Thursday, March 08, 2007

News Release

From the Prime Minister's Web Site (http://www.pm.gc.ca/)



PRIME MINISTER HARPER ANNOUNCES ECOTRUST FUNDING FOR ALBERTA

March 8, 2007
Edmonton, Alberta

Prime Minister Stephen Harper, joined by Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach, announced that Canada's New Government intends to provide Alberta with $155.9 million, as part of a new Canada ecoTrust to support provincial projects that will result in real reductions in greenhouse gas emissions and air pollutants.

"Canada's New Government is investing to protect Canadians from the consequences of climate change, air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions," said the Prime Minister. "Today's announcement recognizes Alberta's ambitious plans in this area, and provides support for measurable progress that benefits all Canadians."

"Like all Canadians, Albertans are committed to doing their part to address climate change for our children and for future generations," said Premier Ed Stelmach. "As part of our government's commitment to building a stronger Alberta, we are pleased to work together with the federal government in using innovation and technology to tackle climate change."

Federal funding for Alberta under the Canada ecoTrust will be invested in leading-edge initiatives that will result in measurable reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. These initiatives will promote environmentally responsible resource development and support the province's work on its climate change plan.

The Government of Alberta will use the funding to move forward on several clean-energy related projects, which may include support for:

  • identifying the opportunities and addressing the challenges associated with developing a large-scale carbon dioxide capture and storage system, to capture and transport CO2 for use in enhanced oil recovery or for underground capture and storage. These projects will be undertaken in association with the work to be done by the joint Canada-Alberta ecoENERGY Carbon Capture and Storage Task Force;

  • supporting a Clean Coal Front End Engineering Design (FEED) project as the first step towards creating a coal-fired electricity generation facility capable of near-zero emissions;

  • a waste-to-energy project in Edmonton to convert municipal waste into electricity. In addition to developing environmentally-responsible and economic alternatives to landfills for municipal waste disposal, this project may also demonstrate the potential for the production of fuels and energy from agricultural and forestry waste; and

  • a Hydrocarbon Upgrading Demonstration Program, which will invest funding in projects that explore commercial opportunities to upgrade Alberta energy resources into other consumer products, while minimizing environmental impacts.

    The Canada ecoTrust for Clean Air and Climate Change will allow each province and territory to develop technology, energy efficiency, and other projects that will provide real results. Canada's New Government will work with all provinces and territories to fully develop this new, national fund.

    Canada's New Government is already taking concrete action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and air pollution by committing to implement aggressive regulations to reduce emissions in all sectors and bring in new initiatives in the energy and transportation sectors. The provincial initiatives supported by the Canada ecoTrust will complement those efforts.

    This Canada ecoTrust will be established using part of the anticipated 2006-07 budgetary surplus. The resources for the Canada ecoTrust initiative will consist of 1.5 billion dollars of new funding on a national basis. This funding will be contained in the upcoming budget and is a part of the actions to be taken on the fiscal imbalance. This new funding will be available as soon as Parliament approves that budget.

    The Prime Minister's Office - Communications
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  • News Release

    From the Prime Minister's Web Site (http://www.pm.gc.ca/)



    OUT OF THE AIR AND INTO THE GROUND: ALBERTA AND CANADA JOIN FORCES TO ASSESS TECHNOLOGY TO CAPTURE GREENHOUSE GASES

    March 8, 2007
    Edmonton, Alberta

    The governments of Canada and Alberta will lead a national effort to ensure Canada takes full advantage of its status as the global front-runner in technology to capture carbon dioxide and store it deep underground.

    The Prime Minister of Canada Stephen Harper and the Premier of Alberta, Ed Stelmach, announced today the formation of a Canada-Alberta ecoENERGY Carbon Capture and Storage Task Force to recommend the best ways for Canada to implement the technology on a large scale.

    "Instead of pumping tons of carbon dioxide into the earth's atmosphere, we may be able to collect it from our oilsands operations, our coal-fired electrical plants, and other industrial emitters, and pump it deep underground where it will remain for eternity," said Prime Minister Harper. "This is a promising technology that could leverage Canada's expertise and Canada's geography."

