She cited applications like providing power for metal mining or
oil sands development where «temporary baseload, heavy - duty power» is needed, as ideal for the technology.
Not exact matches
Tuesday vote was taken hard in Canada
where development of the
oil sands is important to Alberta's budget.
The Alberta government's revision of the Mine Financial Security Program (MFSP) continues down a wrong - headed path
where the province is willing to take on environmental risk to enable
oil sands development.
They point to an article that you wrote in March, I think, of 2012 in Policy Options,
where you basically said, dirty
oil, the tar
sands it's called, dirty
oil and the future of our country,
where you argue that the
development of the, as you use the word, tar
sands, it's become a political term, by the way, as you know, is basically not necessarily good for the country, in fact it takes jobs away in the manufacturing sector of Ontario.
Former Finance Minister Ted Morton is moving into the Energy Minister's office, an area
where he will be comfortable defending the province's record on
oil sands development.
We still don't know enough about tar
sand oil, or bitumen, which takes longer to break down due to its high viscosity, but doesn't spread, we also don't know much about the behavior of
oil from a blowout, such as the Deepwater Horizon BP blowout, and we know little of how crude
oil behaves in the Arctic Ocean,
where there is ice, or how to remediate it,» said Michel Boufadel, director of NJIT's Center for Natural Resources
Development and Protection and a member of the panel of experts charged with evaluating the impact of spills in Northern waters.
The Canadian media are full of speculation that the Canadian government will push for special treatment and protections from global warming regulation of its fastest - growing source of greenhouse gas emissions — the tar
sands oil development in Alberta,
where much of Canada's
oil is derived.
The Nebraska hearing follows a similar affair held in Washington for the House energy committee,
where Canadian climate economist Mark Jaccard testified that, despite the conclusion in the State Department's Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (SEIS), «The denial of Keystone XL will help to slow
development of the
oil sands.
Canada has great plans for controlling greenhouse gases, except of course
where it might hurt
oil sands development in Alberta.
Opponents say the proposed $ 5.4 billion pipeline would be a catalyst to unlocking
oil sands development in Alberta, Canada,
where a dense, sticky hydrocarbon called bitumen is harvested by strip - mining and energy - intense steam - based techniques.
He has also been seconded to a major Canadian
oil sands owner,
where he assisted in the
development and alignment of a full suite of EPC / CM standard form contracts.