Tuesday, November 23, 2021

CANADA

Trudeau vows to go 'further, faster' on climate policy in his third term

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau sketched out his government’s third-term agenda, emphasizing the need for strong action on climate change as Canada grapples with unprecedented flooding along its Pacific coast.

Building a resilient post-pandemic economy, underpinned by the country’s first national childcare plan, and continuing to address the historic harms done to Indigenous people are also top priorities, the government said Tuesday during a so-called throne speech in Ottawa.

The broad-strokes address, delivered by Governor General Mary Simon but written by the prime minister’s office, comes two months after the government was returned to power. Though the incumbent Liberals won a plurality of seats, they lost the popular vote and failed to secure the parliamentary majority Trudeau had coveted, leaving him reliant on opposition parties to pass legislation.

“The government is taking real action to fight climate change. Now, we must go further, faster,” Simon said, according to the prepared text of the speech. “That means moving to cap and cut oil and gas sector emissions, while accelerating our path to a 100 per cent net-zero electricity future.” 

After a first term dominated by Donald Trump’s election in the U.S., and a second sent off course by COVID-19, Trudeau begins his third mandate facing a climate crisis in British Columbia. 


B.C. FLOODING

Vancouver, Canada’s third largest city and a key shipping port, was essentially cut off from the country by road and rail last week after torrential rains put large swathes of farmland under water. The westernmost province, which also saw hundreds die amid wildfires and extreme heat this summer, is now rationing fuel as soldiers race to shore up infrastructure with another wave of precipitation rolling through. 

On top of reiterating its election pledge to cap oil and gas emissions while sharply increasing its carbon tax, Trudeau’s government vowed to create Canada’s first climate adaptation strategy, invest in public transit and mandate the sale of zero-emissions vehicles. But like much of the speech, it was short on details.

Other highlights include promises to:

  • Keep COVID-19 under control through vaccine mandates and the procurement of boosters and newly approved doses for children, as well as working with provinces to strengthen the health-care system;
  • Extend income supports for sectors hardest hit by the pandemic in the short term, while addressing longer-term challenges by completing the roll-out of the national daycare plan and following through with pledges to build more affordable housing units and help first-time buyers get into the market;
  • Reintroduce legislation to regulate streaming and social-media companies that was stuck in the Senate when the election was triggered;
  • Keep communities safe with a mandatory buyback of banned assault-style weapons and by working with jurisdictions that want to ban handguns;
  • Continue working with key allies on global issues, with a focus on deepening partnerships in the Indo-Pacific region and across the Arctic.
  • While the Liberal government will likely win support for its environmental and social policies from the left-leaning New Democratic Party, the main opposition Conservatives are railing against the price tag attached. 

“The cost of living is driven by the cost of government,” Conservative lawmaker Pierre Poilievre told reporters before the speech, noting that annual inflation -- now running 4.7 per cent, the highest since 2003 -- is more than twice as high as both wage growth and the Bank of Canada’s target. “When you spend more, it costs more.”

But Trudeau’s government appears undaunted. After posting a record-smashing deficit of more than $300 billion (US$236 billion) in the fiscal year that ended March 31 and promising $78 billion in additional spending over five years on top of the $140 billion it unveiled in its April budget, the Liberals aren’t dialing back their ambitions.

“The decade got off to an incredibly difficult start, but this is the time to rebuild,” Simon said. “This is the moment for parliamentarians to work together to get big things done, and shape a better future for our kids.”



The Trudeau Government’s speech from the throne warns that ‘Earth is in danger’

Officials including Governor-General Mary Simon and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrive on the throne on November 23, 2021, in Ottawa.Adrian Wyld / The Canadian Press

The federal government issued a stern warning about the coming decades when Governor-General Mary Simon opened the 44th parliament, describing a world “at risk” from climate change and urging lawmakers to translate “talk into action.”

Ms. Simon delivered the minority Liberal government’s roadmap in the Senate on Tuesday, stressing that limiting greenhouse gas emissions causing climate change and adapting to the changes already caused by warming temperatures are among the top priorities.

