Oh yes, there'll be a smelter for sure in Labrador.
Aluminum prices hit a three year low.
Perfect time for a company to hit up a willing government for some Valdmania cash.
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The real political division in society is between authoritarians and libertarians.
Oh yes, there'll be a smelter for sure in Labrador.
Aluminum prices hit a three year low.
Perfect time for a company to hit up a willing government for some Valdmania cash.
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The provincial government's business department is tossing $325,000 at an international, private sector information technology company so the company can create 10 new jobs over the next five years.
$325 K
10 jobs
Five years.
Do the math.
That's 32,500 per job, or $6,500 for each position for each of the five years.
That's pretty much on par with the current administration's plan to develop new jobs in the province by subsidizing with public sector cash.
Within the past two weeks, the provincial government did the same thing with more public cash for a private sector manufacturing business and its facility on the Burin Peninsula: $500 K for an extra 30 jobs and that's on top of the subsidies to get the workforce to its current level.
This use of public cash - including low cost power - for the private sector mirrors what was done here in the 1950s and 1960s in the disastrous Smallwood industrial development program.
It's an idea that was rejected in the 1992 Strategic Economic Plan. There's good reason for it. Subsidizing private sector businesses like this doesn't have the greatest record of success, at least when it comes to creating sustainable, competitive industries.
No small irony that the money for a software company - singled out by the auditor general - comes days after another software developer that relied heavily on public sector cash closed its doors.
Another recipient of provincial cash imploded just months after getting the cheque.
Major national cable and telecom companies aren't likely to fold, but they sure loved getting a massive cash injection from the provincial government to subsidize their expansion projects. The total cost of that one hasn't been calculated yet.
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In a late afternoon news release, the provincial government moved to increase its political control of the Memorial University board of regents.
Bob Simmonds - Jerome Kennedy's former law partner - is the new chair. Three of the remaining five appointments, like the new chair, all have strong ties to the ruling Provincial Conservatives. The last is the wife of the late principal of Grenfell College and therefore a supporter of the government's costly "autonomy" scheme.
These moves will ensure that cabinet's will is imposed the university.
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At left is a seating plan for the opposition benches in the current session of the House of Commons.
The seating chart is laid out from the perspective of the speaker, who would be positioned at the bottom edge. These seats are to his right.
As the largest opposition party, the Liberals sit closest to the speaker's chair. Next come the Bloc Quebecois and at the top of this picture - farthest away from the speaker - are the New Democrats.
The orange coloured squares show the members of parliament from Newfoundland and Labrador.
1. The Liberals are seated from front benches to rear in order of precedence, that is in the order they were elected. Thus, Gerry Byrne sits in the second row from the front (second column from the right in the picture). Todd Russell and Scott Simms come next and in the back are the three newbies, Judy Foote, Siobhan Coady and Scott Andrews.
2. That lone seat way down the back, right next to the door and almost the farthest away from the speaker of any seat in the Commons is Jack Harris. He may be in the front bench but, since the parties have largely done away with the old practice of seating shadow cabinet people on the front benches, Jack has a seat that means something only within the New Democrat caucus.
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A youth conference discussing ways of keeping young people in the province.
A speech by the Premier, including the comment:
"It is by making sound choices in the coming years, both individually and as one team, that we will be able to remove the word 'outmigration' from our vocabularies in the same way that we removed the word 'have-not,' " Williams said during a speech.
That quote from a CBC news story includes comments from two participants, one of whom uses very familiar phrases:
"I don't think it needs to be Alberta wages," Snow said. "I'm not looking for Alberta. I love Newfoundland and Labrador and I love St. Anthony. I just want to stay — Newfoundland is home."
The old homing pigeon drive.
or these comments from the voice of the cabinet minister version:
Twenty year old St. Anthony native Kara Snow says Newfoundland and Labrador is a proud strong determined province and the people here have a lot of things to show that.
Jonathan Earle from Red Bay, Labrador says he thinks the Youth Retention and Attraction Strategy is a step in the right direction.
Proud. Strong. Determined.
Nothing like a political party slogan or, for that matter, a fellow attending the conference.
