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'Grand bargain': Alberta Premier Danielle Smith 'encouraged' by federal government's change of tone when it comes to energy

'Grand bargain': Alberta Premier Danielle Smith 'encouraged' by federal government's change of tone when it comes to energy

Calgary Herald02-06-2025

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says she is 'encouraged' by the federal government's change of tone when discussing energy following Monday's meeting with fellow premiers and Prime Minister Mark Carney.
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Carney and Canada's 13 premiers gathered in Saskatoon on Monday to discuss the federal government's commitment to fast-tracking 'nation building' projects and breaking down internal trade barriers. He said there is 'real potential' for an 'oil pipeline to get to tidewater.'
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'Within the broader context of national interest, the interest is in decarbonized barrels. It provides the development of new industries, it provides economic activity across the West and into the North. There's real potential there,' Carney said.
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'We took up a good deal of our time and discussions and potential to move forward on that and, if further developed, the federal government will look to advance.'
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Smith has been vocal about her list of energy reform demands she wants Carney to address, including repealing Bill C-69 and lifting the emissions cap and said discussions will continue on that front.
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'Let's call it the grand bargain,' Smith said in response to a question about pipelines.
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'I think the point I was making to the prime minister and my colleagues is that there's lots of ways to decarbonize, but the Pathways Project is an expensive project. It would cost anywhere from $10 billion to $20 billion to get built and to make the economic case for that, having more egress with more barrels to be sold to Asia is the way to pay for it.'
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She said Carney's readiness to do a 'two-track process' to identify projects and eliminate barriers that are currently in place is also encouraging, pointing to ways of fixing the regulatory processes to make it easier to approve projects moving forward.
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'I'm encouraged by the immediate change of tone that we've seen from recent months. I think that there's when we hear the prime minister talking about being an energy superpower. We haven't heard that kind of language for some time on both the conventional and clean power.'
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At the meeting Carney said leaders discussed a wide range of projects including the Western and Arctic corridor which connects energy critical minerals and trade infrastructure, the Eastern energy partnership and critical minerals pathways.

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World returns to 'law of jungle' in face of pre-emptive strikes
World returns to 'law of jungle' in face of pre-emptive strikes

