If you could get Noob Bloc-NDP member of parliament Ryan Cleary for what he is worth and sell him for what he thinks he’s worth, you could wipe out the Greek national debt instantly.
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The real political division in society is between authoritarians and libertarians.
If you could get Noob Bloc-NDP member of parliament Ryan Cleary for what he is worth and sell him for what he thinks he’s worth, you could wipe out the Greek national debt instantly.
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In Quebec, Arcelor Mittal mines is looking to hang onto its industrial discount electricity rate of 4.5 cents per kilowatt hour even though the company didn’t delivered on its commitment to build a second pellet plant in the province.
The Parti Quebecois wants to make sure that the company processes as much of the ore it mines in Quebec rather than take it out of the province with a minimum of processing.
For those who may have missed it, this is where Churchill Falls electricity goes: discount electricity inside Quebec for residential and industrial consumers.
Ontario Power Generation will spend $600 million to have a consortium including SNC Lavalin refurbish Ontario’s nuclear generating stations.
In addition, the province has more than 2,000 MW of electricity from wind power either in production or in development.
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In a speech to the St. John’s board of trade this week, Nalcor chief executive Ed Martin dissed natural gas as a possible alternative to his expensive Muskrat Falls scheme.
According to the Telegram’s Wednesday edition – not online - Martin told the business audience that a 2001 study said there wasn’t enough demand on the island to justify a pipeline.
Sort of.
The 2001 study was premised on gas as a commercial development. As such, the study anticipated that any development would be by one of the existing oil companies.
They never considered that the provincial government would have cash enough to build a plant on its own, obtain the gas to develop it and charge the domestic market for whatever gas they used.
That’s basically what Nalcor is doing with Muskrat Falls. At a cost of 21 cents per kilowatt hour, Muskrat Falls isn’t economically feasible. The local market simply couldn’t take a new source of electricity that had a wholesale cost for electricity twice the existing retail cost of electricity in the market. The only way they can make Muskrat Falls work at all is through a complex series of deals and arrangements among interrelated companies that are all part of Nalcor and the provincial government.
So if Ed Martin wanted to be straight with his audience, he would have to compare apples to apples. And on that basis, natural gas is a lot cheaper than Muskrat Falls.
Plus, if Martin had wanted to give a full explanation using past studies, he’d have noted a 2005 study that put a price tag on development. Take the two together and you get a different picture from the one Martin - selectively – painted.
Second, according to the Telly, Martin told the audience that the oil companies had first dibs on the gas and they were re-injecting it to help oil production.
Again, Martin knows that he only gave his audience a fraction of the full story. White Rose has gas available today. They aren’t using it all to produce oil.
But here’s the really important part: it’s our gas. The provincial government can claim any quantity of gas it wants for payment of royalty in-kind.
Martin concluded, as the Telly reports, by insisting he and the gang at Nalcor weren’t dissing gas because they wanted to build a dam. They were pushing the dam because it was the right decision.
Two things come readily to mind. First of all, if that was so, Martin wouldn’t have to say it. The fact he has to insist that Nalcor isn’t biased suggests that he and his company and the other Muskrat Falls proponents have an enormous credibility problem.
And, second of all, they have a credibility problem because none of the project’s proponents can present a simple, concise and truthful account of why Muskrat Falls is better than the alternatives. Ed Martin’s presentation - with the same omissions and selective use of information we’ve seen from people like Wade Locke - couldn’t have made that any plainer.
After all, Ed Martin’s lengthy speech about natural gas isn’t what his vice president told the joint environmental review panel. As SRBP noted last year that “Nalcor dismissed natural gas as ‘purely hypothetical’ since the major oil companies have not identified a ‘viable business case’ (p. 20). Nalcor hadn’t considered natural gas at all.
They didn’t study it.
All this other stuff that Martin told the board of trade about natural gas? Well Nalcor started saying that only after people like your humble e-scribbler started pointing out that natural gas actually was viable and cheaper than the big dam in Labrador.
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The always provocative and informative labradore posted a chart on Wednesday showing the number of days the House of Assembly sat in each session since Confederation.
The information to make up the chart came from the legislative library, the group of people who provide information and research for the members of the legislature.
That period marked by the black band is the period in which the House typically sat for the greatest number of days. It runs from 1972 to 1996. For the 22 years before that and for the 16 years after that period, the legislature hasn’t sat more than 60 days a year.
There’s more. Since 1996 or so, the House has also sat for fewer days per week when it is in session. The members decided that they didn’t want to have a session on Friday mornings as the rules used to require. They decided to cancel the Friday sitting and add an hour to three of the other four days. Same number of hours, they explained, so there was no loss to the amount of time.
They just left out a couple of details. One of the biggest ones is that they chopped off a Question Period on Friday morning. That meant that the opposition parties had one fewer chance during the week to grill the government party. It also meant that House lost a day on which to debate legislation. While they theoretically had the same number of hours in total, the members actually cut off the amount of effective time they had for discussion.
They made a few other changes as well. Once upon a time, not so very long ago, members of the legislature would ask for information from government departments. They got them through something called Questions on the Order Paper. Departments were obliged to deliver the information, free of charge, and without much – if any – deletions or omissions.
The idea behind that was that the members of the legislature had an inherent right to inquire into what the government was doing with public money and how they were doing it. The legislature is supposed to be about more than a place for rackets and speeches. It’s supposed to be a place where the members found out stuff.
