The real political division in society is between authoritarians and libertarians.
05 November 2012
Kathy Dunderdale, give-aways, and the resource curse #nlpoli
As recently as 2005, Dunderdale and her friends turned up their noses at Ontario’s offer to help develop the Lower Churchill at no cost to local taxpayers. The result: No development.
Instead of building the Lower Churchill for export - profit for taxpayers -Dunderdale and her friends are forcing taxpayers to empty out their public bank accounts of billions in oil savings and then borrowing billions more in order to give cheap electricity to multi-billion dollar mining companies. Then those same taxpayers will pay themselves back through their electricity rates over the course of 50 years.
Whoever could imagine such a ridiculous idea? Especially in a province where the overwhelming majority of the population pays very little, if any, tax.
The Fifth of November returns once more #nlpoli
“I know why you did it.
I know you were afraid.
Who wouldn't be?
… There were a myriad of problems which conspired to corrupt your reason and rob you of your common sense. Fear got the best of you, … .
He promised you order, he promised you peace, and all he demanded in return was your silent, obedient consent.”
-srbp-
04 November 2012
The Disney Empire Strikes Back #nlpoli
Lots of anguish and lots of humour attend the news that George Lucas has sold out to Disney.
A sample of the fun:
And another:
-srbp-
02 November 2012
Water Management Controversy Hits Nova Scotia #nlpoli
The interviewed Dennis Browne from Group 2041 on Wednesday. The next day they came back with a discussion of the water management controversy.
Here are links to the audio files:
- Dennis Browne
- Bern Coffey and the Water Management Agreement
Windy #nlpoli
Anyone with half a clue knows that you cannot develop a reliable, efficient electricity system built on type of generation only.
You need a mix so that the advantages of one type offset the weaknesses of another. All hydro is hard to do if you need steady supply because it tends to vary with the water flow. Wind is even worse for that. Oil and coal are good for steady supplies but they tend to be expensive, dirty or both. Natural gas is very cool, especially these days, because not only is there lots of it but it is very inexpensive and can deliver electricity pretty much on demand.
Only in Newfoundland and Labrador do we have access to trillions of cubic feet of natural gas already found, trillions more likely to be discovered, and a provincial government that doesn’t want to develop it because the natural gas is not expensive enough to use.
Labrador Mines and Muskrat Falls #nlpoli
One of the things everyone is learning this week is that a consultant who accepts all the assumptions Nalcor used to arrive at its conclusion in the first place will - inevitably - reach the same conclusions.
Some people will think that the second report proves that the first conclusion was right.
Unfortunately, such is not the case. It merely means that – inevitably –such an approach will repeat the same mistakes, errors, and flaws just as readily as it might get something right.
Think of it as a case of GIGO: garbage in, garbage out.
01 November 2012
Creature from the Black Lagoon and other stuff
Oh, man they have got a Creature from the Black Lagoon in development at Moebius.
It might not hit the shelves until January 2013, though.
-srbp-
C.H.U.R.N #nlpoli
It’s been a mere two weeks since the record-setting 40th change in a single year. On Thursday, Dunderdale added five more:
- a new deputy minister in advanced skills and training, who previously was the DM in education,
- promotion for an assistant deputy minister in advanced skills to the post of associate deputy minister in the same department,
- an acting deputy minister in education,
- a new assistant secretary to cabinet for social policy, and,
- a new assistant deputy minister in child youth and family services.
SRBP forecast that Dunderdale was on track for 49 changes at the senior executive level before the end of 2012.
Muskrat Potpourri #nlpoli
- The skinny on cost overruns – Des Sullivan
- Bringing energy efficiency to the equation – Winston Adams
- The need for power isn’t proven – Maurice Adams
-srbp-
King Kop. Kennedy Kop. #nlpoli
Expect to hear a lot more in the next couple of days about a comment Jerome Kennedy made on CBC Radio’s Crosstalk on Wednesday.
The reason is that back in the spring Kennedy said this to CBC about the opposition parties and debates:
"The problem right now is that I'm not sure these opposition parties are going to provide quality debate on anything," Kennedy said at the time.
Now his tune is different:
…And at that point, I was more critical of critics that I am today," said Kennedy.
"And I became very open to the debate as a result of the PUB's failure to make a decision."
31 October 2012
Calculators #nlpoli
Nalcor’s new marketing website for Muskrat Falls includes a little feature that supposedly shows you what your electricity bill will be with and without Muskrat Falls.
Even though you will pay for Muskrat Falls until at least 2067, they only show the comparisons out to 2030 on the new calculator.
So try a monthly bill currently of $200.
According to Nalcor, your monthly electricity bill with the Marvellous Muskrat will be $268 in 2025.
In 2010, they gave an estimate out to 2040 using a bill that was $200 in 2017. On that basis, your monthly bill in 2025 would be $208 in 2025.
