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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: miraje who wrote (1571487)11/12/2025 2:12:05 PM
From: Wharf Rat3 Recommendations

Recommended By
Eric
Goose94
pocotrader

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576163
 
"Great news for American energy independence"

This is just great news for the purveyors of fossil fuels. American energy independence begins with solar, wind, water, and storage.



To: miraje who wrote (1571487)11/12/2025 2:23:15 PM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
longz

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576163
 
WOW Canada just lost big time, with CARNEY waffling around over more environmental stupidity.

Good show TRUMP!!! Go Trumpy Go!!!

The announcement by the Alaska LNG Project (the U.S. pipeline + export-terminal plan in Alaska) has significant implications for Canada — both positive and negative. Whether it “helps” or “hurts” Canada depends on which sectors you focus on, which geographies, and how Canada’s policies respond. Below is a breakdown of the key ways this development touches Canada, especially given your interests in resource-sector operations in Saskatchewan, rural developments, and energy/logistics infrastructure.

Potential benefits to Canada
  1. Growing global LNG demand lifts all boats

    • The Alaska project signals that demand for liquefied natural gas (LNG) is rising — in Asia, in allied markets concerned about energy security, etc. That means Canada’s own LNG-export potential (especially via the west coast) becomes more relevant. CAPP+1

    • For example, Canada’s LNG Canada facility in Kitimat (B.C.) is now nearing commercial production. Wikipedia+2Reuters+2

    • If Canada can capture a portion of this “race” to supply LNG globally (especially to Asia), there are major economic upside: jobs, export revenues, upstream investment. CAPP

  2. Competitive advantage for Canadian LNG in certain respects

    • Canada has shorter shipping distances to Asia (west coast B.C.) and less reliance on chokepoints (Panama, Suez) than many LNG exporters. CAPP+1

    • Canada can build LNG projects with relatively lower upstream production cost (in certain basins) and has abundant reserves (e.g., the Montney in B.C./Alberta) that can feed exports. CAPP

    • Thus, the Alaska project may raise the stock of global LNG infrastructure investment, drawing attention to the region (North America) in general — which could unlock more capital flows into Canadian exports or associated services.

  3. Spill-over benefits to Canadian service/logistics companies

    • Since you’re involved in field operations, modular facility relocations, infrastructure logistics in Saskatchewan, etc.: a “rising tide” in LNG/export-pipeline activity could mean increased demand for Canadian expertise in drilling services, modular facilities, logistics, equipment rentals, etc.

    • If Canadian energy and export projects ramp up because of heightened global attention, your local-field-services world may see positive knock-on effects (equipment supply, mobilization contracts, pipeline infrastructure, etc.).
Potential risks / downsides to Canada
  1. Increased competition for global LNG markets

    • The Alaska project is explicitly pitched as part of a U.S. “energy dominance” agenda. If the U.S. secures long-term contracts (e.g., with Japan, Korea, Taiwan) ahead of Canadian exporters, that could steal market share that Canada might otherwise target. resourceworks.com+2BOE Report+2

    • Specifically, commentary from Canada says: “U.S. pushing a US$44 billion Alaska LNG project … Canada’s chance to get into Asian markets is at risk.” resourceworks.com+1

    • Canadian LNG projects (especially in B.C.) are somewhat behind in development timelines, so if Alaska leaps ahead, Canada may find itself later to the ball, making contracts harder to secure. BOE Report+1

  2. Regulatory and policy disadvantage for Canada relative to the U.S.

    • Several Canadian sources point out that Canada’s regulatory/approval processes are slower/more burdensome, which may hinder timely LNG development. Business Council of Canada+2resourceworks.com+2

    • Also: Canadian policy choices (e.g., environmental regulation, Indigenous consultation, climate targets) may raise cost or delay LNG infrastructure, making Canadian exports less competitive compared to a “fast-tracked” U.S. project. Northern Beat+1

  3. Domestic market/energy security dynamics

    • If Canadian gas exports shift toward global LNG markets, domestic supply/midstream infrastructure in Canada might need adjustment (though this is more of a management issue).

    • Also: If U.S. becomes a stronger exporter and invites Canada to sell into its system under favourable terms, Canada might become more dependent on U.S. trade flows rather than diversifying fully to Asia, which may raise long-term sovereignty concerns (raised in Canadian commentary). Business Council of Canada
Net assessment: For Canada — “Hurts more than helps” in short term, “Could help” in medium term if Canada acts Given the data and commentary, my judgement is:
  • In the short term (next 1-5 years): The Alaska LNG project hurts Canada’s competitive position because it accelerates a major rival exporter, adds pressure on Canadian projects to get done faster, and may result in market-share loss for Canadian LNG into Asia.

  • In the medium to long term (5-10 years plus): It can help Canada — but only if Canada responds with policy reform, regulatory speed-ups, favourable investment conditions, and exports into Asia rather than depending solely on the U.S. market.
For example, one analysis says: “Alaska LNG poses new challenges for Canada as a competitor in the global energy market. … Canada should accelerate its LNG projects to remain competitive.” Business Council of Canada Another states: “Canada’s LNG industry is at a fork in the road. The U.S. is pushing … Canada is in danger of losing its edge.” resourceworks.com
  • For Saskatchewan / western Canadian operations: While the LNG export activities are more focused in B.C. and coastal corridors, the upstream natural-gas plays (e.g., in Alberta and Saskatchewan) feed the LNG export potential. If Canada seizes the opportunity, companies in Saskatchewan supplying modular units, field services, infrastructure can benefit. But if Canada loses out, you may see less upstream investment, slower growth, or increased competition from U.S. operators.