After all, the legislature is not the government. It is the place where the government goes to get permission to do things with the people’s money. They get the permission from the men and women the people elected to keep an eye on things. That’s the idea at the heart of democracy based on popular sovereignty. Power - the right to make decisions - comes from the people.
In any event, all that’s as maybe. In the late 1990s, the government and opposition cut a deal among themselves. Instead of asking questions on the order paper, the opposition agreed to submit access to information requests, which they would pay for out of the money they got to run the House. The government could then censor the documents as if the members of the House had no right to information other than what the ordinary punters could get.
Everyone had less work to do, the government could keep more information from the public and – don’t forget – they all agreed to give themselves extra cash to hand out in their districts as they saw fit and without receipt.
No one objected.
Not a one.
No one did anything to change any of it until 2006 and even then, the only reason they changed was because some of them got caught breaking the law. Even then the only thing that changed out of the convenient deal was the slush fund. All the other parts stayed in place.
It’s that sort of general understanding among the political parties - the back-room agreements among da b’ys - that helped create the current state of the House of Assembly.
What will be interesting to see in the new session that starts on Monday is whether the sort of easy relationship among the members will carry on.
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The review panel appointed by the offshore regulatory authority to review the Hebron development issued its report on Tuesday with a set of 64 recommendations attached.
Among them (bolding added):
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While she is telling others to stand by for tough budgets and tight times, Premier Kathy Dunderdale is planning to spend more than $3.0 billion in accumulated oil surpluses to build the Muskrat Falls dam.
Now that is no surprise to SRBP readers nor is it a surprise to people who’ve been paying attention to information disclosed as part of the public utilities board hearings into the project.
Nalcor boss Ed Martin confirmed it on Tuesday in a call to Randy Simms on VOCM’s Open Line. Here’s the relevant bit of the Simms and Martin exchange:
Randy Simms: Government of Newfoundland?
Ed Martin: And the Government of Newfoundland will also be putting some equity in as well. They’ll transfer cash to us to put in as equity.
Simms didn’t ask how much, but the amount is right there in Nalcor’s answer to a question from the PUB. CA/KPR-NALCOR- 20 includes a table that lays out the “Stakeholder Equity”. The only Nalcor stakeholder is the provincial government.
Note that it shows financing for the generating facility is 100% equity. The amounts shown in the column “Plus Equity Contributions” adds up to $2.853 billion. That’s the cash transfers Martin was talking about.
On the other side, the ledger shows another $460 million in equity – cash, that is – and that represents 25% of the cost of the transmission line.
What’s most interesting is that Martin didn’t discuss 100% equity with Simms, even though the Nalcor submissions to the PUB discuss it repeatedly. Martin said:
The 60 / 40 is generally what it is going to be. That may end up being 57 /43 or whatever. But it will be around that.
60% debt.
40% cash, that is equity.
Still, it would likely be safe to start from the premise that Nalcor’s calculations and the provincial cabinet’s endorsement of this project is based on having very little public debt, except on the transmission lines. That’s a pretty wild assumption, of course, given the provincial government’s miserable experience with delivering capital works projects on time and close to budget.
Still, if they think they can do it, Nalcor and the provincial government might be tempted to believe they can get the whole thing for cash on hand with only a few hundred million in borrowing. As Martin noted, Nalcor will use other revenue of its own – like from the equity stakes – to add more cash to the pile if need be.
That would also explain how they think they can keep electricity rates low. Without much of a debt load to repay, they can just cream of any profits. If things are worse than expected, the provincial government just won’t make any money back on the project at all. They’ll tell the punters that their great dividend from oil and gas is discount electricity.
You can see that kind of thing in Ed Martin’s closing remarks:
But any cash that goes into this project, any returns that come from it, are staying in the province and results in 100% ownership of an asset for the people of Newfoundland and Labrador, essentially forever.
Sounds wonderful.
Sounds marvellous.
Sounds fantastic until you realise that Martin knows that this project won’t sell electricity anywhere but inside the province.
That means that the people of Newfoundland and Labrador will pay for the Muskrat Falls project up front with their billions in cash from oil.
Then they will pay for all the electricity that comes from it, including the stuff shunted off to Nova Scotia for free.
In effect, the people of Newfoundland and Labrador will be paying themselves back for the money they borrowed from themselves in the first place.
In order to make that work and to keep the electricity prices at a rate people wouldn’t scream about, the provincial government and Nalcor plan to let the people of the province pay themselves back over the course of a half century.
Now you can understand that all this makes a bitter lie of the claim by project proponents that this project will have a revenue stream and pay for itself. The only “revenue” is what the ratepayers will pay annually for their electricity. As SRBP noted before, people will be forced to pay for the costs annually plus a profit because that’s the way the public utilities board sets electricity rates.
Don’t miss the point though - Muskrat Falls is not a revenue stream: it is a tax on the people who own the resource in the first place.
One can scarcely imagine or a more cynical political gambol with public money.
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Politics in Newfoundland and Labrador is about what the social scientists – like political scientists, for example - would call clientelism.
You may have heard it called patronage. Regardless of the word you use, the purpose is the same:
That isn’t just about giving party workers government jobs. It’s basically one element of a system in which citizens trade their status as citizens for that of being the client of a particular patron. The patron gets political power and the ability to dispense benefits of some kind. In exchange, the client gives the patron support.