And Kara and Jonathan are, evidently just two young people attending this conference, they being typical of young people across Newfoundland and Labrador who are, quite naturally interested in these things on a go forward basis.
Typical they might be but they do have a couple of features that make them stand out, features left out of the news stories.
Like the fact that the conference or summit was by invitation only, meaning that those in attendance were selected by the provincial government and its hired consultant. Not so much a gathering of people driven by their own interests as much as a carefully selected group. Carefully selected according to some unknown criteria; perhaps their ability to spout talking points or their enthusiasm for the official views.
Certainly it is not for new ideas since the original news release and the stuff just recently speaks of discovering what young people are prepared to give up. Government is apparently less interested in creating an environment that promotes excellence and accomplishment and more one based on "an understanding of the trade-offs and choices young people are prepared to make."
The homing pigeon policy.
We can solve outmigration, to go back to the Premier's speech, not by innovation and creativity but by figuring out how little people are prepared to settle for. Or in Kara's construction, people should expect to make less money since she does not want "Alberta", she wants something else, called Newfoundland and Labrador.
How edifying a notion.
How far the opposite of "have" could one get when by the very words they use the Premier and the people at his conference accept notions that limit everyone to accepting less than might be attained elsewhere.
This is fundamentally the opposite of the approach set by government, based on genuine consultation, in the years when most of these young people were toddlers, in diapers or not even thought of. The 1992 strategic economic plan - Change and challenge - set as its vision "an enterprising, educated , distinctive and prosperous people working together to create a competitive economy based on innovation, creativity, productivity and quality."
There was no need to ask young people what it would take to get them to stay here. For the most part, people leave because elsewhere offers greater personal and financial opportunities. The solution to ending outmigration lay in creating a province in which wealth - genuine "have" status - could be found at home. Creating wealth - the synonym is "prosperity" - came from unleashing talent and creativity, of daring against the best in the world.
In 1992, staying in Newfoundland and Labrador did not have to mean compromise. In 2008, compromising, settling, accepting less is the stated foundation of government strategy. In 1992, compromise was rejected; in 2008, it is embraced.
But then there is the other bit about Kara and Jonathan and likely a bunch of others at the session. These are not just any young people but part of the group selected already by the provincial government to work with the consultants:
A Youth Advisory Panel will provide ongoing advice on the project’s research design and the development of materials such as dialogue workbooks.
This project seems less about research, of finding out what people want and more about confirming a pre-determined set of ideas, of guiding people along a path.
Certainly, if the familiar phrases used by the conference organizers and presented as ostensibly unvarnished opinion is any guide, the strategy is working.
It's always the stuff they don't tell you that is more revealing.
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From the Canada-Newfoundland and Labrador Offshore Petroleum Board [format changed from original]:
The Canada-Newfoundland and Labrador Offshore Petroleum Board today announced the results of the 2008 Calls for Bids NL08-1 and NL08-2 for exploration rights in the Newfoundland and Labrador Offshore Area. Bidding closed on November 14, 2008 and successful bids were received on all five parcels offered totaling $129,892,000. Three of the successful bid parcels are located in the Central Ridge/Flemish Pass and two are located in the Jeanne d’Arc Basin.
The bids represent the expenditures which the bidders commit to make in exploring the parcels during the initial five-year period of a nine-year term Exploration Licence. If companies discover significant quantities of petroleum resources as a result of the exploration work, they may then seek a Significant Discovery Licence from the C-NLOPB. Any Significant Discovery Licences issued in respect of lands resulting from these Exploration Licences will be subject to rentals which will escalate over time.