    "Carbon capture holds great potential and promise as a tool in our quest to reduce greenhouse gas emissions," said Premier Stelmach. "Together, using technology and innovation, we can be good stewards of the environment while at the same time enhancing Alberta's position on the cutting edge of energy production."

    Building on Canada's CO2 Capture & Storage Technology Roadmap, released by Natural Resources Canada in March of last year, the Task Force will examine the opportunities for large-scale application of carbon capture and storage technology in Canada. Based on that examination, the Task Force is to provide a comprehensive set of options describing how government and industry can work together to take advantage of those opportunities.

    The chair of the ecoENERGY Carbon Capture and Storage Task Force will be Mr. Steve Snyder of TransAlta. Mr. Snyder's biography and the biographies of the other members of the Task Force are attached.

    * * *

    Backgrounder

    Canada-Alberta ecoENERGY Carbon Capture and Storage Task Force


    The Minister of Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) and the Alberta Minister of Energy will establish and provide strategic guidance for a Canada-Alberta ecoENERGY Carbon Capture and Storage Task Force. The two governments aim to build consensus and move forward on an action plan to allow Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) to reach its full potential in Canada. For all Canadians, CCS will be key to reconciling our energy realities with our goals for greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.

    Fortunately, Canada is an ideal situation to take advantage of and enhance our global leadership on this technology. In particular, Western Canada has large concentrations of CO2 being produced in close proximity to world class storage opportunities, with longer-term potential available elsewhere in Canada.

    Building on existing work such as the CO2 Capture and Storage Technology Roadmap, the Task Force will develop and build support for a comprehensive blueprint for implementing a large-scale CCS system in Canada. It will identify and assess current obstacles that are preventing more widespread adoption of CCS, and outline actions, roles and responsibilities for the federal and provincial governments, industry, and other stakeholders.


    Biographies of Canada-Alberta ecoENERGY Carbon Capture and Storage Task Force Members

  • Steve Snyder Chair

    Stephen G. Snyder joined TransAlta Corporation in September, 1996 as President and Chief Executive Officer.

    Prior to joining TransAlta, Mr. Snyder had a successful career with Noma Industries Limited and General Electric Corporation, in Canada and Belgium. As President and CEO of Noma Industries Limited from 1992 to 1996, Mr. Snyder advanced the company from a largely Canadian consumer products manufacturing company to a North American industrial products company. As Chairman and CEO of GE Canada Inc., Mr. Snyder continued with the transformation of GE's Canadian based businesses into global competitors.

    Between 1978 and 1992, Mr. Snyder held a variety of key positions with General Electric Corporation, including Managing Director, Eurolec plc in Brussels (1991–1992), President and CEO of Camco Inc. (1989–1991), Vice President and General Manager, GE Lighting Canada (1986–1989), after a series of increasingly responsible positions in the marketing division at Camco Inc.

    Mr. Snyder has a Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering from Queen's University and a Master of Business Administration from the University of Western Ontario. In addition, he has honourary degrees from the University of Calgary (LLD), and the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology (Bachelor of Applied Technology).

    He is a Director of TransAlta Corporation and CIBC. He is Chair of The Conference Board of Canada, Chair of the Calgary Stampede Foundation, and a Director of the Calgary Exhibition & Stampede. Mr. Snyder is a past chair of the Calgary Zoological Society (2002–2006), the Canadian Electrical Association (2002), the United Way Campaign of Calgary & Area (2001) and the Calgary Zoo's "Destination Africa" capital campaign (2003). In 2005, he was awarded the Alberta Centennial medal.

  • David Keith

    Professor Keith works in climate science, energy technology and public policy. Roughly half of his technical and policy work addresses the capture and storage of CO2, including work managing the risks of geologic storage and services in his work as chair of a crosscutting group for the IPCC special report on CO2 storage.

    Professor Keith serves as a member of several advisory boards and panels including Canada's 'blue ribbon' Panel on Sustainable Energy Technology, and the InterAcademy Council study on Transitions to a Sustainable Energy Systems, and as member of U.S. National Academy committees.
    Professor Keith's broader climate and energy related research addresses the economics and climatic impacts of large scale wind power, the use of hydrogen as a transportation fuel, and the technology and implications of geoengineering.

    Professor Keith has addressed technical audiences with articles in Science and Nature. He has consulted for national governments, industry and environmental groups and has reached the public through U.S. and Canadian radio and television.