That’s a huge difference.
But ya gotta wonder why they changed the way they presented the numbers. It just makes an already confusing situation – for many people – all the more confusing.
Most people aren’t really worried about the costs that far out in the future. They are more concerned with more immediate costs, like say the impact on their taxes or money they’d rather spend on health care but will now have to devote to paying for an enormous dam up in Labrador.
All the same, looking at the comparison charts. The monthly savings aren’t all that great. Even in 2030, you’d be saving less than $50 a month. Nalcor’s total estimated savings over the 14 years between 2016 and 2030 is only $3811.
That’s $272 a year, on average. What’s everything else going to cost in 2025 or 2030 if oil is going to be at the sorts of prices Nalcor assumes? Besides, on the front end of that period the costs are almost identical. There’s no comparative advantage to switching until well into the future.
Maybe all that is a bit too esoteric for some people.
Just look at the numbers. Some people are going to conclude - likely incorrectly - that in a mere two years, the monthly cost for Muskrat Falls for the ordinary consumer appears to have jumped $60 a month. Once someone gets that idea in their heads, even if it is completely wrong those $50 a month in theoretical savings way off in the future are going to seem like what they are today: nothing.
-srbp-
The DG 3 Dog and Pony Show #nlpoli
Big Show.
Room full of people all there because they have a direct interest in the project.
Live streaming by the news media.
And all to release the latest cost estimates for Muskrat Falls. The show was so big, however, that it looked like someone had decided to puff the whole thing up to make it appear much more important than it was.
That turned out to be a fairly accurate impression.
30 October 2012
Getting ready for the onslaught #nlpoli
Some things to bear in mind as the provincial government starts its latest information offensive on Muskrat Falls:
- These aren’t “final” numbers. Whether it’s a government phrase or a media invention, the idea that these numbers are “final” is dead wrong. The DG 3 numbers are nothing more than the latest cost estimate, plus or minus 30%. We won’t know the final numbers until a decade or more from now.
- We already know why Nalcor didn’t look at alternatives. As it looks from CBC’s report, the provincial government spent a chunk of cash to repeat what we’ve already heard from Nalcor – they didn’t look at alternatives to Muskrat Falls to generate electricity for use within the province. When Nalcor suddenly changed the Lower Churchill project objective in 2010 (from export to domestic use) they should have gone back to DG1 and started from scratch. That should have included a series of comparisons of alternatives. They didn’t do that. Instead, they sailed through DG 2. Nothing has changed. They still haven’t looked at alternatives.
- Check for how much information they release about the federal loan guarantee. The provincial government’s story has morphed over the past couple of months: at one point the guarantee would be done. Now we are supposedly getting a range of possible options.
Overall, don’t expect to see any new information from the provincial government. Their objective is not to inform or persuade. Their goal is to plough through the next couple of weeks in the hope that they can get the Muskrat off their political backs.
This has been a done deal since 2010.
Claims to the contrary are complete foolishness.
-srbp-
29 October 2012
The Self-Inflicted Wound #nlpoli
When did the companies involved in the Hebron project sanction it?
Anyone?
Don’t google it.
When did ExxonMobil and all those companies give the project team the green-light to start building the gravity base and all the others bits that will lead to oil production on the fourth field offshore Newfoundland and Labrador?
Sanction.
The green light.
No?
Darin King and the Tory Charm Offensive #nlpoli
A couple of the exceedingly small changes in the recent cabinet shuffle came out of the Bill 29 fiasco. Felix Collins went from the relatively low profile job of justice minister to the complete obscurity of intergovernmental affairs.
Everyone saw that.
And over in another corner, there was a switcheroo people didn’t notice quite as much. Jerome Kennedy gave up the job of directing Government business in the House so that Darin King could take over.
There was no doubt Jerome had completely frigged up in the House, just like there’s no doubt the Tories are way down in the polls. The two went hand in hand all last session and indeed, for most of the last year or more.
Darin King offers no chance of changing that.
27 October 2012
Moebius’ Skipjack
Here are some views of Moebius’ 1/72 scale USS Skipjack held together with green painter’s tape.
Skipjack was the first nuclear-powered hunter killer submarine using the teardrop hull design that optimised underwater performance. Skipjack and her sisters were the fastest submarines in the US Navy until the arrival of the Los Angeles class boats in the 1970s. They remained in front line service until they were decommissioned in 1990.
The navy rushed its first two ballistic missile submarines to sea by modifying the Skipjacks and redirecting some of the parts to what became the George Washington class. A cut in the hull, the addition of about an extra 130 feet, 16 missile tubes and some other structural changes and the Americans had a working launch platform. Unfortunately, they could be as noisy as hell.
