Sue's Blog

Showing posts with label Alcoa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alcoa. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 05, 2011

Prove your Case on Muskrat Minister Skinner - stop Labelling Critics

Today I listened to some of what Minister Shawn Skinner had to say on Back Talk with Pete Soucy.

The Minister was calling to refute what an earlier caller had said regarding the development of Muskrat Falls. I did not hear that caller.

The Minister prefaced his commentary by saying that there are those who do not want to see Muskrat Falls developed and those that agree with government.

This is an insulting and ignorant comment to make.

Minister there are many people - and I am one - who are not fundamentally opposed to developing the Lower Churchill Falls assets. We disagree - however - with the proposal that this government has brought forth.

There are those who believe that the marketplace is not right for development, those who believe the market is right but the partnership is wrong, and those who believe that this power should be developed for use in Labrador - particularly to develop significant industry.

All of these positions are valid - as is the position of one who believes that the Lower Churchill should not be developed for hydro-electric power.

What we all need to do is weigh the positives and negatives of all options and try to establish through reason and due consideration being given to all citizens - the best possible approach.

First - the majority if not all the current sitting government members do not have enough knowledge - acquired through good old hard work and researching such a decision without prejudice, without partisan political zealotry, and with due consideration of genuine criticisms. Unfortunately this has not been done. Minister Skinner - an otherwise rational, reasonable, and self-directed individual - has been reduced to you are either for or agin Government.

The Government has not yet made up its mind as to why this particular development is proceeding.

Examples:

1. We want to contribute to the greening up of Canada.
2. We need the power on the Island.
3. We need to help Atlantic Canada grow stronger as a region.
4. It's a good deal for the Crown Corporation - owned by the people - for future revenues.
5. It allows us to avoid Quebec and Hydro-Quebec.


And no - it's not for all these reasons - they have tried to sell this swamp in Georgia the same way they sold the Fibre Optic fiasco.

The Government routinely and unfairly labels those who have real reasons for opposing the deal. They unfairly categorize all parties that have shown longstanding commitment to natural resource developments - and in particular hydro-electric resources and who disagree with this proposal.

The same PC party fought vehemently against the Clyde Wells administration when privatization of Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro was proposed. They fought the process, they fought the logic or lack thereof, they fought the lack of transparency, they fought the lack of debate, and they fought the same officials they are now using to promote their own idea.

It is somehow acceptable to shove this inferior proposal down the throats of Newfoundland and Labrador - now that it's a PC deal?

It's somehow acceptable to thwart real debate and discussion on the proposal?

It's somehow acceptable to have hydro-officials act in a juvenile manner when members of the public are asking questions at a public hearing process. If this administration could do this without legislated environmental and social assessment processes - they would.

This is a government who has not proven its case. They have not proven the need for the power. They have not proven the markets. They have not proven the cost of the power. They have not proven this is the best deal for the development.

Further the idea that Newfoundland and Labrador has not already contributed more per-capita to greening up Canada with its donation of 5000 MW's of power from the Upper Churchill - is one that continues to insult the people of this province who continue to pay dearly for such a failed agreement.

They have failed to prove that a deal with Hydro-Quebec would not be better for the province - and that further they have failed to deliver a promise of redress on the Upper Churchill.

They have failed to provide a reason that they are unable to develop markets for this resource in Labrador. If power is to be subsidized by the taxpayers - as is proposed to deliver power to Emera - would it be better to subsidize industry in Labrador?

They have not and will not address that every other comparable geographic region with hydro-potential has attracted industry - except Labrador.

Minister Skinner - prove your case.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Labrador and Alcoa We need all the facts!

Please look and understand there are so many things we as people of Newfoundland and Labrador have not been told.


PRESS HERE

Thank you to Norm in Labrador for the link.

I also call on CBC again to air the program on Lower Churchill discussions with PASNY (Power Authority State of new York) during the Peckford days.

We really need the history on this project and now that energy is even more valuable be very careful what we do with our tremendous Lower Churchill.
 What is this? Read below!



If we are an "energy warehouse" (Danny Williams and Tories) what type will we be? Will we be the type that develops renewable, reliable, clean, and efficient hydro to be used by industry in Newfoundland and Labrador or will we be "low hanging fruit" (Ed Martin) developed to export to other provinces and states to develop their industry?