In healthy democracies, the people govern themselves. They vote to elect some of their number to oversee the government. The citizens expect those representatives to deliver public works and services fairly to all on the basis of need. There is no question that the representatives work for the citizens and must be accountable to them.
For people who don’t live in healthy democratic societies, elections are a game in which they can “lose their vote”. What that means is that they could bet on the loser and as such not have any right to anything. People in those societies do not expect to see schools and hospitals built or roads paved in their area because it is their right to receive them. They expect them only because they voted for the party that won the election.
And, implicitly, they expect to be punished when they lose their vote.
There are no ideological or philosophical differences between political parties.
Liberal, Conservative, New Democrat.
Red, Blue, Orange.
Elections become little more than a case of auctioneering votes. Danny Williams himself raised the sale of votes to a new level in his now infamous begging letters to Ottawa. And what he was doing, in a sense, would hardly have shocked politicians from the Quebec of old that Williams was so fond of bashing. It’s doubtful he ever got the joke in that.
Patronage is how things have been in this province for a very long time. The only difference since 2003 is that the patronage is as unrelenting as the general indifference to it.
Road paving? Decided by a political staffer in the Premier’s office, an approach termed “normal” by the Premier of the day. The money was allocated in arbitrary amounts according to what way the electoral district had voted. Blue districts got one amount. Red ones got less.
The Premier of the day loses a by-election and bitches because people were not grateful for all the pork he’d delivered to them.
Whether we are talking about fire trucks or backbenchers handing out cheques from government programs, it’s all part of the same political thinking that in its most naked form delivered us the House of Assembly pork barrel funding scheme. Tories, Grits and Dippers all swam in the trough. Some of the newer ones elected after 2003 went at it worse than the crowd who’d been there a while. And they were unapologetic.
These sorts of societies thrive on the myth of the strong leader. They cannot govern themselves, so the story goes and as a result, they need some strong man - or woman – to do their thinking for them.
So prevalent is this sort of thinking in Newfoundland and Labrador that people don’t see it as odd at all. The news media seldom raise an editorial eyebrow.
So safely entrenched is this approach to politics that cabinet ministers these days can be pretty brazen about it. Here’s how Fairity O’Brien put it before the last provincial election, defending the government against accusations of patronage spending:
okay, so the question here in my district is, and I am only speaking for myself, do you want four more years of what you’ve just experienced in the last eight, or do you want to sit in the Opposition, or whatever it may be…
Or if that wasn’t enough for you, here’s Darin King, as reported by the Great Oracle in the Valley:
A cabinet minister is unapologetic for the rash of pre-election spending announcements coming from the government. The MHA for Grand Bank, Darin King, announced some money for health care recently. There has been a steady stream of news releases, most announcing money that had already been allocated in the budget, over the past several months.
On VOCM Open Line with Randy Simms, King said he is dedicated to bringing in as much money as he can to his district.
No one should be surprised, therefore, if the patrons decide to slap a vassal that is getting a bit uppity. The provincial government secured the silence of many the “advocacy” group these past few years with dollops of public cash for this program or that one. The FFAW was no exception.
Now that things have gotten a little tense in some circles and the FFAW and the NDP are playing rough, Darin King the fisheries minister has decided to stop the FFAW’s funding, as CBC reports.
And what’s more, Darin is pretty clear about why:
“It’s very, very tough to build a working relationship with a group that continues to criticize,” King said.
Now on one level this is just political sookiness from a gang of politicians who’ve never had to govern through a really tough period in their lives. Not that you’d know that, of course, for all the whining, moaning, bitching and complaining they and their Old Leader used to get on with.
But fundamentally, what King is displaying here is all the arrogant sense of entitlement to power, position and patronage that he and his colleagues have had since Day One. King is displaying the customary attitude of his party since 2003 to free speech.
They don’t like it.
The Telegram’s Russell Wangersky had a timely column, as it turned out, in the Tuesday edition of what was once the People’s Paper. He reproduces a relatively innocuous comment from a reader who wanted the letter published but only without a name attached to it. The writer feared he would face some sort of payback. As Wangersky put it:
The perception the letter-writer has, though, is clearly that reasoned debate is not without clearly perceived consequences in this province. Would there be retribution? I honestly don’t know. But there clearly should be a discussion about the fact that such a fear exists, if nothing else.
The provincial government admittedly has a long reach here: many are employed by it or have family members employed by it. Many businesses depend on the provincial government for some or even most of their business.
The fear of retribution is not new: whether it’s a reality or not is hard to know for sure. I know businessmen I’ve talked to in the province — and I’ve said this before — who are willing to talk a lot about Muskrat Falls in private, but who will never speak publicly.
Eight years of quisling hunts and savage personal attacks on “traitors” take their toll. Don’t be surprised if some members of the legislature may well be finding that groups that once welcomed them to meetings and events are now routinely disinviting them. They represent the wrong party.
So Darin King cut off the FFAW’s government funding because they’ve been too critical publicly.
If this surprises you then you are either a hypocrite or a very recent immigrant to the province. This is old news.
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In looking at by-elections in Newfoundland and Labrador, the second and third phases offer a neat cluster of by-elections in urban (metro St. John’s) and rural (everywhere else) districts.
