.
About the Cerrado Verde Potash Project
Cerrado Verde is a unique project: 1) its high grade potash rock outcrops and is amenable to strip mining, allowing fast construction of a scalable operation; 2) it is located in the midst of the world's third largest and fastest growing fertilizer market; 3) it connects to Brazil's largest fertilizer distribution districts via existing and high quality infrastructure; 4) it has the potential to supply both ThermoPotash and KCl to Brazil's local agriculture market from its large potash-rich deposit.

2013年8月20日星期二

Giant miners hit 30-year lows


Mining stocks took a dip on Tuesday, as major companies such as Glencore Xstrata (LON: GLEN) and world’s No.1 BHP Billiton (ASX: BHP) reported massive writedowns.
Glencore’s stock was down almost 2.5% in London at 3:32PM GMT, while BHP lost 1.4% of its value in Australia and was falling in New York this morning.
According to analysts quoted by CNBC, resource companies are now the cheapest they have been in 30 years, relative to the market. But the experts also said stocks could quickly recover as soon as interest rates begin rising.
Most miners are currently facing fairly high fixed costs after making large investments between 2009 and 2011, when commodity prices were high. They are also seeking to win back investor trust, which suffered when some shareholders criticized relatively large executive pay and meagre shareholder payouts.

Read more: Canada mulls CCS for oil sands emissions
A provincial government in Canada said it wants the public's input on plans to cut the emissions from oil sands refining using carbon capture and storage.

The Alberta provincial government said it was committed to spending more than $1.3 billion during the next 15 years on two large-scale CCS projects designed to reduce carbon emissions from oil sands refineries.
Provincial Energy Minister Ken Hughes said it's vetted more than 70 recommendations aimed at improving provincial regulations on CCS and now it was up to the public to review the situation.

"Carbon capture and storage is a critical part of our government's commitment to responsible energy development and reducing our carbon footprint," he said in a statement Monday. "We must ensure CCS is conducted in the safest and most environmentally responsible way possible."

Canadian oil is viewed as more carbon-intensive to produce than conventional crude. The carbon footprint has been an obstacle to the federal government's efforts to get more of its oil to national and international refineries.
Canadian greenhouse gas emissions are expected to increase at least through 2020, the Globe and Mail newspaper reports. It says reductions through CCS won't come until 2050. The newspaper said CCS was part of a provincial "sales pitch" to the U.S. government about the Keystone XL pipeline, planned to reach southern U.S. refineries.

The Alberta government said the public comment period extends to Oct. 3.

Comments about B.C Liberal election donors


Murray
AUG 20, 2013 at 8:43 AM
The NDP is selling its soul to court corporate money. This money creates a ‘golden handcuff’ which will restrain its ability to fight for working class and environmental policies.
gilbert marks
AUG 20, 2013 at 9:11 AM
The BCLiberals don’t need campaign donations. They get all their free ads as “news and commentary” in the MSM. Then we have partisan 3rd party ads that don’t mention the BCLiberals by name but we all know who they are talking about.
Arthur Vandelay
AUG 20, 2013 at 10:00 AM
The BCTF TV ads didn’t specifically mention the NDP or else they would have certainly been on this list as well. Even so, I’m surprised they weren’t.
Shepsil
AUG 20, 2013 at 10:15 AM
Lets not forget the money donated prior to the election by private interest groups to the BC Liberals. The Provincial tax dollars used by the BC Liberals promoting Gov’t initiatives prior to the election period.
When one adds up all those dollars donated and/or used to promote the BC Liberals prior to the election periods, one gets a very unbalanced picture that clearly shows tax dollars and corporate dollars were the lions share of all money donated or used to promote the election of the BC Liberals.
Dix is pissed
AUG 20, 2013 at 10:30 AM
There goes one excuse for his failures.
Barbara Stanwyck
AUG 20, 2013 at 4:34 PM
That is a ton of money all around. Why not use for good instead of evil?
Left Out
AUG 20, 2013 at 6:30 PM
Confirms the obvious, ndp is nothing more than a trade union special interest party and never applicable to the general population.
HellSlayerAndy
AUG 20, 2013 at 7:11 PM
The totals for the NDP are higher than usual mainly due to the fact quite a few people were fooled by their poll numbers.
But since the two parties HAD roughly the same amount of money and the Liberals and the ‘Comeback Kid’ were quite lavish in their spending (as noted by Dix), that really begs the question as what did the NDP do with their money?
Certainly not a lot of evidence they spent it on campaigning or ads or travel or anything?
The NDP are such a trusting lot and anyone that questions that trust usually ends up purged.


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