The speech did not contain any new promises from the Liberal Party, which instead highlighted key priorities from their long list of campaign promises.

“Getting the pandemic under control” and creating a “more resilient economy” were the other two top priorities set by the government. The economy is often mentioned in the speech, but there is only one reference to inflation, which leads to the largest price increase in almost two decades.

The throne speech was quickly rejected by the Conservatives and the NDP. Despite this, the Liberal minority government has no risk of falling because the leader of the Bloc Québécois, Yves-François Blanchet, said his party was willing to “live with this blank piece of paper.”

Nearly a week into BC’s state of emergency, prompted by devastating floods and mudslides, the series of climate disasters the province has suffered since the summer was mentioned at the top of the section on trontale written by the Prime Minister’s Office. In the speech, the government pledged to do more to “prevent and prepare for floods, wildfires, droughts, coastal erosion and other extreme weather exacerbated by climate change.”

The risk of not acting was emphasized in the introductory section written by Mrs Simon’s office.

“Our land is in danger,” said Mrs. Simon. “From a warming Arctic to the increasing devastation of natural disasters, our country and our people need help.”

“We can not afford to wait.”

The Throne speech was the first for Mrs. Simon, who was taken the oath in July, and became the first native to serve as the Queen’s representative in Canada. In a historic first time, she kept the address alternating between Inuktitut, French and English. Rideau Hall said Tuesday’s speech marked for the first time that more than one greeting would be delivered in a native language during a throne speech.

Governor-General Mary Simon reiterated the Prime Minister’s position that the government “must go further, faster” in order to take “real action” against climate change.Sean Kilpatrick / The Canadian Press

The late launch of this autumn’s parliamentary session means that the Liberals have only four weeks to lead key government bills through the House of Commons – a short time frame made more difficult because the opposition has more power to influence the agenda of a minority parliament. The Liberals waited more than two months to recall MEPs to parliament after the September federal election.

On the heels of the campaign’s minority result, Mrs Simon said the direction of the electorate was clear. “Not only do they want parliamentarians to work together to put this pandemic behind us, they also want bold, concrete solutions to meet the other challenges we face.”

However, the official opposition conservatives and the fourth-place NDP both said they would vote against the speech.

“There is nothing in the throne that is about inflation, the cost of living crisis, the national unity crisis, there is no plan to get people to work,” said Conservative leader Erin O’Toole.

NDP leader Jagmeet Singh noted that the Liberals have dropped their promise to introduce a universal drug program, which was promised in the throne last year. “We see a throne speech that does not respond to the urgency of the crises we are facing,” he said.

Nearly two years into the pandemic, the government said the “best way” to bring it under control was through COVID-19 vaccinations and booster shots. Ms. Simon looks forward to Ottawa strengthening the public health system and working with the provinces and territories on issues such as delayed surgeries and access to rural care.

To tackle rising inflation, Mr. Trudeau’s government said it would address the rising cost of living by acting on its election promises to ensure access to affordable housing and childcare across the country, Ms said. Simon.

The government also reaffirmed its plan to go for “more targeted support” for sectors still affected by the pandemic, and said it would ensure it “carefully manages spending.”

Ms. Simon reiterated the Prime Minister’s position that the government “must go further, faster” in order to take “real action” against climate change. She said the government would focus its efforts on limiting and then lowering emissions from the oil and gas sector; accelerate efforts to reach a 100 percent net-zero electricity grid; investment in public transport and injunction for the sale of zero-emission vehicles; and steadily rising carbon prices.

Mrs Simon said during the speech that reconciliation is not a “single act, nor does it have an end date.”

“It’s a lifelong journey of healing, respect and understanding,” she said.

Ms. Simon also said that “reconciliation cannot come without truth.”

In this mandate, the government intends to create a national monument in honor of survivors from housing schools, a long-standing call from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. It also plans to appoint a special interlocutor to “promote justice” in private schools, which was first announced in August.

Ottawa also plans to move forward with an excellence-based mental health and wellness strategy for First Nations, Inuit and Métis governed by indigenous peoples, survivors and their families.