Break those out and you get some information that shows the relative strengths and weaknesses of the parties, depending on where a by-election occurred during the period between 201 and 2011.
For starters, here is a reminder of the cost per vote results for the three major parties in all three time periods (phases).
Now let’s take a look at the second phase, that is, on the by-elections between the 2003 and 2007 general elections.
Three by-elections took place in what we can consider to be urban. They are Signal Hill-Quidi Vidi, Kilbride and Ferryland. The rural by-elections took place in Exploits, Placentia-St. Mary’s, Port au Port, Humber Valley, and Labrador West.
In the urban by-elections, the Conservatives average cost per vote was $8.98. The Liberals CPV was $15.71 and the NDP CPV was $18.17.
As much as we all assume that the New Democrats’ base of support is metro St. John’s, these CPV figures suggest otherwise. Now part of that high cost is attributable to the fact that the Tories hotly contested the seat when Jack Harris left for retirement in 2006.
But when you average the figure out the average cost per vote of the other two, you get $15.70. That almost exactly the same as the Liberals and their political infrastructure in the metro St. John’s area just shrivelled up to nothingness by 2007.
CPV is not a measure of actual effort of course. Parties in Newfoundland and Labrador don’t have to report all their efforts. Volunteer workers, for example, don’t show up as an expense in and of themselves. They show up when the party or the campaign has to foot their travel and accommodations bills.
That’s the kind of thing that happens to the Tories in rural Newfoundland. The Conservative Party itself spent more than $26,000 on campaign worker travel in the Labrador West by-election (2007). The by-elections in Ferryland and Kilbride cost the Tories only about $15,000 and $18,700 for example.
Labrador West essentially comprises two towns that are spitting distance apart. You would not have to spend $26,000 on travel unless you were flying people in from other parts of the province to work the by-election. Scan the by-election finance reports and you’ll see exactly the same kind of phenomenon in other Tory campaigns in rural Newfoundland.
Some call it “by-election-in-a-box” but what the Tories really do is maintain a team of campaigners they can drop into augment the local candidate’s effort. In addition, the Tories have a pattern of tapping into a regular pool of donors to help finance the given by-election. And again, it is part of a pattern of adding to the local campaign.
Contrast that with the Liberals, for instance. In any by-election, Liberal candidates are basically on their own. Sure there are some people who work by-election to by-election, and sure the party headquarters may toss some cash to a campaign.
But on the whole, Liberal candidates couldn’t count on the party for much of anything during the second and third phase by-elections. Two noteworthy exceptions to this were the Straits-White Bay North North and Terra Nova both of which took place in 2009 (Phase Three).
Incidentally, when people talk about the Liberal Party’s lack of organization and infrastructure, this is the kind of stuff they are talking about. This is the meat and potatoes of politics and the Tories know how to make a fine stew of it.
In Phase Three, you had three by-elections in the metro St. John’s are. Those are our urban set: Cape St. Francis, Topsail and Conception Bay East-Bell Island. The rural by-elections were in Baie Verte-Springdale, the Straits-White Bay North, Terra Nova and Humber West.
The Liberals’ urban cost per vote hit $22.50 in Phase Three. Spending dropped, on average, from about $9600 to a little under $7500 and the average vote went from 612 to $330.
NDP urban spending went from $14,412 to $11, 472 and the vote went from 793 to 751. The resulting CPV improved in Phase Three, reaching $15.27 compared to $18.17 in Phase Two.
The Conservatives CPV was $9.00. Their urban spending went up by about $2400 and the average vote went from 2370 (Phase Two) to 2741.
Conservative rural CPV dropped (marginally) from $23.07 to $22.25. Tory rural spending dropped by about $6,000 and the average vote dropped by 170 votes.
The New Democrats’ CPV in rural Newfoundland was $30.82 during Phase Three compared to $16.45 in Phase Two. The NDP increased their spending, on average by $1300 but their average vote dropped by 151. They spent 19% more, in other words, and got 36% less.
Liberal spending on rural by-elections increased by 70%, on average, in Phase Three compared to Phase Two. Liberal rural vote went up by four percent.
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Kennedy says the project has been well received and he doesn't anticipate problems with funding.He said.
Consumer Question: In the reply to PUB-Nalcor-1 46 regarding a cost of service (COS) price for Muskrat Falls power in year 1, Nalcor states that an internal rate of return (IRR) of 8.4% was used "On this basis the cost of service in year 1 would be $214/MWh".“Cost of service” is the usual way that the utilities board prices electricity. As the province’s natural resources department website puts it:
Legislation directs the PUB to use cost of service methodology to derive rates, allowing an appropriate rate of return on a rate base of allowed costs. The PUB determines the allowed rate of return according to financial market conditions.$214 per megawatt hour translates to – take a breath – 21.4 cents per kilowatt hour. Go get your ‘lecky bill if you need to see that you are paying about half that rate right now for what you get. When you stop hyperventilating, read on. The question continues:
(a) Is the cost of the TL [transmission line] from Labrador included in the $214 /MWH?Now comes the answer:
(b) If so, provide a breakdown of the $214 /MWh cost between the Muskrat Falls site and the TL.
(c) Provide the in service capital costs (separately for the Muskrat Falls site and for the TL) used to calculate the COS $214 MWh year 1 price.