We have 48 politicians who do not believe we can attract industry here - particularly Labrador. We have 48 politicians that are demonstrating incompetence at best and complete disregard at worst. We have 48 politicians that are spinning us - the people - and the media by saying we are a "cool" province an "up and coming" province a "have" province yet they are unable to use "the best remaining hydro potential in the country" (Danny Williams and the National Energy Board) to attract energy intensive industry such as an aluminum smelter.

If they can not attract industry using cost-effective hydro they are certainly unable to attract it any other way. Therefore they are telling you there is no future in Newfoundland and Labrador past the life of the oil wells.

 Alcoa is but one aluminum company operating in 200 locations in 32 countries in the world. Our politicians have been spinning the message that we can not attract such a company here. Too expensive - we are too north - we are not in an industrial province - anything but tell you the realty.

Okay - there is a smelter of theirs in Iceland:

Designed to comply with Iceland's stringent environmental standards, Fjardaal uses advanced technologies and processes to set new standards for sustainable aluminium production in a clean-air, clean-water environment. Power is 100% renewable hydro. It also generates more than 450 permanent Alcoa jobs, plus 300 more indirect jobs, in Iceland. And its revenues, payroll, and taxes provide a positive contribution to economic development in both East Iceland and the country as a whole.

Norway:

Alcoa Lista - Norway is a primary Aluminium smelter with a production capacity of 96,000 tpy. We operate two product lines: Extrusion billets and foundry alloys.In total 319 people are working in 5-shift operation 7 days per week, all year long.

Quebec

The photo at the head of this blog is that of  Baie Comeau smelter:



In March 2008, a new, $1.2 billion upgrade project was announced. This project will involve the replacement of the Söderberg technology by new prebake cells, and the adoption of a more advanced technology for the existing 480 prebake cells. These upgrades will bring the smelter’s production from 437,000 metric tons to 548,000 metric tons.

The smelter is Baie-Comeau’s biggest employer and its employees are highly involved in the community.

There are 12 Alcoa locations in Ontario and Quebec and in Quebec it is the wonderful hydro power that is the attraction. I guess Labrador power is fuelling that industry as well.


And now there is discussion to put a smelter in Greenland based on renewable hydro power.



No aluminum smelter for Labrador is not conceivable yet our 48 politicians remain committed to exporting that potential so perhaps Nova Scotia might attract industry. This is not acceptable!


Say no to the giveaway of our resources. No to the Emera deal which makes wealth for everybody but us.

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Here - there - everywhere Aluminum - but....

not Newfoundland and Labrador.

Let's look at the Aluminum Sector:

In North America Primary Aluminum production uses over 9000 MW's of power. Of this 70% is hydro generated - 29% is coal generated - the remaining 1% is shared by oil - natural gas and nuclear generation. None are powered by wind.

Clearly the aluminum sector prefers hydro generation for power supply.

This extends to other jurisdictions in the world - where - if hydro is available they will use it.

According to the International Aluminum Institute:

At least 55 per cent of the world's primary aluminium is produced using hydro-electric power which is clean, non polluting and renewable. Hydroelectric dams and their related aluminium smelters tend to be situated in remote areas, and therefore provide economic activity where there would otherwise be none. Other aluminium smelters are located in areas where there is historically a natural surplus of energy for which there is insufficient economic local use.


For our tremendous Lower Churchill power - Labrador must be an ideal candidate. The fact that previous governments and the current administration has been unable to successfully attract under reasonable terms this type of industry only reflects regressive policy of developing the Lower Churchill for export.

As one reader of Sue's Blog pointed out - sarcastically - "Iceland has no choice: it either uses its electricity within Iceland, or it doesn't get used at all." I guess that's the answer then - when industry knows it must come to a jurisdiction to utilize hydro power - it will.

Thus Iceland has 3 aluminum smelters - Labrador has none and that wonderful Upper Churchill power has helped to create:

The first step in processing aluminum in Quebec employs close
to 4,800 people in plants whose capacity represents 23% of
the Province’s primary production.

Second and third processing activities, although significant,
are difficult to quantify because they take place in very
diverse sectors.