It also intends to ensure that there is “fair and equitable” compensation for those harmed by the First Nations Child Welfare System. The Liberal government is currently engaged in closed-door discussions with parties, including the Assembly of First Nations and the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society, hoping to reach an out-of-court settlement on the matter by the end of the year.

Gov. Mary Simon is holding the throne while her husband Whit Fraser watches in the Ottawa Senate on November 23, 2021.Sean Kilpatrick / The Canadian Press


Opposition parties feeling left out as federal throne speech outlines Liberal agenda

Immediately after the speech was read, Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet signalled his party will support what he called '24 pages of completely empty words
'
Author of the article:
The Canadian Press
Joan Bryden
Publishing date: Nov 23, 2021


OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau threw few bones to opposition parties Tuesday in a throne speech that recapped the election platform that produced a second consecutive Liberal minority government.

A vote on the throne speech will be the first confidence test for the government, with the Liberals’ survival dependent on the support of at least one opposition party.

Nevertheless, Trudeau made little effort in the throne speech to secure the support of any of the other parties, choosing instead to reiterate in broad strokes Liberal promises to finish the fight against COVID-19 and rebuild a more resilient, fairer, greener economy.

Voter anger over Trudeau’s decision to call an election in the midst of the pandemic dashed his hopes of capturing a majority on Sept. 20. He is now evidently counting on that anger to dissuade opposition parties from triggering another election anytime soon, relieving him of the necessity to modify his agenda to satisfy any of them.

It’s a gamble that appears to have paid off, at least on the throne speech.

Gov. Gen. Mary Simon, the first Inuk person to serve in the role, centred the theme of reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples in Tuesday’s speech from the throne with an introduction — delivered in English, French and Inuktitut — that she had written herself.

“I encourage you to seek out the truth, and to learn about the lived realities in First Nations, Inuit and Metis communities,” Simon said in the speech delivered in the Senate chamber.

“Although each community is distinct, we all share a desire to chart a way forward together towards reconciliation.”

She also touched upon the finding by First Nations of hundreds of unmarked graves on the sites of former residential schools across Canada earlier this year.

“We cannot hide from these discoveries. They open deep wounds,” she said in French.

At the same time, she said there is hope.

“Reconciliation is not a single act, nor does it have an end date. It is a lifelong journey of healing, respect and understanding,” she said.

Immediately after the speech was read by Simon in the Senate chamber, Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet signalled his party will support what he called “24 pages of completely empty words.”

“Supporting might not be the best word. We will live with this empty piece of paper, gently read in three languages,” he said, adding it’s impossible to vote against “apple pie.”
Advertisement

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh, whose party is considered the most likely dance partner for the Liberals, panned the speech for failing to even mention his party’s priorities, including pharmacare, continuing pandemic supports and boosting annual health transfers to the provinces.

“This is not a speech that looks like they want to work together,” Singh said, warning Trudeau not to take NDP support for granted.

Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole said his party will oppose the throne speech, which he lambasted for failing to lay out a plan for reviving the economy, particularly the skyrocketing cost of living.

Despite winning only a minority of seats, Trudeau asserted in the speech that Canadians gave parliamentarians clear direction in the Sept. 20 election.

“Not only do they want parliamentarians to work together to put this pandemic behind us, they also want bold, concrete solutions to meet the other challenges we face,” the speech said.

“This is the moment for parliamentarians to work together to get big things done and shape a better future for our kids.”

There were no surprises in the speech, which reiterated the promises the Liberals made in their election platform and focused largely on economic recovery from the pandemic.

The pillars of that recovery will be more aggressive action to combat climate change, measures to produce more affordable housing and finishing negotiations with two holdout province and two territories that have yet to sign onto the Liberals’ $10-a-day national child care program.

Reconciliation was also a major theme of the speech, delivered partly in Inuktitut, as well as French and English, by Simon, the first Indigenous person to hold the viceregal post.

She opened the speech with her own reflections on the pain caused by the discovery last spring of what are believed to be hundreds of unmarked graves of Indigenous children at the sites of two former residential schools.