    Professor Keith is trained as a physicist. As a graduate student at MIT, he built the first interferometer for atoms work which was the "hottest topic" in physics according to ISI's citation index. As an atmospheric scientist he worked at NCAR and Harvard, where he served as lead scientist for a new Fourier transform spectrometer with high radiometric accuracy that flies on the NASA ER 2 high altitude aircraft.

    Keith returned to Canada in 2004, taking a position at the University of Calgary, where he leads a research group on energy and environmental systems.

  • Kathy Sendall

    As Senior Vice President of Petro Canada, Ms. Sendall is responsible for the company's oil and gas exploration and production in North America. As a member of the Executive Leadership Team, she is also accountable for the effective integration of the planning and execution of Western Canada business objectives with overall strategies and activities of the corporation.

    Ms. Sendall first joined Petro Canada in 1978 and, after leaving to spend two years working with Nova Gas Transmission, rejoined the company as an Engineering Supervisor of Offshore and International Joint Ventures. Ms. Sendall held various supervisory positions until 1991, when she was appointed Wholesale Marketing Manager for Petro Canada Products. In 1994, Ms. Sendall served as Manager and, later, Director of Business Development in the Natural Gas Liquids Business Unit. In 1996, she was appointed Vice President, Engineering and Technology. In 2000, she was appointed Vice President, Western Canada Development and Operations and in 2002 was appointed Senior Vice President, Western Canada.

    Ms. Sendall graduated from Queen's University with a Bachelor of Science (Honours) degree in Mechanical Engineering, and attended the Western Executive Program at the University of Western Ontario Business School in 1990.

  • Ian Anderson

    Ian Anderson is President of Kinder Morgan Canada, one of the largest energy transportation, storage and distribution companies in North America. His responsibilities include the executive oversight of a 4,500-kilometres petroleum pipeline system that transports production from the Alberta oilsands to British Columbia and the United States.

    Prior to assuming his current role, Mr. Anderson was Vice President of Finance and Corporate Services at Terasen Pipelines, Inc., and he also served as Vice President of Finance and was Corporate Controller at Terasen Inc. Mr. Anderson has extensive experience in the Canadian energy sector having provided executive leadership in the areas of finance, regulatory affairs, marketing, business development, strategy development and human resources.

    Mr. Anderson is a graduate of the University of Michigan Executive Program and a Certified Management Accountant. He is currently a board member of the Canadian Energy Pipeline Association and a member of the Association of Oil Pipe Lines and the Financial Executives Institute of Canada.

  • Patricia Youzwa

    Ms. Youzwa was appointed to the position of President and CEO in July of 2004 after serving as Vice President of SaskPower Customer Services since 2001 and as President and Chief Executive Officer of NorthPoint Energy Solutions, a SaskPower subsidiary. She joined SaskPower as Vice President of Corporate Planning and Regulatory Affairs in 1999.

    Prior to joining SaskPower, Ms Youzwa ran a business consulting company for three years. Before that, she held a number of positions with the public service of the Government of Saskatchewan, including Deputy Minister of Economic Development and Deputy Minister of Energy and Mines.

    Ms. Youzwa has served on the Minister's Advisory Council on Science and Technology for Natural Resources Canada and she was the Vice Chair of the Natural Resources Canada Advisory Board on Energy, Science and Technology. She is currently Chair of the Hospitals of Regina Foundation and a Director of the Saskatchewan Institute of Public Policy.

    Her education includes a Bachelor of Arts with Honours in Economics from the University of Saskatchewan, and Master of Arts in Economics from the University of Toronto.

    Ex-officio members

  • Cassie Doyle

    Cassie Doyle was appointed Deputy Minister of Natural Resources Canada in June 2006.

    Previously, she had been with Environment Canada — first as Assistant Deputy Minister of Human Resources and Service Innovation, then as Associate Deputy Minister beginning in December 2003.


    Ms. Doyle came to the Government of Canada from the British Columbia Assets and Land Corporation, where she was President and CEO. From 1992 to 1999, Ms. Doyle held senior positions in the Government of British Columbia, including Deputy Minister of Environment, Lands and Parks; Small Business, Tourism and Culture; and Housing and Consumer Services, as well as Assistant Deputy Minister of Municipal Affairs.