The following bids have been accepted:
NL08-1 Flemish Pass:
- Parcel 1 (138,200 ha) - Husky Oil Operations Limited 40%, Petro-Canada 40%, Repsol Exploracion S.A. 20%: $18,600,000
- Parcel 2 (134, 227 ha) - Husky Oil Operations Limited 67%, Repsol Exploracion S.A. 33%: $1,188,000
- Parcel 3 (55,954 ha) - StatoilHydro Canada Ltd. 65%, Husky Oil Operations Limited 35%: $18,724,000
No. NL08-2 Jeanne d’Arc:
- Parcel 1 (19,430 ha) - Petro-Canada 50%, StatoilHydro Canada Ltd. 50%: $81,900,000
- Parcel 2 (121,348 ha) - Husky Oil Operations Limited 67%, Repsol Exploracion, S.A. 33%: $9,480,000
Subject to the bidders satisfying the requirements specified in the Call for Bids and Ministerial approval, the Board will issue an Exploration Licence for each of the five parcels in January 2009. The licences will be for a term of nine years, with an initial period of five years.
Media contact: Sean Kelly APR, Manager, Public Relations (709)778-1418//(709)689-0713// skelly@cnlopb.nl.ca
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1. Consilient Technology, a success story in the local information technology sector closed its doors today. The office is closed and the furniture is gone, according to CBC news.
In his report for 2006, issued early in 2008, Auditor General John Noseworthy raised concerns about the conditions attached to an infusion of provincial public money.
2. Wabush Mines is slashing production in response to the global economic downturn. Production forecast for 2009 is about half of what it was in 2007/2008. Layoffs are expected.
Other factors are influencing the Wabush Mines decision in addition to the demand drop:
"We are now going through the most difficult time in the history of Wabush Mines, with, from what I perceive to be, an unfavourable work climate at the plants, the worst cost structure in North America and a plant that is aged," he said.
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Petition to strengthen democracy in Newfoundland and Labrador, by someone named Ursula Dowler.
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How very strange that Michael Ignatieff, the candidate who says the Liberal party needs to change, is the very guy looking to bar media access to a leadership candidate's debate in Mississaugua.
Red Tory's account is simple. Your humble e-scribbler has some slightly more detailed ones but they all fit in the same space:
Michael Ignatieff is the wrong person to lead the Liberal Party.
Period.
Looks like you'll be hearing that simple refrain quite a bit from this corner over the next few months.
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This effort to link Danny Williams and Barack Obama has reached some pretty silly points already.
First there was the rip-off/homage/"inspired by" video thingy using a speech Danny Williams delivered to a Tory fund raising dinner [c'mon ad agency video guys, who paid for the speech viddying in the first place?]
Now I.P. Freely, the low-rent local cross between "V" and Benny Hill is pushing posters, based on an iconic image of Obama, left.
Now it's not like this poster hasn't inspired some knock-offs already, including some truly fine ones.
It's just that surely someone can come up with an original idea, even if it is a parody.
What with the official government pollster in the field and what with a video taken at the Provincial Conservative $500 a plate fundraiser circulating (who paid for the video gig, guys?), don't believe for one second that it hasn't gone unnoticed among the thumb clickers on the Hill that the initial "Danny did it" spin on the Inco smelter story is pretty much dead.
It wouldn't be surprising to find that one entire office-load of Blackberries has been sent back for replacement what with the buttons pressed through the casing from all the frantic texting that is surely going on. It's not like they didn't organize one of the most intense pitcher plant deployments in over a year to try and forestall any possible slippage in the numbers collected by the official government pollster.
The pitcher plant story line got right down to Bill Rowe and the infamous Tony sharing their beliefs that had the entire Voisey's Bay deal from start to finish was, in point of fact, due entirely, solely, totally and utterly due to the singular magnificence unprecedented on the planet of the guy who paid Bill Rowe's tab in Ottawa.
But no matter how hard they tried to drown it, the truth about Voisey's Bay surfaced and people acknowledged that the Voisey's Bay was a good thing and the Premier really had very little to do with it then or now.
Even Roger Grimes got in a few licks of his own in the process:
"It was a good deal for Newfoundland and Labrador from start to finish, regardless of what the Opposition was trying to say," he said.
"Mainly, Danny Williams [was] trying to suggest it was full of loopholes and so on, which has proven so far definitely not to be true," Grimes said.
Not true?
That's putting it mildly.
The better part of seven years after he first started talking about loopholes and problems neither Danny Williams nor his deputy nor anyone else has shown the loopholes, problems or other weak spots in the Voisey's Bay deal Danny Williams claimed were there.