“We cannot hide from these discoveries; they open deep wounds,” Simon said, adding that “despite the profound pain, there is hope.”

Among other things, the speech promised to create a national monument to honour residential school survivors.

Simon also issued a personal call for action on climate change.

“Our Earth is in danger. From a warming Arctic to the increasing devastation of natural disasters, our land and our people need help. We must move talk into action and adapt where we must,” she said.

Amid extreme flooding and landslides in British Columbia, the speech reiterated the Liberals’ promise to develop the first-ever national adaptation strategy to help Canadians adjust to the changing climate.

It argued that growing the economy goes hand in hand with protecting the environment and that now is the time to “go further, faster” on combating climate change.

It promised to “strengthen action to prevent and prepare for floods, wildfires, droughts, coastline erosion and other extreme weather worsened by climate change.”

The speech — delivered to a much smaller than usual audience of masked dignitaries, senators and MPs in a bid to maintain physical distance — sketched only the broad outlines of the government’s agenda with few details.

It argued that ending the pandemic “for good” is the best way to revive the economy.

But with employment now back to pre-pandemic levels and almost 90 per cent of Canadians fully vaccinated, the speech reiterated the Liberals’ plan to replace emergency benefits that kept millions of Canadians and business afloat during the pandemic with more targeted aid for those hardest hit by the health crisis.

— Additional reporting by Erika Ibrahim

Whatever else Canadian government vows faster indigenous reconciliation





Tue, November 23, 2021,


Canada's governor general opened parliament Tuesday in a speech partly delivered in her native Inuktitut, highlighting the "deep wounds" reopened by the recent discovery of mass graves at schools for indigenous children.

Governor General Mary Simon, who was sworn in July to serve as the first indigenous representative of Queen Elizabeth II in Canada, said: "This is the moment to move faster on the path of reconciliation."

In the throne speech outlining Prime Minister Justice Trudeau's agenda, she said the discoveries in May of more than 1,300 unmarked graves at schools in British Columbia and Saskatchewan "horrified" Canadians and underscored how a past policy of assimilation caused "deep wounds."


Those finds, she said, "show how much the actions of governments and institutions of old have been devastating for indigenous peoples, who continue to suffer from it today."

Trudeau has made reconciliation with more than 600 tribes a priority for his government, which returned to power following a general election in September.

Highlighting the plans of Trudeau's Liberals in her speech, Simon said the government plans to taper pandemic aid down to a Can$7.4 billion (US$5.8 billion) package targeting hardest-hit sectors through the spring.

The government will also prioritize affordable housing and subsidized day care, increased immigration, tougher gun laws, and deepening partnerships in the Indo-Pacific region.

The statement follows a two-year row between Ottawa and Beijing over tit-for-tat arrests of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou, and two Canadians, former diplomat Michael Kovrig and businessman Michael Spavor.

All three were released and repatriated in September.

- 'Our planet is in danger' -

In her speech Simon also promised the federal government's support for Canadians on the Pacific coast who are recovering from catastrophic flooding and mudslides caused by heavy rains that left at least four dead and one missing.

Ottawa has already deployed the army to help, and vital road and rail links between Vancouver and the rest of Canada have started to be reestablished this week.

The latest flooding to hit British Columbia, following record-high temperatures over the summer that killed more than 500 people, as well as wildfires that destroyed a town, is a stark reminder of "extreme weather worsened by climate change," Simon said.

"Our planet is in danger," she said. "From a warming Arctic to the increasing devastation of natural disasters, our land and our people need help."

To pass their agenda, the Liberals must rely on at least one other party.

With the Tories and Bloc Quebecois saying they won't support the throne speech, the New Democrats could be left to prop up Trudeau's government. Otherwise, the country may face a fourth election in six years.

amc/mdappens, this Parliament looks set to be (mostly) about climate change

With one big crisis starting to abate, MPs must now turn

 the focus back to the other one

Lloyd Allen helps clean up his friend's home after flooding in Princeton, B.C., Saturday, Nov. 20, 2021. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

As the 44th Parliament since Confederation gets down to business this week, parts of British Columbia are still under water. The province has only just started to recover from what could prove to be the most expensive disaster in Canadian history.