Canada Standard

timean hour ago

  • Canada Standard

World returns to 'law of jungle' in face of pre-emptive strikes

Western support for Israel's right to strike Iran backs up a pattern of "pre-emptive" violence that critics say is further eroding international law and the rules-based order put in place in the wake of World War II, ushering in a "law of the jungle" in which might takes precedence over right – with dire consequences for global stability and co-operation. 19/06/2025 - Modified: 22/06/2025 By Benjamin Dodman | France24 On October 12, 2023, as Israel and its allies reeled from the carnage wrought just days earlier by Hamas militants in southern Israel, the then Pentagon chief was asked whether Washington would place any conditions on its hugely expanded security assistance to its Middle East ally. Lloyd Austin's answer to reporters was a straightforward "no", based on the assumption that Israel's military would "do the right things" in its war against the Tehran-backed militia. Twenty months on, Israel has flattened Gaza, bombed swathes of Lebanon, seized further territory in Syria, and now launched a direct attack on Iran as it pursues what it describes as an "existential" fight against the Islamic Republic and its allies in the region. Throughout the fighting, its ultra-nationalist leaders have dismissed the mounting evidence of war crimes committed in Gaza, which led the International Criminal Court to issue an arrest warrant for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in November 2024. Senior cabinet members have openly advocated the forced removal of Gaza's population, which would amount to a genocidal crime, and the dismemberment of Syria. Netanyahu himself has discussed the possibility of assassinating Iran's head of state and precipitating "regime change" in the Islamic Republic in interviews with US media. Ironically, such rhetoric brings Israel closer in line with the inflammatory bluster typical of its arch-foe Iran – with the important difference that Israel does possess nuclear weapons and a military capable of backing up its increasingly provocative statements. The extraordinary escalation is a "natural consequence of the impunity that has prevailed in the region over the past two years", says H. A. Hellyer, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies (RUSI) in London. "The fact that Israel has faced no consequence for repeatedly infringing international law sends a very clear signal: that if it chooses to do more, it can," he explains. "And it can count on the most powerful actors in the international community simply not doing very much or actually empowering and emboldening it." The most immediate consequence of Israeli impunity in the Middle East is the immense suffering inflicted on civilian populations, nowhere more so than in Gaza, where Israel's ongoing military campaign has killed more 55,000 people, according to local health officials, and rendered the narrow strip of land largely uninhabitable. Another consequence, with more far-reaching implications, is the further erosion of the rules-based order in place since World War II, says Karim Emile Bitar, a Middle East expert at Beirut's Saint-Joseph University and visiting professor at Sciences-Po Paris. "Recent events have driven the final nail into the coffin of international law and of what has been referred to as the liberal international order," he says. "The message to the world is that if might is on your side, you can break all the rules, trample on international law and all the standards that have been in place since 1945, and there will be absolutely no accountability." 'A new Middle East' Netanyahu has described Israel's actions as ushering in a "new Middle East", a phrase that has haunted the region at least since the 2003 Iraq War, when the US and its allies sought to remodel it – with catastrophic consequences. "There has been a lot of jubilation (among critics of Iran), imagining that these are the 'birth pangs' of some sort of new Middle East. On the contrary, this is a spiral of violence, fostered by an environment of impunity that allows for vigilante action to take place without repercussions," says Hellyer. "Nobody needs to be a fan of the Iranian regime, or Hezbollah or Hamas, to see that this activity is incredibly destabilising for regional order and security," he adds. "It also has massive repercussions for international order and international security, because it means that there isn't a rules-based order at all. It becomes the law of the jungle. And that should be quite concerning to all of us." Bitar notes that few people in the Sunni Arab world will be "shedding a tear" for the Iranian regime – "and for good reason, given the disruption and suffering caused by Tehran's regional proxies". However, he adds, "they are also alarmed by an increasingly unbridled Israel, which – unlike Iran – has the means to wipe out entire cities, and whose senior ministers now openly advocate ethnic cleansing in Gaza". An immediate consequence is likely to be a regional arms race to try to narrow the gap with Israel. In Iran's case, analysts point to the likelihood of a fresh push to go nuclear, thereby achieving the exact opposite of the stated goal of Israel's military operation. "Israel's attack is making Iran feel very vulnerable. Their conventional deterrence has failed, and I think we're going to see more and more calls from within the country to pursue nuclear weapons," says Daryl Kimball of the US-based Arms Control Association, noting that contrary to Israeli claims, Western intelligence assessments have so far concluded that Tehran is not currently pushing to militarise its nuclear programme. Kimball says there are already voices in Iran calling for the country to withdraw from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which prohibits states that don't have nuclear weapons from pursuing them. "Bombing (Iran) simply makes sure they will try a hundred times more because they will assess there is no rules-based order, there is simply the threat of force and mutually assured destruction," adds Hellyer. 'Anticipatory' self-defence The phrase "birth pangs of a new Middle East" was famously used by former US secretary of state Condoleeza Rice to refer to the 2006 Israel-Hezbollah war, one of many conflicts with roots in the regional upheaval caused by the US invasion of Iraq. "Back then, there was at least a stated aim to promote democracy and human rights in the region, even if it was largely a smokescreen," says Bitar. "Now there is no such pretence. We're back to Bismarckian power politics, in which might precedes right, and a world governed by nationalist authoritarian leaders in the mould of Putin and Trump." In the present climate, he adds, "the dwindling number of people who talk about respect for international law are regarded as hopeless idealists disconnected from reality". While Israel's attack on Iran has drawn condemnation around the world, the messaging from Western leaders has been far more mixed, with talk of Israel's "right to defend itself" often taking precedence over references to international law. Hours after Israel launched the first wave of attacks, French President Emmanuel Macron, whose planned summit on a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was scuttled by the outbreak of war, put the blame squarely on Iran and said France stood ready to defend Israel if necessary. Germany's Chancellor Friedrich Merz went a step further, arguing that Israel was "doing the dirty job for all of us" by taking on in the Iranian regime – prompting outcry in a country where the emphasis is normally on de-escalation. In an op-ed published by the Guardian, Sydney-based international law professor Ben Saul argued that support for Israel's "right to self-defence" had no legal grounding in the present conflict and set a dangerous precedent. He described Israel's attack on Iran as "part of a pattern of unlawful 'anticipatory' violence against other countries", along with its recent destruction of Syrian military bases and equipment, despite "the absence of any attack by the new Syrian authorities on Israel". "The risk of abuse of 'anticipatory' self-defence is simply too great, and too dangerous, for the world to tolerate," Saul wrote, noting that Russia claimed to invade Ukraine "in part because it speculatively feared NATO expansion". He added: "Many countries have hostile relations with other countries. Allowing each country to unilaterally decide when they wish to degrade another country's military, even when they have not been attacked, is a recipe for global chaos – and for the unjustified deaths of many innocent people." 'One pillar of the post-war order is attacking another' In an interview with Middle East Eye, Sir Richard Dalton, a former British ambassador to Tehran, noted that past US administrations had refused to countenance a large-scale Israeli attack on Iran, but that Netanyahu "has obtained more leverage over the US (since Donald Trump's return to power) and Israel is more of a law unto itself". Dalton said other Western countries had been "incredibly limp in not holding Israel to account" for its conduct over the past 20 months, a stance he attributed in part to their growing disregard for international law. "They don't look at the legal issue. They won't look at the circumstances in international law when a pre-emptive strike against a potential enemy is lawful and when it is not," he said. "Israel's strike was an illegal aggression. But we're prepared to talk frankly in those terms about Russia but not about Israel." While Western powers have failed to rein in the violence, the institutions they helped found decades ago to uphold the rules-based order have not sat idle. Since the start of the Gaza war, both the ICC and the International Court of Justice (ICJ) have moved with urgency, the latter issuing successive rulings last year to warn of the risk of genocide in Gaza and order an end to Israel's military operations in the south of the enclave. Neither court, however, has the capacity to enforce international law if world powers refuse to comply. When the ICC issued its arrest warrant for Netanyahu, former US president Joe Biden described the move as "outrageous". His successor at the White House has gone a step further, issuing an executive order in January to authorise sanctions on the court over its "illegitimate" actions against the US and its "close ally Israel". The Trump administration has also withdrawn the US from several UN bodies and slashed the organisation's funding, creating a situation in which "one pillar of the post-war order is attacking another", according to Brian Brivati, visiting professor of contemporary history and human rights at Kingston University. "The leading founder of the UN is now undermining the institution from within, wielding its security council veto to block action while simultaneously starving the organisation of resources," Brivati wrote on The Conversation earlier this week. "The combination of a powerful state acting with impunity and a superpower disabling the mechanisms of accountability marks a global inflection point," he added. "Other global powers, including Russia and China, are taking this opportunity to move beyond the Western rules-based system." The breakdown of the system could have catastrophic consequences for global stability, warns RUSI's Hellyer, pointing to the need for international rules and co-operation to tackle a host of global challenges. "There will always be new crises and conflicts, not least of which dealing with the climate emergency," he says. "And we need international law and the rules-based order to at least mitigate their consequences." (NOTE: THis article was writen prior to the U.S. attacks on Iran's nuclear sites in the early hours of Sunday morning (Saturday night U.S. time).. Source: France24