That's because - evidently - they don't exist.
If they did, Danny Williams would produce them.
Ultimately, that is the giant bluff that wound up being called this week much to the chagrin of Bill, Tony and bunch of others.
And all those thumb clickers, they discovered that no matter how hard you press those keys, eventually the truth gets out.
People understand that stuff you pay for that says you did a good job is nowhere near as persuasive or gratifying as having people - of their own accord - tell you that in hindsight you were right and they were wrong.
They can press your thumbs as hard as they like and you can't change that.
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From the Globe and Mail editorial on Friday:
In his somewhat ruthless takeover of much of his party's organization, Mr. Ignatieff has also demonstrated a knack for the more hard-nosed aspects of party politics – or at least the ability to attract organizers and backroom veterans capable of doing the heavy lifting. Among Mr. Dion's many problems was an inability to rally his party behind him; Mr. Ignatieff, who seems to be amassing high-profile supporters by the day, would be less likely to suffer that fate.
Now this takeover didn't happen within the past couple of days. It must have happened over the past couple of years. That is, Iggy's crew had to take over key positions while Dion was still leader.
And if that's the case, little surprise then that Dion had an "inability to rally his party behind him".
And if that's the case, then it's little surprise that the party didn't do very well at the polls recently what with all the Iggy people in charge of everything and their not really convinced of Dion's leadership in the first place.
Might that explain some candidates less than enthusiastic performance during the election, including turning up as star players in Conservative attack releases?
Hmmm.
Something didn't add up all along.
But it's starting to.
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While rookie member of parliament Siobhan Coady leaped past considerably more experienced caucus mates to get a post as the fisheries and oceans critic (and good on her), the last Dion shadow cabinet seems to be a case of sticking the Newfoundlander in charge of the fish.
Sure Coady has a family business in the fishery and therefore knows something about things that live in the ocean and the people who make a living - such as it is in most cases - from it.
But for far too long, Newfoundland and Labrador has been politically regarded as the home of fish and whine.
Count up the number of times fisheries and oceans in any party has gone to a Newfoundlander since 1949 either as minister or as an opposition critic. You'll quickly get the point.
There are more than a few substantive problems with this of course.
First, there is an inherent conflict of interest in putting in charge of the fisheries department a politician with ties to the fishing industry. That no one seems bothered by this is a sign that the fishing industry has no political clout in the country even though it is a significant economic sector in several provinces.
Second, there is an even greater conflict created by putting in charge of fisheries (or acting as the critic) any politician from a province where the fishery is less a business than a Frankenstein exercise in social engineering.
The tinfoil hat brigade, the anti-Confederate sasquatch hunters will leap forward to blame the evil machinations of "Ottawa" for the plight of the local industry. The sad reality is that the current mess is entirely the construction of the political, social and business interests of Newfoundland and Labrador, over successive generations, who have forestalled, undermined and otherwise opposed any real and positive reform.
In Newfoundland and Labrador, the fishery is a cult. As with any cult, it has its high priests who will rush to the temple altar - in this case the local open line shows and fisheries broadcast - to declare any reformer as a traitor, as a heretic. It is an inbred cult where satisfaction comes from shagging your own. Onlookers are distracted from the spectacle by the claim that outsiders have covetous designs on the defiled or that foreigners need to be driven from what is left of the sanctuary.
Of course, there is also the third problem, namely the perpetual death struggle between local and national politicians. Williams penchant for whining and his love of personal attacks first on Loyola Hearn and then Fabian Manning, only added to the problem lately and gave the Conservative death struggle its unique characteristics. Theirs is just the latest racket, though, in what has been, essentially, an interminable struggle.
Consider, if you will, two groups of politicians sitting in a meeting room, discussing not how best to help unshackle the legion of wage-slaves chained to the splitting tables, but rather jockeying to avoid being the one to take the political flack from the cultists.
If any political party in Canada had any real interest in the people involved in the fishery, they would never appoint anyone from this province to serve as fisheries minister or as critic of the department. Nor would they appoint someone from a neighbouring fisheries provinces who does little more than mouth the worship words of the local cultists.