Torrential rains and flooding caused thousands to be evacuated. Major highways were blocked or washed out, farms were swamped and livestock lost, towns were left isolated, supply chains were snarled and motorists were asked to conserve gasoline. Four people are known to have died.

But it's just not the floods weighing on the opening days of this Parliament. Before the floods came this summer's heat dome and wildfires. The extreme heat killed nearly 600 people in B.C. between June 18 and August 12 — the deadliest weather event in Canadian history. On June 29, Lytton, B.C. registered the highest temperature ever recorded in Canada. The next day, a wildfire consumed the entire town.

And before that heat wave came floods in Ontario and Quebec in 2019Eastern Canada's heat wave of 2018record-breaking wildfires in B.C. in 2017 and 2018, and the wildfire that roared through Fort McMurray, Alberta in 2016.

A helicopter battles a wildfire in Fort McMurray, Alta., on Wednesday May 4, 2016. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press)

The 43rd Parliament — which ran from December 2019 to this past August, when Justin Trudeau triggered a fall election — was consumed by the public health emergency that started a few months after it began. History will record the 43rd edition of the Parliament of Canada as the Pandemic Parliament.

The 44th Parliament could be about a lot of things, as most parliaments are. There are a great many things to do and debate. COVID-19 is still not done with us and the aftershocks will be felt for some time to come.

But this Parliament might be judged by how it met the other crisis unfolding before our eyes — by what it does to deal with the impacts of climate change that are already unavoidable, and to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions that would make things even worse in the future.

Gov. Gen. Julie Payette and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau watch as Usher of the Black Rod Greg Peters leaves to summon members of the House of Commons for the throne speech in the Senate chamber on December 5, 2019 in Ottawa. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

It seems like ancient history now, but there was a throne speech in December 2019, a few weeks before reports surfaced of a mysterious illness affecting people in China. Julie Payette was still governor general. It was a slightly simpler time.

Climate change was at the centre of the agenda Payette presented on the government's behalf that day.

"Canada's children and grandchildren will judge this generation by its action — or inaction — on the defining challenge of the time: climate change," she said.

After ending the 2019 election with a minority government, Trudeau seized on climate change as an issue that united voters across parties: 63 per cent of voters had cast ballots for parties that supported putting a price on carbon emissions.

People attend a climate change protest in Montreal on Nov. 6, 2021. (The Canadian Press)

The pandemic did not entirely upend that agenda. A year after the throne speech, the Liberals laid out a new climate plan. This past April, they increased the ambition of Canada's national emissions target and then, in the waning days of the last Parliament, the Senate passed the government's new climate change accountability legislation.

But the case for acting is only more obvious now — to everyone. According to recent polling by Abacus Data, 66 per cent of Canadians say they believe governments should put "more emphasis" on reducing emissions — that's up ten percentage points since the spring of 2016.

And while many people complained that this fall's election was unnecessary or pointless, the Liberals ran on a climate, conservation and adaptation platform that included more than a hundred bullet points promising either to continue pursuing previous actions or to implement new ones.

The new ministers of environment and natural resources — Steven Guilbeault and Jonathan Wilkinson — already have asked the government's net-zero advisory panel for advice on how to implement a gradually declining cap on emissions from the oil and gas industry.

Guilbeault will soon have to present an updated plan to Parliament on meeting Canada's 2030 target to meet the conditions of the Canadian Net-Zero Emissions Accountability Act (the deadline is December 29, though that could be extended by three months).

The official consultation on "just transition" legislation ended in September and a report is due this fall. A task force on flood insurance and relocation — established to advise the government on two campaign promises from 2019 — is expected to issue its final report in the spring. The promise of a new disaster assistance benefit for those who can't work because of floods or fires also remains unfulfilled.