New global order taking shape as international law takes back seat
New global order taking shape as international law takes back seat

Canada News.Net

time2 hours ago

  • Canada News.Net

New global order taking shape as international law takes back seat

Western support for Israel's right to strike Iran backs up a pattern of "pre-emptive" violence that critics say is further eroding international law and the rules-based order put in place in the wake of World War II, ushering in a "law of the jungle" in which might takes precedence over right – with dire consequences for global stability and co-operation. 19/06/2025 - Modified: By Benjamin Dodman | France24 On October 12, 2023, as Israel and its allies reeled from the carnage wrought just days earlier by Hamas militants in southern Israel, the then Pentagon chief was asked whether Washington would place any conditions on its hugely expanded security assistance to its Middle East ally. Lloyd Austin's answer to reporters was a straightforward "no", based on the assumption that Israel's military would "do the right things" in its war against the Tehran-backed militia. Twenty months on, Israel has flattened Gaza, bombed swathes of Lebanon, seized further territory in Syria, and now launched a direct attack on Iran as it pursues what it describes as an "existential" fight against the Islamic Republic and its allies in the region. Throughout the fighting, its ultra-nationalist leaders have dismissed the mounting evidence of war crimes committed in Gaza, which led the International Criminal Court to issue an arrest warrant for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in November 2024. Senior cabinet members have openly advocated the forced removal of Gaza's population, which would amount to a genocidal crime, and the dismemberment of Syria. Netanyahu himself has discussed the possibility of assassinating Iran's head of state and precipitating "regime change" in the Islamic Republic in interviews with US media. Ironically, such rhetoric brings Israel closer in line with the inflammatory bluster typical of its arch-foe Iran – with the important difference that Israel does possess nuclear weapons and a military capable of backing up its increasingly provocative statements. The extraordinary escalation is a "natural consequence of the impunity that has prevailed in the region over the past two years", says H. A. Hellyer, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies (RUSI) in London. "The fact that Israel has faced no consequence for repeatedly infringing international law sends a very clear signal: that if it chooses to do more, it can," he explains. "And it can count on the most powerful actors in the international community simply not doing very much or actually empowering and emboldening it." The most immediate consequence of Israeli impunity in the Middle East is the immense suffering inflicted on civilian populations, nowhere more so than in Gaza, where Israel's ongoing military campaign has killed more 55,000 people, according to local health officials, and rendered the narrow strip of land largely uninhabitable. Another consequence, with more far-reaching implications, is the further erosion of the rules-based order in place since World War II, says Karim Emile Bitar, a Middle East expert at Beirut's Saint-Joseph University and visiting professor at Sciences-Po Paris. "Recent events have driven the final nail into the coffin of international law and of what has been referred to as the liberal international order," he says. "The message to the world is that if might is on your side, you can break all the rules, trample on international law and all the standards that have been in place since 1945, and there will be absolutely no accountability." 'A new Middle East' Netanyahu has described Israel's actions as ushering in a "new Middle East", a phrase that has haunted the region at least since the 2003 Iraq War, when the US and its allies sought to remodel it – with catastrophic consequences. "There has been a lot of jubilation (among critics of Iran), imagining that these are the 'birth pangs' of some sort of new Middle East. On the contrary, this is a spiral of violence, fostered by an environment of impunity that allows for vigilante action to take place without repercussions," says Hellyer. "Nobody needs to be a fan of the Iranian regime, or Hezbollah or Hamas, to see that this activity is incredibly destabilising for regional order and security," he adds. "It also has massive repercussions for international order and international security, because it means that there isn't a rules-based order at all. It becomes the law of the jungle. And that should be quite concerning to all of us." Bitar notes that few people in the Sunni Arab world will be "shedding a tear" for the Iranian regime – "and for good reason, given the disruption and suffering caused by Tehran's regional proxies". However, he adds, "they are also alarmed by an increasingly unbridled Israel, which – unlike Iran – has the means to wipe out entire cities, and whose senior ministers now openly advocate ethnic cleansing in Gaza". An immediate consequence is likely to be a regional arms race to try to narrow the gap with Israel. In Iran's case, analysts point to the likelihood of a fresh push to go nuclear, thereby achieving the exact opposite of the stated goal of Israel's military operation. "Israel's attack is making Iran feel very vulnerable. Their conventional deterrence has failed, and I think we're going to see more and more calls from within the country to pursue nuclear weapons," says Daryl Kimball of the US-based Arms Control Association, noting that contrary to Israeli claims, Western intelligence assessments have so far concluded that Tehran is not currently pushing to militarise its nuclear programme. Kimball says there are already voices in Iran calling for the country to withdraw from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which prohibits states that don't have nuclear weapons from pursuing them. "Bombing (Iran) simply makes sure they will try a hundred times more because they will assess there is no rules-based order, there is simply the threat of force and mutually assured destruction," adds Hellyer. 