(d) Please provide a breakdown on debt/equity ratios/interest rates/return on equity used for the $214 MWh cost (separately for Muskrat Falls site and TL).(e) Instead of using the 8.4% IRR, can Nalcor provide the COS Muskrat Falls power price in year 1 (for the Muskrat Falls site plus TL) using the same assumptions as used for TL COS pricing regarding debt/equity ratios same interest rate for debt and the same return on equity)?
A. (a) The cost of the Labrador Island Transmission Link is not included in $214 /MWh provided in response to PUB-Nalcor-46. The cost of service price in year 1 of operations is based on an 8.4% return on equity coupled with the sales profile for the Island to be comparable to Nalcor’s alternative pricing model for Muskrat Falls of $ 76 /MWh ($2010, escalating at 2% annually).So right away, Nalcor confirms that the 21.4 cents per kilowatt hour they have already given as the cost of service pricing does not include transmission.
(b) Please refer to Nalcor’s response to (a) above.
(c) The in-service capital cost for Muskrat Falls assuming an AFUDC rate of 8.4% is $3.6 billion.This part is a bit technical but here’s what it says. If you use a method called “allowance for funds used during construction” or AFUDC then the cost of the dam at Muskrat Falls is $3.6 billion.
(d) The key financial parameters used in the calculation of the alternative cost of service for Muskrat Falls were 100% and an 8.4% return on equity in order to maintain comparability with Nalcor’s pricing approach and model.Maybe that’s clear to super-duper insiders but when they asked for a group of ratios, Nalcor gave them two. The 8.4% is clearly identified as the return on equity or profit.
(e) In an escalating supply price analysis framework, leverage of 75% debt is not finance able because the initial low sales volumes and associated revenues would result in inadequate debt service coverage as required in capital markets. During the first 6 years of commercial operations there was insufficient cash flow for debt servicing as the debt service coverage ratio was below 1.0. For years 7 through 12, the debt service coverage ratio was below the minimum threshold of 1.4 times recommended by Nalcor’s financial advisors.Here’s the fun bit.
On Monday, the provincial public works department put a limit on the size of trucks that can go over the left bridge at Placentia.
This came after someone inspected the bridge.
Interestingly enough, the same department had a tender call out last May to replace the bridge they just put restrictions on.
A few months later - In August, 2011 to be exact - the department cancelled the tender because the only bidder came in almost $20 million above that they budgeted. Here’s what the release said would happen:
With the bid for this tender coming in so high, the department will immediately begin a full review of the existing bridge to provide more details around the exact condition of the current structure, and costing and potential years of service life for a rehabilitated structure. The review will also help determine whether the scope of work for a replacement structure can be revised to make the project more cost-effective.
Now being off budget and behind schedule is not new for provincial public works. In fact, since 2003, this sort of stuff is the norm.
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For those who may have seen natural resources minister Jerome Kennedy’s handful of tweets selectively paraphrasing bits of the American president’s speech, here’s the whole thing, via whitehouse.gov.
Take a few minutes and listen to the speech. Read the transcript. The context of Obama’s words are important if you want to get the full and correct meaning.
…high gas prices are like a tax straight out of your paycheck…
That’s the central problem as Obama lays it out right at the beginning. High gasoline prices hurt Americans. They hurt them at home and they hurt them at work.
Obama proposes a strategy:
If we’re going to avoid being at the mercy of these world events, we’ve got to have a sustained, all-of-the-above strategy that develops every available source of American energy. Yes, oil and gas, but also wind and solar and nuclear and biofuels, and more.
Rather than develop just one energy source, Obama wants to develop a range of energy sources.
And then he points to the need for efficiency and conservation:
We need to keep developing the technology that allows us to use less oil in our cars and trucks, less energy for our buildings and our plants and our factories -- that’s the strategy we’re pursuing. And that’s the only real solution to this challenge.
Conservation is a route that the current Conservative administration and Nalcor specifically reject as part of a package of ideas to meet the province’s energy needs.
Just like they specifically reject balanced budgets and reducing the debt as a way of reducing the debt. Sounds stupid when you say it like that, but that is their policy. They want to keep spending more than we are taking in.
Their solution to the province’s energy needs is a megaproject that will increase the public debt.
Go on a little further in the speech and you’ll see something else:
We’re taking every possible action to develop, safely, a near hundred-year supply of natural gas in this country -- something that experts believe will support more than 600,000 jobs by the end of the decade.
Newfoundland and Labrador has enough natural gas offshore to run a Holyrood-sized electricity plant everyday, all day for a century.
The gas is cheap and it’s readily available. A natural gas plant that could produce more electricity than Muskrat Falls would cost less than half as much.
The natural gas plant would produce electricity when we need it and more besides. Muskrat Falls will produce its peak in two months of the year when we don’t need it and no one else will buy it. In the mid-winter when we need the electricity, Muskrat Falls won’t be able to meet provincial needs and supply the commitment to Nova Scotia.
When you are an energy-rich province with abundant natural resources, you use the cheapest ones to meet your own needs. The only people who don’t want to develop natural gas offshore Newfoundland and Labrador are the oil companies…and their best friend, the provincial government.
Obama calls it the “all of the above strategy”.
The provincial government in Newfoundland and Labrador has an idea.