The Liberals say work with the provinces and territories to update flood mapping will be completed in the next three years and Canada's first national climate change "adaptation strategy" will be finalized by the end of 2022. All federal subsidies for fossil fuels are to be phased out by 2023.

A car is charged at a charge station for electric vehicles on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Wednesday, May 1, 2019. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

The Liberals also have promised to implement a Clean Electricity Standard, a zero-emission vehicle mandate, new methane regulations and new climate-related financial disclosure rules for federally regulated institutions.

Inevitably, there will be other things to worry about. The Conservatives seem eager to argue that inflation is the most worrisome storm bearing down on Canada; some voters might be inclined to agree. From provincial capitals, the premiers will continue agitating for a long-term commitment to more federal funding for health care. The Liberals themselves will want or need to move forward on child care, reconciliation and reform of the Canadian Forces.

There will be new controversies and gaffes. Opposition-dominated committees will agitate for new investigations.

Only in the most extreme circumstances can Parliament be expected or even allowed to put aside all other business and focus exclusively on confronting a single threat — as it did for several months through the pandemic spring and summer of 2020.

But Parliament need not put aside any sense of urgency until the next pandemic. The next great challenge of our time is already here. It has been building for decades and it will not get any easier with time. For all the action that has been taken in recent years against it, there is still much more to do.

The damage and disruption wrought by the floodwaters in British Columbia offer both a reminder of the threat and a purpose for this Parliament.


SPACE RACE 2.0
SpaceX rocket business leadership shakes up as two VPs depart

PUBLISHED MON, NOV 22 2021
Michael Sheetz@THESHEETZTWEETZ

KEY POINTS

The leadership of SpaceX’s rocket business has been shaken up, CNBC has learned, including the departure of two vice presidents.

SpaceX vice president of propulsion Will Heltsley has left, multiple people familiar with the situation told CNBC, having been with the company since 2009.

Lee Rosen, SpaceX vice president of mission and launch operations, left last week, sources said, having joined the company in 2013.



The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and Crew Dragon capsule on launch Pad 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center on November 09, 2021 in Cape Canaveral, Florida.

Joe Raedle | Getty Images

The leadership of SpaceX’s rocket business has been shaken up, CNBC has learned, as two vice presidents have parted with the company.

The changes arrive with Elon Musk’s space company now the leading U.S. rocket builder with its Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy vehicles. The company is also investing heavily in the development of its next-generation Starship rocket.


SpaceX vice president of propulsion Will Heltsley has left, multiple people familiar with the situation told CNBC, having been with the company since 2009. Those people said Heltsley was taken off Raptor engine development due to a lack of progress. The Raptor engines power SpaceX’s Starship rocket and Super Heavy boosters.

Heltsley’s departure demonstrates the intense pressure on the engine’s development, given the key role it plays in Starship’s success. The company has successfully performed a multitude of test firings and flights with Raptor, steadily improving the engine. Musk recently said that a second generation of the Raptor engine “has significant improvements in every way.”

“But a complete design overhaul is necessary for the engine that can actually make life multiplanetary. It won’t be called Raptor,” Musk said in a Tweet on Nov. 16.

SpaceX’s Jacob McKenzie, who has been with the company for more than six years, is now leading Raptor engine development and production, sources said.

A closer look under the base of Super Heavy Booster 4 at the 29 Raptor engines.
SpaceX

Lee Rosen, SpaceX vice president of mission and launch operations, left last week, people said, as well as Ricky Lim, senior director of mission and launch operations. Rosen had been with SpaceX since 2013, while Lim joined the company in 2008.

SpaceX did not respond to CNBC’s request for comment on the leadership changes.

A handful of other long-time employees left after SpaceX closed its purchase offer on Friday, timing which people familiar with the matter indicated was in part tied to employees’ stock vesting schedules. While SpaceX did not raise new capital in the secondary sale, the round was done at $560 a share – increasing the company’s valuation to $100.3 billion.

SpaceX has had a banner year: The company has launched 25 successful Falcon 9 missions, carried 12 astronauts to orbit with its Dragon capsules, grown its Starlink satellite internet service to about 140,000 users, and continued to make progress with Starship.