'Anticipatory' self-defence The phrase "birth pangs of a new Middle East" was famously used by former US secretary of state Condoleeza Rice to refer to the 2006 Israel-Hezbollah war, one of many conflicts with roots in the regional upheaval caused by the US invasion of Iraq. "Back then, there was at least a stated aim to promote democracy and human rights in the region, even if it was largely a smokescreen," says Bitar. "Now there is no such pretence. We're back to Bismarckian power politics, in which might precedes right, and a world governed by nationalist authoritarian leaders in the mould of Putin and Trump." In the present climate, he adds, "the dwindling number of people who talk about respect for international law are regarded as hopeless idealists disconnected from reality". While Israel's attack on Iran has drawn condemnation around the world, the messaging from Western leaders has been far more mixed, with talk of Israel's "right to defend itself" often taking precedence over references to international law. Hours after Israel launched the first wave of attacks, French President Emmanuel Macron, whose planned summit on a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was scuttled by the outbreak of war, put the blame squarely on Iran and said France stood ready to defend Israel if necessary. Germany's Chancellor Friedrich Merz went a step further, arguing that Israel was "doing the dirty job for all of us" by taking on in the Iranian regime – prompting outcry in a country where the emphasis is normally on de-escalation. In an op-ed published by the Guardian, Sydney-based international law professor Ben Saul argued that support for Israel's "right to self-defence" had no legal grounding in the present conflict and set a dangerous precedent. He described Israel's attack on Iran as "part of a pattern of unlawful 'anticipatory' violence against other countries", along with its recent destruction of Syrian military bases and equipment, despite "the absence of any attack by the new Syrian authorities on Israel". "The risk of abuse of 'anticipatory' self-defence is simply too great, and too dangerous, for the world to tolerate," Saul wrote, noting that Russia claimed to invade Ukraine"in part because it speculatively feared NATO expansion". He added: "Many countries have hostile relations with other countries. Allowing each country to unilaterally decide when they wish to degrade another country's military, even when they have not been attacked, is a recipe for global chaos – and for the unjustified deaths of many innocent people." 'One pillar of the post-war order is attacking another' In an interview with Middle East Eye, Sir Richard Dalton, a former British ambassador to Tehran, noted that past US administrations had refused to countenance a large-scale Israeli attack on Iran, but that Netanyahu "has obtained more leverage over the US (since Donald Trump's return to power) and Israel is more of a law unto itself". Dalton said other Western countries had been "incredibly limp in not holding Israel to account" for its conduct over the past 20 months, a stance he attributed in part to their growing disregard for international law. "They don't look at the legal issue. They won't look at the circumstances in international law when a pre-emptive strike against a potential enemy is lawful and when it is not," he said. "Israel's strike was an illegal aggression. But we're prepared to talk frankly in those terms about Russia but not about Israel." While Western powers have failed to rein in the violence, the institutions they helped found decades ago to uphold the rules-based order have not sat idle. Since the start of the Gaza war, both the ICC and the International Court of Justice (ICJ) have moved with urgency, the latter issuing successive rulings last year to warn of the risk of genocide in Gaza and order an end to Israel's military operations in the south of the enclave. Neither court, however, has the capacity to enforce international law if world powers refuse to comply. When the ICC issued its arrest warrant for Netanyahu, former US president Joe Biden described the move as "outrageous". His successor at the White House has gone a step further, issuing an executive order in January to authorise sanctions on the court over its "illegitimate" actions against the US and its "close ally Israel". The Trump administration has also withdrawn the US from several UN bodies and slashed the organisation's funding, creating a situation in which "one pillar of the post-war order is attacking another", according to Brian Brivati, visiting professor of contemporary history and human rights at Kingston University. "The leading founder of the UN is now undermining the institution from within, wielding its security council veto to block action while simultaneously starving the organisation of resources," Brivati wrote on The Conversation earlier this week. "The combination of a powerful state acting with impunity and a superpower disabling the mechanisms of accountability marks a global inflection point," he added. "Other global powers, including Russia and China, are taking this opportunity to move beyond the Western rules-based system." The breakdown of the system could have catastrophic consequences for global stability, warns RUSI's Hellyer, pointing to the need for international rules and co-operation to tackle a host of global challenges. "There will always be new crises and conflicts, not least of which dealing with the climate emergency," he says. "And we need international law and the rules-based order to at least mitigate their consequences." (NOTE: THis article was writen prior to the U.S. attacks on Iran's nuclear sites in the early hours of Sunday morning (Saturday night U.S. time)..