A study of industrial sub-contracting in Quebec (Sous-traitance
industrielle du Québec - STIQ) revealed that over 1,300
manufacturing facilities use aluminum in their products.

It should also be remembered that, while aluminum smelters
naturally tend to locate close to sources of electric power at
competitive prices, the transformation sector tends to locate
close to markets liable to receive its products.

Significant efforts have been made to promote aluminum
fabrication in Quebec, particularly in the research sector.

The industry has made a commitment to create 1,500 jobs
in the fabrication sector over the next 10 years.

It is time to stop bypassing Labrador as the industrial capitol of our province. When you consider the iron-ore deposits - Voisey's Bay minerals - potential uranium and other major mineral deposits - and add the Upper and Lower Churchill power potentials - it had to take complete mismanagement and inferior policy not to have achieved this by now.

If hydro and mineral resources were handled to make Labrador the primary beneficiary of the regional resources - we would not need Hebron to bring any Newfoundlander and Labradorian home - they would already be here - and we would be attracting workers from the rest of Canada here.

Do not allow the export of Lower Churchill power.

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

What does Alcoa want?

Back to Registry of Lobbyists - Newfoundland and Labrador


For months now people have asked questions about the Energy Plan - and possible markets for Lower Churchill Power. For his part - the Premier has not lived up to prior commitments on the release date of the energy plan - and frankly does not care to answer legitimate concerns of people on the significant power potential in Labrador.

Kathy Dunderdale does not respond at all - either by choosing to ignore - or told to keep quiet.

Heavy industry is wheeling and dealing globally to enter into power contracts that provide cost competitive - renewable - and reliable supply.

Alcoa has an interest in the Lower Churchill development - we need to know what that interest is.

The provincial registry of lobbyists contains the following:

Particulars: Lower Churchill Development
Registration Number: CL-204-168
Lobby Activity Date: 2007-01-15
Status: Approved
Effective Date: 2006-12-20
Amended Date: 2007-01-15
Approval Date: 2007-01-22

William Wells Consultant Alcoa Canada

Bill is a past CEO of Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro and arguably has much more experience negotiating on a potential Lower Churchill deal than Ed Martin. If he has been hired by Alcoa to lobby respecting the Lower Churchill development - what is Alcoa interested in?

An aluminum smelter in Labrador?

Let me remind the reader that Danny Williams - when leader of the Official Opposition - wanted all details of negotiations or potential deals on the table in the House of Assembly.

We are still waiting to find out why Conservative strategist and Harper supporter - Timothy Powers - has been hired by Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro - how much has he been paid - and what exactly are his terms of lobby.

Saturday, January 27, 2007

The Power of Power

Maryland knows very well the prohibitive cost of energy drives industry away while predictably priced reliable power attracts and keeps industry.

They are another example or victim of deregulation and privatization of energy resources.

In late 2005 Alcoa shut down its aluminum plant because:

"When we were first moving to idle that plant, we had said for about eight months in advance the plant was in danger because of the power situation,"...

Utility deregulation sent electricity prices to prohibitively high levels, forcing Alcoa to shut the aluminum smelter and lay off about 640 workers.

Recent Maryland state legislation that Lowery said Alcoa helped fast-track paved the way for public and private partnerships to develop power plants.
"We want to make metal there (Eastalco), and in order to do that we could no longer buy power off the grid. Now what we're looking into is whether it makes sense to do this another way," he said, referring to Alcoa coming up with its own source of electricity.


These quotes from a Reuter's Article on Friday.


There's no doubt government is working with the company to find solutions - and they do not have the benefit of a Lower Churchill supply. But private power pumped to the grid shut the aluminum smelter down and it's going to take public partnership for power to get the plant up and running again.

Having said that Alcoa - like Alcan and Rusal are on the lookout for places to build new processing facilities and replacement units for those shut down - primarily resulting from energy related concerns. That place should be Labrador!

Friday, January 26, 2007

While Danny's in Alberta - where is Charest?

Let's Start here...