Musk last week said SpaceX will “hopefully” launch its first orbital Starship flight in January or February, which represents the next major milestone in the rocket’s development. That launch is pending regulatory approval by the FAA, as well as technical readiness.

SPACE RACE 2.0

Canada and Ukraine launch construction of spaceport

20.11.2021 

An official ceremony was held in Canada to mark the start of the construction of a joint Ukrainian-Canadian spaceport in the east of the country.

"On November 18, in Halifax, the space agencies of Ukraine and Canada signed a joint statement of partnership, and on November 19, a solemn ceremony of laying a ‘cornerstone’ of the Ukrainian-Canadian space launch complex was held," the Embassy of Ukraine in Canada reported.

It is noted that during the visit of Head of the State Space Agency of Ukraine Volodymyr Taftay to Canada, a model of the launch control center of the joint project will be unveiled.

The joint Ukrainian-Canadian project to create a space launch complex in the province of Nova Scotia is being implemented by the Canadian company Maritime Launch Services. The project involves the use of the Ukrainian carrier rocket Cyclone 4M.

During the ceremony, Volodymyr Taftay, Head of the State Space Agency of Ukraine, stressed the importance of the project not only for the development of space cooperation between Ukraine and Canada, but also for further strengthening traditionally friendly and partnership relations between the two countries.
SPACE RACE 2.0Nova Scotia

Proposed N.S. spaceport announces payload client for 1st rocket launch

Maritime Launch Services aiming for rocket launch in 2023

A rendering shows the outside of the launch control centre for the proposed Canso spaceport. (Maritime Launch Services)

The company behind the push to build Canada's first commercial spaceport, to be located on the tip of northeastern Nova Scotia, announced on Friday the first payload client for its initial rocket launch, which it expects near the end of 2023.

Stephen Matier, president and CEO of Maritime Launch Services, told reporters in Halifax that Nanoracks, a leading commercial payload provider to the International Space Station, will use the spaceport to deploy small satellites for its customers.

Texas-based Nanoracks, which also offers satellite services to the Canadian Space Agency, is known for having designed and built the oven for baking cookies that was shipped to the space station in 2019.

Matier said the launch agreement with Nanoracks is worth $45 million US, adding that the business case for getting the spaceport built is increasingly evident.

"The commercial space industry is already at $400 billion a year and growing," he said. "The backbone of that industry though, is the ability to launch those satellites into orbit."

Stephen Matier, the president and CEO of Maritime Launch Services, speaks with reporters after an announcement during the Halifax International Security Forum. (Brett Ruskin/CBC)

Nanoracks co-founder Jeffrey Manber said his company's confidence in the proposed venture is a sign that the idea of building a launch centre on Canada's East Coast is realistic. The proposed site was picked because of its remoteness and its access to a desired due south trajectory to put satellites into orbit.

"It's extremely important to have a variety of spaceports," Manber said in an interview Friday. "Being so close to the United States, it will be easy to ship your satellites, so there are a lot of advantages for our customers once Maritime Launch gets going."

Matier also announced that his company had signed a letter of intent to launch small satellites for Nova Scotia-based GALAXIA Mission Systems. As well, he revealed preliminary designs for a launch control centre to be built at the spaceport site near Canso, N.S., complete with a visitor and educational centre.

Matier said the first payload will be launched aboard a Ukrainian-built Cyclone-4M rocket. He said the rocket, which has 877 successful missions to its credit, offers a lift capacity of five tonnes with a payload bay four metres in diameter, capable of carrying dozens of satellites at a time.

Maritime Launch Services filed a report to the Environment Department earlier this month addressing questions about the proposed rocket launching facility (Maritime Launch Services)

Volodymyr Taftai, head of Ukraine's state space agency, was among the dignitaries on hand for Friday's announcement. Others included federal Innovation, Science and Industry Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne and federal Immigration Minister Sean Fraser, along with Canadian Space Agency president Lisa Campbell.