And if any politician from this province wanted to do anything for the fishery other than perpetuate the misery in it, he or she would refuse any political responsibility for it either in cabinet or opposition. Better leave the job to someone not already seduced by the cultists.
Sadly, in the the New Democratic opposition and now the Liberal shadow cabinet, we have the same old cycle repeating itself once again.
As far as this appointment goes, Siobhan Coady has done alright for herself; it's quite a plum and we get a fresh face on the scene.
But for the fishery?
We'd venture there'll just be more of the same.
Wait.
What's that on the wind?
Could it be a news release on custodial management?
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From a news release by government House leader Joan Burke in an announcement that the provincial legislature would re-open for its fall sitting on November 25th:
The sitting of the legislature is an important part of our democratic process.
Yes it is.
Well, it would be if the opposition didn't have to shame Burke into making an announcement. In past years, the party house leaders shared information informally so that they could be properly prepared to engage in, as Burke puts it, "productive session with respectful and healthy debate on the legislative agenda". That's a pattern of non-partisan co-operation that dates back decades in the legislature.
Word from the hallways of the legislature is that so far Burke has shown her opposition counterparts the same regard as she's given to the Memorial University Act, the Memorial University board of regents and senate and university president Eddy Campbell. Her approach so far is pretty much in keeping with her small-minded approach to funding the opposition parties, well at least the Liberal one.
No indication would she give of when the House would open and so far no advance warning, in confidence, of what general areas would be coming up for debate. No indication that is until after opposition House leader Kelvin Parsons issued a news release pointing to "a continuous trend developing in this province that our current government will wait until the absolute last minute to open the legislature and then rush towards closure in the shortest time possible."
Still no word on the legislative agenda apparently nd Parsons is likely not holding his breath. Burke will probably let him know a couple of days beforehand.
Seems that Burke is playing the petty partisan game just as roughly as her boss does, but then again, contempt - whether for the traditions of the House or the legislature itself - is a hallmark of the current administration since it first took the government benches in 2003.
That's what makes Burke's references to the democratic process such a nose puller.
Expect the session to be shorter than normal, since the opposition is likely going to be pushing the government hard. Under the circumstances, given the stress from the financial hard times cabinet is wrestling with and given that Burke herself will come under scrutiny for her hand in the Memorial University mess, the government's real lack of regard for the legislature and the democratic process will shine through.
After all, that's what happened in December 2006 when they last faced some serious problems.
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From a comment by Wallace Ryan on a cbc.ca/nl story:
Despite the ugly words of Canadians, Newfoundlanders and Labradorians are finally closer to our dream of returning to those pre-WWI days when we were a rich nation full of promise and bravery.
I think it's time for us to reassert our nationhood and reclaim our heritage that has been sullied too long by Canadians. The only way we are to survive the demographic time bomb that threatens to make Newfoundland and Labrador second class citizens in this supposedly equal confederation is to reconstitute ourselves as an independent nation.
I'm sick of hearing our proud people maligned and mocked by our so-called fellow Canadians. I'm not a Canadian. I'm a proud citizen of the nation of Newfoundland and Labrador.
Free Newfoundland and Labrador.
Vive Newfoundland et Labrador Libre!
Ah yes, the glorious days before the Great War.
Political corruption, religious segregation, poverty, disease, health care and education that rivaled anything found in a modern underdeveloped country.
Such a glorious place that a huge portion of the first volunteers were rejected because they did not meet the minimum requirements of being 5 ft 2 inches in height with a chest measurement of 35 inches.
Sheer heaven!
We must free Newfoundland.
We must free it, that is, of such unashamed ignorance.
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A Lockheed Aircraft video of launch and recovery trials of a modified Marine Corps KC-130F Hercules on the aircraft carrier U.S.S. Forrestal (CVA-59).
This gives new meaning to carrier on-board delivery.
Only a few short weeks ago, Premier Danny Williams was claiming that Newfoundland and Labrador would be largely immune from the global economic crisis because it was protected by some sort of magical fiscal bubble.