Here is a quote from the Premier on the Lower Churchill to the editor of the Corporate Knights magazine:

Newfoundland and Labrador are set to develop the Lower Churchill’s hydro potential. Newfoundland Premier Danny Williams told me, “I recently [May 2006] wrote to the Premier of Ontario about [Lower Churchill], which will be online by 2015 and can provide 2,800 MW, enough to light up a million and a half homes in Ontario. We have some of the best wind regimes in the world; our projections indicate that by as early as 2009 we could have 300 MW, another 400 MW by 2013, with the potential of tens of thousands of MW of wind energy available through Labrador. Between Quebec and Newfoundland and Labrador, we can provide [Ontario] with all the clean energy that you’re going to need over the next several decades.”
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This is one of the many places Danny and myself part ways.

Sometimes it's just in the attitude. It's having a vision - selling it - and doing what's necessary to bring it to reality.

Sometimes it's being in the right place at the right time. It's knowing where that is and making sure your included.

Sometimes it's knowing what your brand is - not what a group flicks up on a design program. It's believing what you have is unique - in demand and valuable.

While Danny is in Alberta visiting his Newfoundland and Labrador constituents - people who have left from years of failed government policy - Jean Charest is in Davos Switzerland highlighting Quebec (the nation within a nation) to the world. He is doing this to avoid having to make the U-Haul out west to visit Quebecers who have emigrated.

What is Charest doing there?
Well he (the Government of Quebec) is a selected participant at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2007.

Selected Participants representing Canada are:
Jean Charest - Premier of Quebec - Canada
David Emerson - Minister of International Trade - Government of Canada


What is Charest participating in? The agenda follows below but Charest is focused and he's getting media and industry attention.

Here is part of a CanWest story on Charest's participation.

Wednesday was the first day of annual meetings in Davos where corporate and political leaders meet with academics and representatives of civil society.

''It is unthinkable that we can solve the problem of climate warming without the United States,'' Charest said, recalling that in the 1980s, emissions of sulphur dioxide, falling in Quebec lakes in the form of acid rain, were a major pollution problem.

It took the U.S.-Canada Acid Rain Treaty, signed by then-prime minister Brian Mulroney and then-president Ronald Reagan, to set the stage for the American Clean Air Act of 1990, he recalled.

At discussions in Davos on Wednesday, climate change was described as ''the biggest market failure of all time.''

Charest said the Clean Air Act offers market mechanisms that could be applied to deal with the greenhouse gases blamed for climate change.

''We are very much at the beginning of a market mechanism in the reduction of greenhouse gases,'' he said, adding that the success in dealing with acid rain shows this approach can work.

''Clear objectives are the first ingredient necessary for success,'' the premier said. ''If there are no clear objectives, human nature being what it is, people will procrastinate.''

Charest noted that in his state of the union message Tuesday, U.S. President George W. Bush, ''for once'' spoke of greenhouse gases and ''seemed to remember what is at stake.''

The premier said in the discussions in Davos he has attended, American corporate leaders have shown they do not share Bush's view that cleaning up greenhouse gases could harm the U.S. economy.

''The American people have been much more sensitive to the issue than the federal American government,'' he said.


''Several American states have made commitments,'' he added and Quebec will working with the New England governors and the other four Eastern Canadian premiers at a meeting next month in Quebec City on climate change.

''In Quebec we have taken the offensive,'' he said. ''We have taken a leadership role on the issues of sustainable development and reducing greenhouse gases.''

And that extends to his government's commitment to develop clean renewable hydroelectricity, which Hydro-Quebec will offer for sale to Quebec's neighbours, he said.

Environmentalists have questioned whether damming the Rupert River to generate electricity for export is an ecological solution.

In an interview with the British Broadcasting Corporation Wednesday, Charest called Quebec the California of the North, comparing his government's environmental efforts with those of California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.

Charest is sipping champagne with World political Leaders - World super Industries and significant numbers of NGO's.

He is meeting with the elite of the elite in business and Hydro Quebec and through it Quebec is planning the next 25 years of growth based on hydropower - including the Lower Churchill in one way or another.

The Premier says he wants Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro to be a super Energy Company and the Province to be an Energy Warehouse. With Danny's lack of vision and determination to export all the power from the Churchill through or to Quebec - we remain a pimple on the arse of Central Canada.