    Earlier in her career, she occupied various positions with the City of Ottawa and, in 1987, she was the Executive Director of the International Year of Shelter for the Homeless. Ms. Doyle holds a Master of Social Work degree in Public Policy and Administration and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Sociology.

  • Dan McFadyen

    Mr. McFadyen, a professional engineer with over two decades of experience in public service and the energy sector, joined Alberta Energy as Deputy Minister in January 2006.

    Mr. McFadyen's wealth of knowledge and experience in the energy industry provides the public sector executive and Alberta energy sector experience needed to play a key leadership role in the implementation of Alberta's energy policies.

    Prior to joining Alberta Energy, Mr. McFadyen was responsible for the development of policy initiatives in the areas of regulatory and financial affairs as Vice President, Regulatory Affairs and Public Policy, with the Canadian Energy Pipeline Association (CEPA).

    Over the course of his career, Mr. McFadyen has served as Deputy Minister of Energy in Nova Scotia (2002 2004) and as Chair and Acting President and CEO of the Saskatchewan Research Council (2000 2001). He also served as Assistant Deputy Minister (ADM) in several key positions in the Saskatchewan public service including, ADM, Resource Development, Department of Industry and Resources, and ADM, Resource Policy and Economics Division, Department of Energy and Mines.

    He earned a B.Sc. (Mechanical Engineering) at the University of Manitoba, and is a member of the Association of Professional Engineers, Geologists and Geophysicists of Alberta and the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy.

    The Prime Minister's Office - Communications
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  • Notice

    From the Prime Minister's Web Site (http://www.pm.gc.ca/)



    Public events for March 9 2007

    March 8, 2007
    Ottawa, Ontario

    Public events for Prime Minister Stephen Harper for Friday, March 9th are:

    Saskatoon, Saskatchewan

    12:00 p.m. – Prime Minister Stephen Harper will make an announcement. He will be joined by Chuck Strahl, Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food and Minister for the Canadian Wheat Board, and Carol Skelton, Minister of National Revenue. Members of Parliament from the Saskatchewan Caucus will also be in attendance.

    Don Côté's Farm
    Highway 7
    Saskatoon, SK

    *Open to media*

    Note: Please refer to the driving directions below given that farms in this region do not have specific addresses. For more information please contact
    Barry Firby: (306) 229-1720.

    Directions from Saskatoon Airport: Exit Saskatoon via 22nd Street West and follow highway #7 exit. There is minor construction as you leave the city and make a left turn on to #7, but traffic is not stopped. Proceed south on #7 to the only overpass (CN train tracks). Immediately past the overpass, turn left on Cedar Villa Road. The Côté Farm is the first farm on the right, approximately 2 km. from #7. The buildings are primarily grey in a treed yard.
    The Prime Minister's Office - Communications
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    Statement

    From the Prime Minister's Web Site (http://www.pm.gc.ca/)



    STATEMENT BY THE PRIME MINISTER MARKING INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY

    March 8, 2007
    Ottawa, Ontario

    Prime Minister Stephen Harper today issued the following statement on the occasion of International Women's Day:

    "Ending Violence Against Women: Action for Real Results, is Canada's International Women's Day theme for 2007, and reflects our government's resolve to introduce effective measures that put an end to violent crimes and provide women the assistance they need.

    "Canada's New Government understands the impact that violence has on the lives of women and families across the country, and the importance of change today that will last for generations to come. Canadians want assurance that our nation is a safe and secure place to live and raise families, that we remain a peaceful, law-abiding society, and our victims of crime are respected and their voices heard.

    "Over the past year, Canada's New Government has been delivering positive change for Canadian women and their families.

    "We have introduced significant pieces of legislation to strengthen our justice system. Our proposed legislation includes stricter conditions on sexual and violent offenders, tougher mandatory minimum penalties for gun crimes, and raising the age of protection from sexual exploitation.

    "One of our proud initiatives includes addressing the long-standing issue of matrimonial property rights, which has unfairly prevented on-reserve Aboriginal women from equal property rights.

    "By introducing new measures and supporting effective programs, we are working to provide all women in Canada with a sense of security and opportunity."
    The Prime Minister's Office - Communications
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