Canada warns of retaliation without Trump agreement
Canada warns of retaliation without Trump agreement

Canada News.Net

time2 hours ago

  • Canada News.Net

Canada warns of retaliation without Trump agreement

OTTAWA, Canada: Canada may boost its counter-tariffs on steel and aluminum imported from the U.S. if a comprehensive trade agreement with President Donald Trump is not finalized within the next 30 days, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced this week. Earlier this month, Trump raised import duties on these metals from 25 percent to 50 percent, prompting the industry to call for Canada to respond officially. This decision could negatively impact Canada, the largest supplier of steel and aluminum to the U.S. Carney stated that he had reached a mutual agreement with Trump to aim for a new economic and security deal by July 21. He emphasized that, based on the progress achieved in the trade negotiations, Canada would modify its existing counter-tariffs on U.S. steel and aluminum products by that date. While Carney did not immediately respond to Trump's recent tariff increase, he expressed the desire to see advancements in talks focused on establishing a stronger economic and security alliance. Earlier this year, on March 13, Canada enacted 25 percent retaliatory tariffs on steel products worth C$12.6 billion and aluminum products worth C$3 billion. Furthermore, Canada is introducing new procurement policies that allow Canadian producers and trading partners with tariff-free access to compete for federal contracts involving steel and aluminum. Carney also indicated that Canada intends to create new tariff-rate quotas equal to 100 percent of 2024 levels for steel imported from nations without free trade agreements, aiming to stabilize the domestic market and prevent detrimental trade shifts. Approximately 90 percent of Canada's steel and aluminum exports go to the U.S., while Canada consumes about 20 percent of U.S. steel exports and 50 percent of U.S. aluminum exports, according to the Royal Bank of Canada, underscoring the importance of this trade relationship. Under Carney's leadership, Canada is advancing numerous infrastructure projects, including those related to defense and housing, which will significantly increase the demand for steel and aluminum. "We are committed to supporting the industry by prioritizing Canadian steel and aluminum in federal projects," Carney stated during a press conference.

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