The agenda for the forum:

Date Title
24.01.2007 Update 2007: The Legal Landscape around Climate Change
24.01.2007 Update 2007: The Global Economy
24.01.2007 Update 2007: The Regional Agenda - Middle East
24.01.2007 Update 2007: The Regional Agenda - USA
24.01.2007 Update 2007: Exploring Identity and the Communication Disconnect
24.01.2007 Update 2007: Beyond Web 2.0 -- From Content to Collective Knowledge?
24.01.2007 Update 2007: Addressing Global Fault Lines
24.01.2007 Update 2007: Leading in a Networked World
24.01.2007 Update 2007: CNBC Debate - Make Green Pay
24.01.2007 Update 2007: The Regional Agenda - Asia
24.01.2007 Update 2007: The Regional Agenda - Latin America
24.01.2007 Opening Buffet
24.01.2007 The Shifting Power Equation: Business
24.01.2007 The Shifting Power Equation: Technology and Society
24.01.2007 The Shifting Power Equation: Geopolitics
24.01.2007 The Shifting Power Equation: Economics
24.01.2007 The Shifting Power Equation: Exploring the Implications
24.01.2007 Opening Reception
24.01.2007 Welcome to the Annual Meeting
24.01.2007 Opening Address by Angela Merkel, Federal Chancellor of Germany
24.01.2007 Opening Plenary: The Shifting Power Equation
24.01.2007 Democracy Beyond Elections
24.01.2007 Why Do Brains Sleep?
24.01.2007 Getting the Message across with a Story
24.01.2007 The Security Implications of Climate Change
24.01.2007 The Rise and Fall of Empires
24.01.2007 Living in the Urban Age
24.01.2007 The Age of the Avatar and Multiple Identities
24.01.2007 Museums Look to the Future
24.01.2007 The Geopolitics of Demographics
24.01.2007 AIDS 2025
Date Title
25.01.2007 The World Electronic Community (WELCOM) Interactive Platform
25.01.2007 Iraq: Uniting for Stability
25.01.2007 Meet the Artists
25.01.2007 Robotics Unleashed
25.01.2007 Future Series: Building the Skills of Tomorrow
25.01.2007 What the Mind Teaches Us about Education
25.01.2007 Relationships and Self-Esteem
25.01.2007 The Comprehensive Response to Terrorism
25.01.2007 The Challenge to Moderate Islam in South-East Asia
25.01.2007 When Emerging Market MNCs Buy Abroad
25.01.2007 Dialogue in the Dark
25.01.2007 Ensuring Future European Growth
25.01.2007 Energy 2007: Generating Local Solutions
25.01.2007 Demystifying Productivity and Growth
25.01.2007 Joint Swiss-US Economic Commission: The Challenges Confronting World Trade Liberalization
25.01.2007 Depression
25.01.2007 Rules for a Global Neighbourhood in a Multicultural World
25.01.2007 Who Will Run the Internet?
25.01.2007 Stem Cells
25.01.2007 Japan: Beyond the Recovery, But What's Next?
25.01.2007 Introducing the Open Forum 2007
25.01.2007 The Big Re-think: Managing 21st Century Challenges
25.01.2007 Investing for Stability
25.01.2007 Journalism Is Dead - Long Live the Journalist
25.01.2007 Early Warning and Crisis Preparedness
25.01.2007 CNN Connects: Our Networked World
25.01.2007 Do State-Owned Enterprises Tilt the Playing Field?
25.01.2007 Managing India's Youthful Tide
25.01.2007 Making Sanctions Part of the Solution
25.01.2007 Regulation and Financial Market Competition
25.01.2007 Future Series: Making Tribal Dynamics Work
25.01.2007 CEO Salaries: How High Will They Go?
25.01.2007 From Private Giving to Social Investing: the New Philanthropreneurs
25.01.2007 Reveal Your True Colours
25.01.2007 The Scent of Success
25.01.2007 India and the Global Services Economy
25.01.2007 Dialogue in the Dark
25.01.2007 The Next Wave in Banking - the Unbanked
25.01.2007 Climate Change: A Call to Action
25.01.2007 Creating New Body Parts
25.01.2007 What Kind of World Does China Want?