They’ve got a vision.
Unfortunately, it’s tunnel vision.
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Energy analyst Tom Adams is at it again.
He’s sent a bunch of technical questions to the consumer advocate to ship along to Nalcor about the Muskrat Falls proposal.
Let’s see what happens.
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Headline on a news release issued on Wednesday by the provincial government:
Budget 2012 Investments Will …
And in the first paragraph, you get this line:
Budget 2012 will allocate $1.4 million…
So if they can announce some budget details in February, they can release the rest of it, too.
No excuses.
Let’s have it.
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Jack Swinimer is a resident of Holyrood.
He’s a retired bank official.
He’s also a big Tory supporter who calls open lines shows regularly to talk up his team or, more importantly, talk down anyone else.
With Muskrat Falls on the go at the public utilities board, no one was surprised to see Swinimer on the line-up for the last day of the board’s public hearings on the set-up question Jack’s pals sent over to the board.
Jack admonished the board not to be swayed by ex-politicians, bloggers and…wait for it…open line callers.
Not content to blow his own foot off with that one, Swinimer also decided to tried some facts and logic.
Sadly for the enthusiastic Swinimer, his other comments got no further than the open line caller thing.
Jack used his career in banking to solemnly declare that borrowing money to build a thermal replacement for Holyrood would be a bad idea. On the other hand borrowing for his friends’ favourite would be good. Muskrat Falls would pay for itself, he declared because it would generate revenue.
Sadly for Swinimer, nothing could be further from the truth. Either Muskrat Falls or a thermal replacement for Holyrood would generate revenue and “pay for itself”. That’s because both projects would sell their power in Newfoundland and Labrador.
Swinimer went off the rails because he paid attention to his Tory talking points and ignored those other sources, all of whom have explained – in detail – how Jack’s pals propose to generate “revenue at Muskrat Falls.
Some of the sources Jack ignores have actually demonstrated why no one is interested in buying Muskrat Falls power: It’s too expensive, especially when compared to what they get from really cheap and plentiful …yes, you guessed it…natural gas.
Jack also claimed that while natural gas might be useful one day, right now it isn’t available. He didn’t cite any evidence to back his claim. He just stated it as if it was true.
Too bad for Jack that natural gas is available today and it is cheap.
Cheaper than Muskrat Falls.
Tune in later this morning when Jack will likely be on open line again.
Don’t ignore him. Jack’s comments are always interesting, even if they have an alarming tendency to blow up in his own face.
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A year ago, he was running down politicians who host town halls for their constituents.
He called himself a s#*t-disturber for saying it.
Now that he’s got the job, noob Bloc-NDP member of parliament Ryan Cleary is all there for hosting them.
What does that make Ryan now?
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One measure of campaign efficiency and effectiveness is comparing the amount a campaign spends for the number of votes it receives.
It’s called cost-per-vote.
Here’s a comparison of the cost per vote for each of the three political parties in a string of by-elections over the past three years. From left to right, they are:
Basically you judge CPV this way: the lower the number, the better. No matter whether your party is the incumbent or one of the outs, you want to spend as little money as possible to get your votes in the box. That just reflects a basic notion about spending money efficiently. Money, like people and time, is precious.
Just so that you don’t get turned around here, we are not talking about winning or losing. Spending the most per vote doesn’t necessarily guarantee success at the polls. In fact, you can spend the most per vote and get clobbered.
In the four by-elections they won, the Tories spent the least amount per vote compared to the other parties. In three of the by-elections, the variation was marginal. In Humber West, for example, the Conservatives spent $21.50 per vote compared to the Liberals $23.48. The New Democrats spent $28.29.
In the one by-election in this series they lost (Straits-White Bay North in 2009), the Conservatives spent $30.96 per vote compared to $19.61 per vote for the Liberals. The NDP spent $37.50.
Take a look at the three by-elections in between those two extremes and you’ll see other extremes. The Tory CPV in Topsail was a mere $6.15. In Terra Nova it was $11.53.
One of the reasons for this is that the Tories didn’t have to ship in large numbers of campaign workers a long distance from St. John’s in order to effect the win. In both Humber West and the Straits, the Tories’ centrally controlled campaign system meant they had to pay cash to cover the travel and accommodations of their workers.
They didn’t have to do that in the two by-elections closest to Sin Jawns. And not surprisingly, that’s the two where the Tory CPV was less than 10 bucks.
As noted here after the Humber West by-election, the Tories poured a heavy effort into hanging onto the seat. Now that we have actual financial details, we can see that the Tories were relatively more efficient in CPV terms.
But notice how close together the three parties were.
That’s interesting.
It will get more interesting when you look at the trends in cost-per-vote over the past decade and a bit. That’s for another post.
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Related:
Twitter flame wars between cabinet ministers and Dale Kirby over Muskrat Falls.
Surely Darin, Jerome and Clyde have better things to do with their days.
Then again, maybe not.
But at the heart of the whole flare up was Lorraine Michael’s theatrical delivery of a letter to the public utilities board on Tuesday explaining she would not be making a presentation on Muskrat Falls.
Like they really gave a flying frig in the first place.
Right after she handed the envelope to someone from the utilities regulator, Michael took some questions from reporters.