Ambitious modellers could convert this kit to a George Washington. The easier conversion would be to build a GW after its conversion from a missile carrying submarine. The navy chopped out the missile sections and stuck the bow and stern back together. The end results as a Skipjack with the old fairing around the sail that led up to top of the missile section left in place.
The picture quality isn’t great but for those interested in these things, it will give a sense of the size of this kit.
The front of the box says the kit builds to 40 inches. The back of the box says 42 inches. The back is right. That’s a 48 inch level in the foreground and while you can’t see it clearly in this picture, the submarine will be 42 inches almost exactly from the tip of the bow to the point at the end of the five-bladed screw.
Here’s another view from the top:
The hull is split into four sections fore, aft, top, and bottom. The sections are bagged and wrapped in soft plastic to prevent scratches and dings in shipping. The entire kit is packed into a box 22 inches long. This facilitates shipping and helps to keep the costs down.
The surface detail is finely molded with slightly recessed lines. There is a waterline molded into the upper hull. This mars the finish toward the bow where it cross the upper sonar array but you can fix that with a skillful application of some putty. Fore and aft of the sail, you will find all the hatches marked, included the main access hatches as well as the ones covering the mooring cleats and bollards.
On the sail, most of the batches appear to be outlined, including the two main hatches that open onto the dive planes. These were used when in port as easy access to docks, as well as for observation and mounting armed watches (guards). None of the hatches are open so if anyone wants to do so, they’ll have to scratch build the interiors behind them.
The kit includes markings for all Skipjack-class submarines, including Scorpion.
Out of the box, the kit builds as a submarine in its launch configuration and paintjob. The two buoy hatches on the topsides are to be painted international orange. That isn’t correct for an operational submarine. you’ll have to do some research to decide how you want to paint your submarine. If you hunt around, you can find some very useful advice on weathering, especially for the anti-fouling red on the lower half of the hull.
The screw is the original five-bladed design. The Skipjacks received seven bladed screws during refits in the early to mid- 1970s in order to correct a noise problem. No biggie. If you build Skipjack from the box and change the paint scheme, you will get an historic ship from the time she sailed into Murmansk harbour and reputedly sat submerged a mere 30 or 40 metres off the end of a busy pier and watched goings-on in one of the old Soviet Union’s major naval bases.
-srbp-
26 October 2012
Muskrat Falls Trends #nlpoli
Just for the fun of it, here is a graph of the frequency of searches for the term “Muskrat Falls” in Canada since November 2010.
According to Google the numbers on the graph represent the number of searches for the term relative to the total number of searches. The numbers are not absolute values but are scaled and normalized. To get an explanation of that check out Google Trends’ help section.
Aside from the peak in search activity right at the beginning, the most intense searching has been within the past couple of months. Interest didn’t seem to ramp up on the project until the fall of 2011 except for a couple of brief periods that seem to coincide with when the House was open.
If you limit the search to just Newfoundland and Labrador, you get a fairly constant level of searching.
The letters mark relevant news stories.
-srbp-
25 October 2012
From wonderment to bereavement #nlpoli
The decline in the quality of public life in our province over the past decade is matched by a decline in other places across Canada and in Ottawa.
For those who may not have noticed some of the commentary on this here are three pieces worth considering:
- Allen Gregg: 1984 in 2012 - the assault on reason
- Susan Delacourt: a lesson in the art of political debate
- Chantal Hebert: House of Commons no longer a source of wonder for a journalist
-srbp-
The Business Case for Muskrat Falls #nlpoli
All sorts of business people in Newfoundland and Labrador love Muskrat Falls.
Funny thing is that they don;t talk about risk, profits, cash flows, return on their investment, and other stuff you’d expect business people to talk about.
Nope. They say stuff like “We believe in good things for our province.”
Who doesn’t?
They say things like “… we believe we have the courage to harness the opportunity before us and make these things happen.”
So that started the old gears turning in your humble e-scribbler’s old noggin. What would it be like if they listened to a business pitch for Muskrat Falls just the same way that Nalcor and the provincial government is pitching Muskrat Falls?
Let’s not get distracted by alternatives and public utilities board and megawatts and all that. Let’s just talk about making the old staple product in business school: widgets. And just for the sake of convenience, let’s make the pitch to the province’s greatest living businessman, the Old Man Hisself.
24 October 2012
Muskrat Falls – The Importance of Transparency #nlpoli
Nalcor will install new generating capacity at Portland Creek in the mid-2030s despite having about 1200 gigawatt hours of electricity available from Muskrat Falls.
In his latest assessment - Muskrat Falls – The Importance of Transparency [scribd pdf] - JM concludes that Nalcor apparently plans to build Portland Creek at additional cost to consumers in Newfoundland and Labrador in order to keep capacity available at Muskrat Falls to meet the commitment to Emera.