25.01.2007 China, Japan, and Korea - Managing a New Power Centre
25.01.2007 Checkmate
25.01.2007 Future Series: Visualizing a Successful Enterprise
25.01.2007 Enough Is Enough - Israel and the Palestinian Territories
25.01.2007 Reverse Engineering the Brain
25.01.2007 Stopping the Spread of Nuclear Weapons
25.01.2007 Energy 2007: The New Era of Petropolitics
25.01.2007 What's on the Mind of Asia's New Business Giants?
25.01.2007 Billions in Development Aid: What Are the Results?
25.01.2007 China as a Global Partner - A Conversation with
25.01.2007 The M&A Landscape: Developing the 2007 Heatmap
25.01.2007 Dinner and Jazz
25.01.2007 Whither European Identity?
25.01.2007 The Art of Investing in Art
25.01.2007 The Future of the Dollar
25.01.2007 Science and Spirituality
25.01.2007 The Global Playing Field for Intellectual Property Rights
25.01.2007 The Role of Religion in International Relations
25.01.2007 Classic Clarets
25.01.2007 Can Markets Save the Planet?
25.01.2007 The Changing Military Calculus on the Korean Peninsula
25.01.2007 How Red Is Your Tape?
25.01.2007 Me, Myself and My Identity
25.01.2007 Governing the Multifaceted Citizen
25.01.2007 Emerging Nutrition Markets
25.01.2007 Pricing China's Demographic Trends
Date Title
26.01.2007 The World Electronic Community (WELCOM) Interactive Platform
26.01.2007 Who Will Shape the Agenda?
26.01.2007 A Conversation with President Lula da Silva of Brazil
26.01.2007 Is Freedom Overrated?
26.01.2007 Dialogue in the Dark
26.01.2007 The Procreation Choice
26.01.2007 CEO Series: Collaborate to Innovate
26.01.2007 In China, Does Big Equate to World Beater?
26.01.2007 Housing Deflation: What's That Hissing Sound?
26.01.2007 Privacy: Your Life as an Open Book
26.01.2007 Who Funds Research and Innovation?
26.01.2007 Engineering Nature's Power Solutions
26.01.2007 Finding a Stable Future for Iraq
26.01.2007 Technology for a Healthy Future
26.01.2007 How Cities Drive Innovation
26.01.2007 Wisdom of Youth
26.01.2007 Simple Solutions to Complex Problems
26.01.2007 Hedge Fund Transparency
26.01.2007 Africa's Emergence as a Vital Strategic Interest
26.01.2007 Sustaining China's Next Stage of Development
26.01.2007 Science and Development
26.01.2007 CEO Series: Globalization at a Crossroad
26.01.2007 BBC World Debate: Climate Change
26.01.2007 New Blood for Industrialized Societies
26.01.2007 The Human Lifespan
26.01.2007 Emerging Markets: Whose Standards Apply?
26.01.2007 ASEAN's Economic Roadmap
26.01.2007 Mexico and US Immigration Politics
26.01.2007 India's Reform Agenda
26.01.2007 The Responsibility of the Moderates
26.01.2007 Sustainable Energy Consumption: Does Anyone Care?
26.01.2007 African Agriculture: Ready for a Revolution
26.01.2007 Derivative Markets, Mounting Worries
26.01.2007 Investment Fund Activism
26.01.2007 Making Brazil Grow Better
26.01.2007 Managing Risk in Megaprojects
26.01.2007 Fighting Low-Profile Diseases
26.01.2007 Executive Pay and Performance
26.01.2007 The Gulf States as an Emerging Financial Hub
26.01.2007 The G20 Agenda - A New Power Equation
26.01.2007 How Much Should the Industrialized World Spend on Healthcare?
26.01.2007 Nuclear Fusion: An Energy Source for Tomorrow
26.01.2007 The Gulf Cooperation Council Countries and the World: Scenarios to 2025
26.01.2007 Dialogue in the Dark
26.01.2007 Pioneers and Pitches: The Next Big Thing
26.01.2007 Relationships and Self-Esteem
26.01.2007 The Next Limits to Growth
26.01.2007 A Business Manifesto for Globalization
26.01.2007 Strategies for a New Power Equation
26.01.2007 Is Bigger Better in Private Equity?
26.01.2007 The User Takes Charge of Content