Michael is in a bit of a political jam, you see. Tuesday’s little bit of a show was a way to try get out of it. Michael campaigned during the last federal election alongside Jack Layton. The provincial and federal NDP supported a loan guarantee for Muskrat Falls. Good for Newfoundland and Labrador (votes), as it seemed at the time, and definitely good for some votes in Nova Scotia.
That was then.
This is now.
In the meantime, public sentiment in the province has shifted against the project. Lots of people - lots of significant people – have turned up lots of significant problems with the deal. While Michael went along with the whole thing back in 2011 when she was the lone Dipper in the provincial legislature, she now has a caucus to contend with. Some of them don’t like Muskrat Falls.
Hence the softening of official Dipper support for the project.
But Michael still can’t get away from the unions. They love the project. Lots of public dollars to employ lots of unionised members and potential union members.
Want to know how strongly the union support the project? Check any comment by federation of labour boss Lana Payne. And when the unions want something, their political wing – Lorraine’s bunch – will have a hard time opposing them. All of this allows for big internal divisions in the NDP caucus and that’s without getting into the egos and the ambition.
Part of what you saw in the Twitter fight on Tuesday was the Tories pounding on a wedge issue: the NDP position on da Falls. And they were hammering the wannabe leader, Dale Kirby. He gets on Tory nerves, big-time, for a whole raft of reasons. There were lots of school-boy taunts about getting him in the House where people would see the Dippers for what they are. Yada, yada yada, blah, blah, blah.
All that bravado doesn’t get away from the fact that the only caucus more fractured than the Dipper one is the Tory crew. They’ve got splits over the fishery and the budget and Muskrat Falls.
What’s more, Kathy Dunderdale has no control over her cabinet, let alone her caucus. One day after she says that people have to put their egos aside and stop playing the blame game so everyone can sort out the fishery, former fisheries minister Clyde Jackman is out there playing the blame game on province-wide radio.
So amid all the bluster and fury on Tuesday between the Tories and the Dippers lots of things were not as they seem.
Go read Lorraine’s letter, for example.
In effect, it is a submission to the commission review of the Muskrat Falls project. You see, if Lorraine really didn’t want to participate in the whole exercise she just wouldn’t have shown up in the first place.
Instead she says that a presentation wouldn’t allow her to outline the NDP concerns. Then she outlines them without having to face any questions from the panel or Nalcor.
Oddly enough, the Liberal Party’s natural resources critic managed to sit in front of the commission and lay out substantive concerns.
In the letter, Michael states the NDP criteria for a successful project; economically viable, environmentally sustainable and beneficial to the province. Like anyone would propose an economically foolish and environmentally destructive project that would screw taxpayers to the wall.
And in the letter itself, she doesn’t say that the provincial NDP think the whole idea of the project is nutso. Lorraine basically says that there isn’t enough information and that there should be time for a more detailed review.
“We are not yet convinced…”
She doesn’t say “not convinced”.
Lorraine says not yet convinced.
The Big Tories who have come out against the project are saying they want a proper process. That’s so they can’t be accused of betraying the party. No one can mistake their meaning though, even if the actual words are soft. They know Muskrat Falls is ludicrous.
The NDP use coded language, too. But notice the difference between the Tory code and the Dipper code. With the NDP, you really can’t see an unequivocal rejection of the project. Lorraine left a hedge in her letter, the letter that is a submission to the review while claiming it isn’t a submission.
The one thing you can’t mistake though is the political turmoil in the province at the moment. If any of it erupts into the open, this could be an amazing year in local politics.
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Regardless of any change in the cost of other forms of energy,… we will have stability in this province that few parts of the world could depend on with the same reliability.
Did Premier Kathy Dunderdale say that? During the provincial election last fall, she told The Scope that Muskrat Falls is:
…i the way forward that will provide us a new energy we are going to need to run the place, but it will stabilize those energy prices because we don’t have the volatility of oil anymore.
In January 2012, she told the St. John’s Board of Trade that:
Our government firmly believes developing the hydro-power resources of the Lower Churchill is the key to a sustainable future for our province over the long term. Muskrat Falls is a venture that will pay for itself through lower energy costs, new export revenues and new opportunities for economic development here at home.
Maybe natural resources minister Jerome Kennedy tweeted it one day:
Hydro avoids the volatility of oil.
Might have been Nalcor’s Ed Martin:
Muskrat Falls translates to lower and stable rates for customers.
None of them did.
Premier Frank Moores said it in 1974 when local politicians first turned their attention seriously to developing the Lower Churchill. No matter what happens in other parts of the world, no matter what other technologies exist, hydro-electricity would be the future for Newfoundland and Labrador.
Economics had nothing to do with it, if you follow the comments from others involved in the project. As Philip Smith notes in his account of the development of Churchill Falls*, the Lower Churchill generated more power than the island part of the province needed in total. Environment and technology made difficult the task of running lines across the narrow gap between Newfoundland and the mainland.
The provincial government found some of the finest minds of the time, American consultants, to look at the project. They pronounced the scheme “economically viable and socially desirable.” Advances in underwater transmission in Scandinavia made the underwater link to the mainland a better bet than it might have been a decade earlier.
Moores was sold:
It is the intention of the provincial government to use power created from the Lower Churchill within the province only. It is clear to us that this position is in the best interest of all Newfoundlanders.
