
WATCH LIVE: Premier Danielle Smith announces plan to enhance U.S.-Alberta relations
Premier Danielle Smith and Minister of Advanced Education Rajan Sawhney share details on a plan to increase Alberta/Canada-U.S. policy research, LIVE here.
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Edmonton Journal
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Varcoe: On eve of new era for Canadian energy exports, Keyera CEO welcomes Ottawa's push to fast-track major projects
Article content 'It creates the possibility, but a very clear process, which has at its heart consultation — full consultation with Indigenous peoples — to define what is a nation-building project.' At Keyera, the midstream company said its deal with Houston-owned Plains will see the firm buy the assets and strengthen 'domestic energy infrastructure and energy security . . . and (it) establishes a strong, cross-Canada NGL corridor.' The acquisition will give Keyera more size and scale, noted the company's CEO. As for the country's broader energy sector, Canada has tremendous advantages to export more products from the Pacific Coast, including shorter shipping time to get LNG, crude oil and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) — propane and butane — to Asia than from the U.S. Gulf Coast. But the country needs regulations and policies to enable more exports. 'Hopefully, we can be more competitive in the international space as we expand our LNG and hopefully export a growing amount of crude barrels to Asian markets,' Setoguchi said. 'I'm hearing positive things from our prime minister. I hope he follows through and makes it happen.'


National Post
an hour ago
- National Post
How does a rockslide happen? 'The mountain that moves' was Canada's deadliest
A large rockslide in Banff National Park left up to 15 hikers injured Thursday, leading to one potential death and raising a series of questions about how and why the disaster occurred. Article content With officials still working on rescue and treatment of survivors, it will be some time until an investigation concludes why the rockslide happened. But a look at published research and archive news articles on rockslides provides some general information about the dangerous occurrences. Article content Article content Article content Article content A rockslide happens when a large chunk of rock detaches itself from the mountain where it sits and begins sliding down the slope. Why does this occur? Well, natural erosion or seismic activity can cause a rockslide, as can heavy rainfalls. Human activity such as excavation, construction or mining can also lead to a rockslide. Article content As one chunk of rock begins its downward slide, it can quickly gain momentum and trigger massive amounts of other rock to also begin sliding, leading to devastating effects. notes a landslide or rockslide can occur 'when gravitational and other types of shear stresses within a slope exceed the shear strength (resistance to shearing) of the materials that form the slope.' Article content What's the difference between a landslide and a rockslide? Article content A landslide occurs when sediment or loose dirt disengages from a hill or mountain and begins moving downwards. A rockslide, however, means solid rocks are also being swept down a slope during a similar type of event. Rockslides are also incredibly fast-moving, as they tend to move down a flat surface of a mountain. Article content The most horrific rockslide in Canadian history occurred in 1903 when a huge slab of Turtle Mountain crashed down onto the town of Frank and Crowsnest Pass (about 250 kilometres southwest of Calgary). At least 72 known residents were killed in the natural disaster, as were an undetermined number of others visiting or passing through the area. Some historians thus put the death toll closer to 90. Article content An estimated 80 to 110 million tonnes of rock were involved in the deadly event that came to be known as Frank Slide. The rockslide only lasted about a minute and a half. Article content Newspaper clippings and archive stories from the rockslide describe the horrific results that led to the deaths of men, women and children. As those clippings note, information about the state of some of the victims was disturbing, but shed light on how powerful the rockslide was: 'The leg and hip of a man was found lying fifty yards from the Imperial Hotel.'


National Post
an hour ago
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FIRST READING: How Canada's dairy cartel keeps fumbling our foreign trade negotiations
First Reading is a Canadian politics newsletter curated by the National Post's own Tristin Hopper. To get an early version sent directly to your inbox, sign up here. Article content TOP STORY Article content Article content As Canada is actively trying to expand its trade with the non-U.S. world, Parliament has just entrenched the one thing that has scuppered more trade negotiations than anything else. Article content This week, the first bill passed by the 45th Parliament ended up being a Bloc Québécois-championed proposal to shield the Canadian supply management system from any foreign trade negotiations. Article content Article content Bill C-202, which passed the Senate on Wednesday, bars the Department of Foreign Affairs from negotiating any trade deal that liberalizes foreign access to Canada's heavily tariffed dairy and egg sector. Article content Article content Although the bill has been framed as a boon to the country's 9,000 dairy farms, everyone from trade analysts to other Canadian farmers have warned that it comes at the cost of kneecapping Canada's ability to grow its global trade links. Article content The Grain Growers of Canada trashed the bill, saying it scares away trade partners at the precise moment that Canada needs to find more of them. 'For grain farmers who rely on access to international markets, the result will be less ambitious trade agreements, fewer export opportunities, and slower economic growth at home,' said Kyle Larkin, the group's executive director, in a Wednesday statement. Article content The Canadian Agri-Food Trade Alliance (CAFTA) similarly framed C-202 as throwing a wrench into Canada's 'accelerated trade diversification agenda.' Article content 'At a time when Canada must be demonstrating leadership and consistency in defending predictable, rules-based trade, this bill sends the wrong message,' CAFTA said, in a press release. Article content Supply management has directly led to the collapse of at least one major Canadian trade deal, and has held up negotiations on several others. Article content In January 2024, the U.K. walked away from negotiations for a bilateral trade deal with Canada over Ottawa's refusal to compromise on supply management and accept increased imports of British cheese. Article content During 2015 negotiations for the since-cancelled Trans-Pacific Partnership, Canada's refusal to allow free trade access to its dairy sector wound up becoming one of the deal's most conspicuous snags. Article content As U.S. negotiator Darci Vetter said at the time, Canada was trying to close a 'market access' deal that 'doesn't include market access.' Article content A 2016 trade agreement struck with the European Union was secured only after Canada agreed to liberalized European access to the Canadian dairy market — but at the cost of billions in compensation paid to dairy farmers.