26.01.2007 Energy 2007: Advancing the US Energy Agenda
26.01.2007 CEO Series: Finding Future Talent
26.01.2007 Future Series: The Future of Urban Mobility
26.01.2007 A Conversation with H.M. King Abdullah II of Jordan
26.01.2007 The Battle against Cancer - A Progress Report
26.01.2007 Scaling Innovation in Foreign Aid
26.01.2007 Hurricanes, Heatwaves and High Seas
26.01.2007 Rebalancing Risk in Financial Markets
26.01.2007 The Price of Becoming Old
26.01.2007 Latin America Broadens Its Horizons
26.01.2007 A Conversation with President Calderón-Hinojosa of Mexico
26.01.2007 Delivering on the Promise of Africa
26.01.2007 Managing Access to Oil: The Risk of the 21st Century
26.01.2007 Convergence on the Move
26.01.2007 ASEAN's 40 Years - A New Future
26.01.2007 Building Sustainable Post-Conflict Environments
26.01.2007 Wealth, Passion and Succession
26.01.2007 Dinner and Jazz
26.01.2007 Turkey's Political Future
26.01.2007 The Singles Economy
26.01.2007 Globalization and the Middle-Class
26.01.2007 Health in the City
26.01.2007 Time for Tough Choices in Latin America
26.01.2007 Cultural Leaders Dinner
26.01.2007 The Influence of the Gaming Generation
26.01.2007 Who's the Teacher
26.01.2007 The State of US Leadership
26.01.2007 Eclectic Fine Wines
26.01.2007 Combating Counterfeiting and Criminal Syndicates
26.01.2007 Entering a New Age of Human Space Flight
26.01.2007 Russia's More Muscular Diplomacy
26.01.2007 Western Europe's Eastern Neighbours
26.01.2007 Nobel Nightcap
Date Title
27.01.2007 Voices from Iran
27.01.2007 What Is Today's American Dream?
27.01.2007 The Global Economic Outlook 2007
27.01.2007 The Future of the Middle East
27.01.2007 The City: Managing Rapid Urbanization in Developing Economies
27.01.2007 Future Series: Designing Sustainable Cities
27.01.2007 Managing Hyper-growth Corporations
27.01.2007 Building Health Systems in Developing Markets
27.01.2007 Checkmate
27.01.2007 Genetic Screening: Seeing the Future?
27.01.2007 The Commodities Boom - Structural or Cyclical?
27.01.2007 Can Central Banks Manage Global Financial Risks?
27.01.2007 CEO Series: Surviving Information Epidemics and Managing Reputation Risks
27.01.2007 A Blueprint for Human Settlement of the Solar System
27.01.2007 Modern Russia: Strengths, Challenges and New Prospects - A Perspective from the Government
27.01.2007 The Fate of the Universe and the Search for Life
27.01.2007 Modern Russia: Strengths, Challenges and New Prospects - A Perspective from Business
27.01.2007 Presentation of the Crystal Award
27.01.2007 Buffet Lunch
27.01.2007 Future Series: Living in a Connected World
27.01.2007 Is the Multicultural Society an Illusion?
27.01.2007 CEO Series: Energy Strategy as a Competitive Advantage
27.01.2007 Combating Corruption
27.01.2007 Pandemics: Monitoring a Risk in Hibernation
27.01.2007 China Gets Innovative
27.01.2007 The Impact of Web 2.0 and Emerging Social Network Models
27.01.2007 The Emerging Strength of Emerging Markets
27.01.2007 Global Challenges
27.01.2007 Religion: Source of Peace or Cause of Violence and War?
27.01.2007 Closing Plenary
27.01.2007 Frozen Trade Talks and the Need for Progress
27.01.2007 New Frameworks for Tackling Digital Piracy
27.01.2007 Brands: Today's Gods?
27.01.2007 Concert
27.01.2007 Concluding Remarks on the Open Forum 2007
27.01.2007 The Gala Soiree

That's the agenda - do you think there may be anything of value to Newfoundland and Labrador here?

Selected Participants representing Canada are:
Jean Charest - Premier of Quebec - Canada
David Emerson - Minister of International Trade - Government of Canada


What is Charest participating in?