A second consulting firm, more smart minds from Winnipeg and Montreal, took on further studies. They predicted that there were “excellent prospects” for new industries to use the power. Their forecasts held that the whole 1800 MW output of Gull Island would be absorbed on the island by 1988. With the federal government helping to underwrite the project, the Canadian consultants predicted that island consumers would get the power for 14 mills per kilowatt hour, at a time when the going wholesale rate for power if sold to or through Quebec was less than eight mills.
The past weighs heavily on the mind of politicians in Newfoundland and Labrador. They go back to it regularly. Kathy Dunderdale, Jerome Kennedy, finance minister Tom Marshall, and the crowd at Nalcor have invoked the historical totems of Churchill Falls and Bay d’Espoir to justify their Muskrat Falls project.
What they are talking about is not the actual events, of course, but rather the imagined version of events they or others hold to be true. They are a form of cultural short-hand. They are metaphors for other ideas. They are coded speech.
What we are talking about here is not an academic abstraction, nor is it about competing interpretations – narratives, if you will – of local history. Newfoundland history, as used by politicians, is a living language.
But it is a language that has no basis on reality. It is entirely fictitious. The people who speak about the past are, like Paul Oram, fundamentally ignorant of the past. Oram was not an historical revisionist, as the title of that old post suggested. To be a revisionist requires a familiarity with both the events themselves as real occurrences and the competing stories of what those events mean.
Rather, Oram was a typical political actor of the modern Newfoundland stage. History for such an actor is not about concrete events involving people who behaved in the sort of complex world in which all of us live, simultaneously at the moment.
Their history is plastic. It can be moulded to suit any need.
Their history is not, to paraphrase Calvin, an exercise in interpreting the past to suit our current biases. Nor is history solid. Rather, history for them is air.
Former Premier Brian Peckford intruded into the Muskrat Falls world on Tuesday. His letter to Premier Dunderdale is a simple thing. The second sentence of the first paragraph is the basis for his understanding of the project and the issues:
Of course, as you know, I was heavily involved in this enterprise when I was Minister of Mines and Energy and as Premier.
Dunderdale dismissed Peckford with her characteristic arrogance:
But a message from afar, about a debate that you haven’t been engaged in, or public information sessions that you haven’t participated in, then you know it’s difficult for me to deal with.
But before she got to that she started from a very curious place:
I don’t know how close Mr. Peckford ever was to the energy files here in the province in terms of a new development. I know a great deal of work went into (Upper Churchill) redress.
This is not Dunderdale admitting her lack of knowledge of Peckford. Far from it. That is Kathy Dunderdale dismissing Peckford out of hand as knowing nothing about the subject.
If he had something useful to say, then she’d listen. But he doesn’t know anything so just pay no attention to him.
But it is Dunderdale who clearly doesn’t know anything. She is ignorant, both in the sense of not knowing anything and in the local sense of being rude.
The Premier is profoundly uninformed of events that happened in her adult lifetime. She can’t be posing or pretending. One must be not only completely unaware of the truth but also assured of its irrelevance in order to make such an obviously ridiculous comment with such complete self-assuredness.
What is truly remarkable about Dunderdale, Kennedy and Marshall is that they speak of history. They tie their decisions to the past. “We must learn from the mistakes of the Upper Churchill,” tweeted Kennedy last month. “I don't want to spend my nights wondering if I'm going to be the new Joey Smallwood,” Kennedy told an audience in Corner Brook.
For all that sort of comment, Kennedy, Dunderdale, Marshall and the others have no sense that they are displaying exactly the characteristics – arrogance and tunnel vision, among them – that led to the events in the 1960s they wish to avoid.
Such is their understanding of what our history is.
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* Philip Smith, Brinco: the story of Churchill Falls, (Toronto: McClelland and Stewart, 1975)
George Murphy is the NDP member of the provincial legislature best known for pushing the government gas price gouging scheme that forces consumers to pay prices for gasoline that benefits the provincial government and the gasoline retailers.
Murphy says he is on the side of consumers.
Now Murphy thinks that a jump in food prices is caused by ferry rates:
According to Voice of the Cabinet Minister:
The MHA for St. John's East says he's concerned about the latest inflation numbers from Statistics Canada, and says those numbers are linked to Marine Atlantic's rate hike. According to Stats Can consumer prices in January are up by 2.5 per cent in metro compared to last year. Murphy says the hike of 4.9 per cent in food prices can be directly traced to the four per cent increase in Marine Atlantic ferry rates.
He says it's time for the federal government to step in and keep Marine Atlantic rates low and stable so that the people aren't gouged at the grocery store.
A small increase in the cost of sailing on a ship for a few miles caused food prices to rise dramatically.
Not the fact that the food comes from places like California on the other end of the friggin’ continent, and is brought here in trucks that burn diesel fuel, the price for which is pretty high these days.
And the solution to that problem is for the federal government to pour tax dollars into lowering those evil ferry rates.
Murphy likes spending federal tax dollars to help people.
He also wants the federal government to support development of Muskrat Falls.
That’s the Newfoundland Tory/Dipper scheme to force the taxpayers of Murphy’s district to pay full cost plus profit for electricity so that the private sector company that sells electricity to people in Nova Scotia can get the juice for free.
Murphy likes spending public money to help people.
You just gotta know that those people Murphy winds up helping aren’t consumers in Newfoundland and Labrador.
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