水果视频

Right in the centre - One has to wonder

By Ken Waddell

Neepawa Banner & Press

Note: By the time you read this column, Christine and I plan to be home from a 5,000 km road trip. It鈥檚 a trip that would not even be possible with an electric car. The federal governments in both Canada and the United States have their energy policies entirely wrong, but the warnings spelled out in this 2019 column have gone largely unheeded.

Given how much sense it makes to develop Canadian oil resources, one has to wonder why it is taking, or has taken, so long to get the job done. Canada exports a lot of oil, but it imports a lot as well. Why? It doesn鈥檛 make any sense.

Now, before we get too far along here, let it be said that electric heat and electric cars and trucks may well be the way everything will go someday. The key word is 鈥渟omeday鈥. We aren鈥檛 there yet, especially in rural and remote areas. Electric heat is well accepted, but gas heat is still more efficient and economical in most cases. Personal note: Our house has a 110-year-old steam radiator heating system, fired by a gas boiler and I wouldn鈥檛 trade it for anything. It鈥檚 clean, efficient and a great source of heat. It is quick and because it鈥檚 radiant, it warms the whole house and everything in it, including us.

For vehicles, electric may be the way of the future, but it just isn鈥檛 feasible. Electric cars just won鈥檛 get us from western 水果视频 to Winnipeg and back reliably without stopping for a re-charge. It鈥檚 just not efficient or convenient. We are told that electric trucks will also be the way of the future, but again, it鈥檚 just not there yet.

So, that brings us back to oil resources. We will need oil for a long time to come and so will the rest of the world. That begs the question as to why we don鈥檛 develop more of our own oil and cut back on imports. I suspect there are some shady reasons.

There are interests out there that would not profit from more Canadian (read western Canadian) oil. The Irving oil companies are heavily invested in refineries, but I believe they are heavily invested in shipping oil from overseas countries. If western oil was pipelined to the Maritimes, it could be that Irving companies鈥 shipping investment would suffer. I also believe that many U.S. companies don鈥檛 want Canadian oil coming into the states, as it would undercut their markets.

Internally, we have problems getting pipelines approved on an environmental basis. Instead, we risk transporting oil by train, which is way more risky. We bow down to every environmental group and to some First Nations communities to the extreme. Some FN communities want refineries and pipelines because it means economic growth. The latter are the smart ones, those objecting communities, not so much.

Pipelines, hydro lines, refineries and many other engines of economic development do not harm the environment. What does harm the environment is stagnated communities, ones without development and without hope, communities that can鈥檛 support themselves or their infrastructure.

Governments need to grow a spine and set a sensible economic course.

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this column are the writer鈥檚 personal views and are not to be taken as being the view of the Banner & Press staff.