On Thursday, Williams acknowledged that the bubble burst:
"But going out next year [2009] and the years forward … once you get into the $60 range, then you are starting to look at deficit situations."
Of course to anyone paying attention, Williams' magical bubble claim was preposterous:
New wells at White Rose and Hibernia will not restore oil output to the peak level, no matter what the price. Rather it merely slows the rate of decline.
Hebron is not around the corner. Even if it is sanctioned within the next twelve months, Hebron will not come on stream until sometime after 2018. At that point, it will merely replace White Rose, Terra Nova and Hibernia which by that time will have ceased production or be on the verge of being tapped out. One field cannot replace three.
Of course, we are already looking at deficits on a cash basis. Bond Papers readers have known that for months. There have been a series of posts highlighting economic forecasts of extremely poor growth in gross domestic product, forecasts that have only forecast even further shrinkage in the economy.
On top of that, however, several specific posts addressed in detail the factors contributing to the current and future economic problems to be faced:
That last one is only one major item which will add to the provincial government's financial burden. The money needed for the 5% shares of Hebron and White Rose, and possibly for a 10% share of Hibernia South will have to be borrowed, either from lenders or from the other partners. That debt is not optional any more and in the case of Hebron, there will be no revenue for at least a decade from that project which would make the debt self-sustaining.
Any cuts to government spending in the coming months and years will further tighten the local economy and consumer spending. The St. John's housing market, for example, is enjoying a boom built almost entirely on public spending. Some have credited projects like Hebron but since that project doesn't exist yet, it's hard for it to generate anything but marginal economic activity.
Nor has the St. John's market, for example, been buoyed by remittance workers. Some of the boom can be traced to that source but the major beneficiaries of migrant labour revenue have been in areas like Stephenville or the Great Northern Peninsula. St. John's remains a company town and the company is the provincial government. Hack its spending, either in salaries, programs or capital works and you hack into the local service and retail sectors. Hack into those sectors and consumer spending, another staple of government revenue, will decline as well.
Nor can the provincial government look to other construction projects to boost the economy. NLRC's refinery is dead. The gas facility is rumoured to be still on track but until sod is broken, it remains nothing more than speculation. Harvest Energy's expansion at Come by Chance has been shelved. The Lower Churchill project is also more talk than reality.
More than anything, the looming provincial government financial mess should put paid to the fairy tale that the current administration practices anything looking like prudent fiscal management. To the contrary, it has shown repeatedly that there is little if any strategic planning to its spending beyond the need to present the best face to the polls or to have spending match income.
The current administration ignored any criticisms of its approach and specifically. It emphatically rejected constructive alternatives to its spend-happy approach such as creating an investment fund from some non-renewable resource revenues.
A former finance minister once forecast annual deficits of a half billion dollars a year. His successor borrowed $1.0 billion to fund public sector pensions. The Premier himself committed to meet any future deficits with increased public debt.
By all appearances, he will get his wish.
The people of Newfoundland and Labrador will get the bill.
It didn't have to be this way.
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The wrong candidate the last time.
The wrong candidate this time.
The wrong candidate any time.
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ALCOA, the company that retained a lobbyist for two years on the Lower Churchill project, is slashing another 350,000 tonnes from its production in light of declining global demand for aluminum.
That brings the total ALCOA reduction to 615,000 tonnes this year, or 15% of the company's total production capacity.
Rio Tinto is reconsidering an $11 billion project in Saudi Arabia and Vale is also cutting output.
Aluminum prices have plummeted by more than 40 per cent to around $1,995 a tonne on the London Metal Exchange since July as demand from industries as far afield as aerospace and soda cans has shrivelled up.
Inventories held in LME warehouses have ballooned to 1.55 million tonnes, equivalent to more than half the yearly output of Australia, a major supplier.
“Cuts, such as the one by Alcoa, and the Chinese stimulus package, could help the market, but it will take time to work off the massive inventory build-ups,” Investec Resources analyst Darren Heathcoate said.
All of this pretty much makes speculation about an aluminum smelter for Labrador seem pretty far fetched.
Well, far fetched to people who aren't wearing tin foil hats.
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