  • For your business / logistics lens: The U.S. project could raise demand for global-scale modular infrastructure, pipeline relocation, long-haul mobilization which could create opportunity for Canadian suppliers—but only if you’re positioned to capture service contracts across North America or internationally.

  • For policy/regulatory strategy: Because you’re operating in a regulated-infrastructure heavy domain, this underscores the importance of favourable permitting, efficient mobilization, and being ready for export-oriented resource development. If Canadian policy lags (which commentary suggests it is), your risk exposure increases (project delays, cancellation, cost inflation).

  • For relocation / provincial strategy (you evaluating rural Alberta/Saskatchewan): The broader energy-export dynamic matters: Provinces that position themselves as attractive for upstream/export infrastructure (e.g., less regulatory delay, better incentives) may outperform. If Canada loses the LNG export race, regions dependent on gas/export growth may under-perform.
Recommendation / what Canada should do to turn this into a help Since the U.S. is moving aggressively, Canada should:
  • Streamline permitting and regulatory processes for LNG projects, especially on the west coast. Business Council of Canada+1

  • Focus on export contracts to Asia (Japan, Korea, Taiwan) rather than just the U.S. market. The commentary notes Canada needs that diversification. resourceworks.com

  • Leverage Canada’s shorter shipping distances and “lower-carbon” LNG production potential (e.g., electrified compression, hydro-powered plants) as a competitive differentiator. CAPP+1

  • Increase upstream investment in Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin to feed export capacity — Canada has the reserves. CAPP
In summary: Yes, the Alaska LNG project hurts Canada’s strategic position in the short term by ratcheting up competition and exposing Canadian delays. But it can help Canada in the medium/longer term if Canada reacts smartly — accelerating its LNG export program, improving regulatory environment, and capturing more of the global LNG value chain.



To: miraje who wrote (1571487)11/12/2025 2:38:32 PM
From: Heywood401 Recommendation

Recommended By
pocotrader

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576163
 
Company finalizes purchase of Nikiski facility in plan to import LNG to Alaska to address shortage



To: miraje who wrote (1571487)11/13/2025 9:50:42 AM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

Recommended By
longz
miraje

  Respond to of 1576163
 
Do you remember when Dumb Ass Obama did this?

Obama bans oil drilling 'permanently' in millions of acres of ocean
  • 21 December 2016


Arctic rigs like the "polar pioneer" were never actually deployed

Outgoing US President Barack Obama has permanently banned offshore oil and gas drilling in the "vast majority" of US-owned northern waters.

Mr Obama designated areas in the Arctic and Atlantic oceans as "indefinitely off limits" to future leasing.

The move is widely seen as an attempt to protect the region before Mr Obama leaves office in January.

Supporters of president-elect Donald Trump could find it difficult to reverse the decision.

Canada also committed to a similar measure in its own Arctic waters, in a joint announcement with Washington.

The White House said the decision was for "a strong, sustainable and viable Arctic economy and ecosystem." It cited native cultural needs, wildlife concerns, and the "vulnerability" of the region to oil spills as some of the reasons for the ban.

But while Canada will review the move every five years, the White House insists Mr Obama's declaration is permanent.

The decision relies on a 1953 law which allows the president to ban leasing of offshore resources indefinitely.




Environmental law professor Patrick Parenteau says Trump faces "uphill battle" against Obama's ban

During the election campaign, Donald Trump said he would take advantage of existing US oil reserves, prompting concern from environmental groups.

But supporters have already suggested that any attempt to reverse the "permanent" decision outlined by the law would be open to a legal challenge.

Reacting to the Arctic declaration, Friends of the Earth said: "No president has ever rescinded a previous president's permanent withdrawal of offshore areas from oil and gas development.

"If Donald Trump tries to reverse President Obama's withdrawals, he will find himself in court."

However, the American Petroleum Institute said "there is no such thing as a permanent ban," and that it hoped Mr Trump's administration would simply reverse the decision.



Boost for fragile waters: Roger Harrabin, environment analyst

The ban is a huge boost for conservation in the fragile waters of the Arctic - and for campaigners urging action against climate change.

The oil industry has a bad safety record in northern waters already. In 1989 the tanker Exxon Valdez ran aground in Alaska, spilling hundreds of thousands of barrels of crude oil, polluting 1,300 miles of coastline. Some of the oil endures, and some animal species have yet to recover.

In 2014, Shell's drilling rig the Kulluk also ran aground in the Arctic's tempestuous seas. The firm subsequently halted Arctic exploration.

Northern waters are so cold that it takes bacteria much longer to break up oil products than in the warm waters of the Gulf. And the drilling conditions are among the most challenging on Earth.



Exxon Mobil chief Rex Tillerson has been appointed as the next US secretary of state

President Obama is heeding advice from scientists warning that humans have already discovered three times more fossil fuels than we can burn without risking the climate.

Oil firms will still want to explore for further profits, though. And the next secretary of state, Exxon's Rex Tillerson, may offer the industry a route round the ban by paving the way to an Arctic drilling deal with Russia.

Follow Roger on Twitter @rharrabin, external



Mr Trump has also raised fears among some environmental campaigners through his choices for senior White House roles.

Rex Tillerson, chief of oil company Exxon Mobil, has been named his secretary of state. His energy secretary, Rick Perry, has previously called for less regulation of the oil industry in his role as governor of Texas.

Environmental groups strongly criticised both appointments.

Very little oil drilling currently takes place in the Arctic region, as it is more expensive and difficult than other available options.



To: miraje who wrote (1571487)11/13/2025 9:53:53 AM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

Recommended By
longz
miraje

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576163
 
From bankrupting coal to banning oil, OBAMA was the biggest Dumb Ass in U.S. history.