vimarsana.com

Page 54 - கனடியன் சங்கம் ஆஃப் பெட்ரோலியம் ப்ரொட்யூஸர்ஸ் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Pan American Silver Announces Appointment of Kathleen Sendall to the Board of Directors

Pan American Silver Announces Appointment of Kathleen Sendall to the Board of Directors Pan American Silver Corp. announced today the appointment of Kathleen Sendall to its Board of Directors. Ms. Sendall has more than 30 years of experience in the energy sector, and has served on numerous public company and not-for-profit boards. She is currently a director of Enmax Corporation, an electricity utility owned by the City of Calgary and a member of the Member Council for Sustainable Development … Pan American Silver Corp. (NASDAQ: PAAS) (TSX: PAAS) (“Pan American”) announced today the appointment of Kathleen Sendall to its Board of Directors. Ms. Sendall has more than 30 years of experience in the energy sector, and has served on numerous public company and not-for-profit boards. She is currently a director of Enmax Corporation, an electricity utility owned by the City of Calgary and a member of the Member Council for Sustainable Development Technology Canada, an independent fe

Evening Brief: COVID-19 vaccinations begin

Evening Brief: COVID-19 vaccinations begin By iPolitics. Published on Dec 14, 2020 6:05pm COVID vaccines arriving in Canada last month (Canada Border Services Agency photo) Today’s Evening Brief is brought to you by Talent Fits Here™, a campaign created by the Canadian Construction Association. Canada’s construction industry is full of innovation and opportunity. Let’s help more Canadians discover a rewarding career. Learn more. Good evening, In the news we’ve been hoping for seemingly all year, the first of the COVID-19 vaccinations began in Quebec and Ontario, after arriving on Canadian soil last night. Limited supplies of Pfizer’s BioNTech vaccine were administered at Toronto’s University Health Network for long-term care home staff, including nurses and personal support workers (PSW), beginning with Anita Quidangen a PSW of more than 30 years working at the Rekai Centre in downtown Toronto.

It can no longer be free to pollute: Updated climate plan includes carbon tax hikes

It can no longer be free to pollute: Updated climate plan includes carbon tax hikes The plan includes money to encourage heavy industry to reduce its emissions, for communities to make buildings more energy efficient, and for remote communities to get off diesel-generated power Dec 14, 2020 10:00 PM By: Canadian Press Minister of Infrastructure and Communities Catherine McKenna, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Minister of Canadian Heritage Steven Guilbeault and Minister of Environment and Climate Change Jonathan Wilkinson walk to make an announcement on the government s updated climate change plan, in the Dominion Arboretum in Ottawa, on Friday, Dec. 11, 2020. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang

Alberta, oil sector laud changes in federal climate plan

The Globe and Mail Bookmark Please log in to listen to this story. Also available in French and Mandarin. Log In Create Free Account Getting audio file . This translation has been automatically generated and has not been verified for accuracy. Full Disclaimer The oil industry and the Alberta government say Ottawa’s removal of gaseous and solid fuels from Canada’s long-awaited federal Clean Fuel Standard will avoid an exodus of investment in the fossil fuel sector. The federal Liberals’ climate change plan, released last Friday, proposed to triple the carbon tax and spend more than $15-billion to pass Canada’s 2030 greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets. But it also significantly dialled back its original plans for the Clean Fuel Standard – a complicated policy to provide emissions reduction incentives and create a credits-trading market – narrowing its scope to focus only on liquid fossil fuels such as gasoline, diesel and oil.

Government-owned pipeline versus its climate plans could turn profit to loss

Last Updated: Friday, December 18, 2020 08:22 In 2018, faced with large-scale protests and legal delays, U.S,-based KinderMorgan said it had had enough and would halt its ‘Trans-Mountain’ pipeline project from Alberta to the British Columbia Pacific coast. The massive project was to twin a decades old existing line to increase capacity for shipping Alberta’s tar sands oil.  The Trudeau Liberal government stepped in and bought the Canadian line and the project saying it was in the national interest, and paid $4.4 billon in a deal quickly accepted by shareholders. The government said it would then sell the pipeline project or completed line. So far there have been no buyers.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.