Taftai called the Maritime Launch project the next chapter in the relationship between Ukraine and Canada. "This is a project which will combine a perfect launch site, a perfect location and an excellent rocket," he said.

In May, Maritime Launch Services announced it had secured $10.5 million from Toronto investment bank PowerOne Capital Markets in order to help it achieve its first flight. It also announced some of the firms chosen to design and construct the launch pad, including Stantec, Strum Consulting, Nova Construction and St. Francis Xavier University.

Matier told CBC News it was aiming to hold the first launch at the end of 2023, two more in 2024, four in 2025 and then work its way up to eight per year.

An artist's rendering shows the launch control centre at the proposed Canso spaceport. (Maritime Launch Services)

The $200-million project has not received taxpayer money so far, Matier said, though the company has "expressed interest to our government in letting them know we'd welcome their support."

Last March, Nova Scotia's Environment Department granted the company an 18-month extension to begin the project's construction. The department said it expected all conditions of the environmental assessment approval to be completed no later than Dec. 3, 2022.

Matier said the work on satisfying the province's requirements continues, as does pre-construction activities, including design work for the entire facility and work to find potential customers.

"We are having positive conversations with other satellite developers," he said.

BRO CULTURE IS RAPE CULTURE

Facing a "challenging time", Activision Blizzard announces formation of Workplace Responsibility Committee

The latest poorly-judged move from Activision Blizzard includes a press release pushed out in the dead of night that doesn't mention its 10,000+ employees.

Another day, another development in the messy, appalling saga that is Activision Blizzard's response to its ongoing sexual harrassment lawsuit.

Following reports that Bobby Kotick apparently discussed stepping down as Activision Blizzard boss, the company's board slipped out a press release at 10.30pm EST detailing the formation of a "Workplace Responsibility Committee".

The press release, written in dense HR-centric language, basically notes that this new committee will oversee Activision Blizzard’s progress in "successfully implementing its new policies, procedures, and commitments to improve workplace culture and eliminate all forms of harassment and discrimination at the company". You can read about some of the proposed policies here, though it's worth noting that they won't necessarily apply to Kotick himself. Hm.

The new Workplace Responsibility Committee will consist of the only two women on Activision Blizzard's 10-person board of directors (a board which has stood behind Kotick as calls for his resignation mount up), though Activision notes "a new, diverse director" will soon be added to the board, too.

"The committee will require management to develop key performance indicators and/or other means to measure progress and ensure accountability," reads the press release. "The chief executive officer, Bobby Kotick, along with the chief people officer and chief compliance officer will provide frequent progress reports to the committee, which will regularly brief the full board. The committee is empowered to retain outside consultants or advisers, including independent legal counsel, to assist in its work."

So, basically, the committee can get advice from outside sources and lawyer up, but there's no reference at all to how it can (or should) interact with the actual workforce. You know, the people making all these complaints and the reason state and federal agencies are investigating the company.

"Formation of the committee and additional future changes will help facilitate additional direct oversight and transparency and ensure that the company’s commitments to Activision Blizzard’s workforce are carried out with urgency and impact," the press release continues. "This has been a challenging time across the company, but the board is confident in the actions underway to set the company up for future success."

It's worth noting, at this point, that this press release is directed at investors – some of which have also called for Kotick's resignation.

Given that PlayStation and Xbox bosses are planning to re-evaluate their relationship with Activision Blizzard, the formation of this Committee may not be enough.

Nintendo Joins Sony And Xbox In Calling Activision Blizzard Crisis 'Disturbing'

Doug Bowser finds recent reports “distressing”


By Ryan Leston
Updated: 23 Nov 2021 

Nintendo has joined the likes of Sony and Xbox, speaking out against Activision Blizzard due to recent reports of sexual misconduct and toxicity.

In a new report by Fanbyte, Doug Bowser reportedly expressed concern over the ongoing situation at Activision Blizzard in a company-wide email, calling the allegations "distressing and disturbing."

“Along with all of you, I’ve been following the latest developments with Activision Blizzard and the ongoing reports of sexual harassment and toxicity at the company,” he explained. “I find these accounts distressing and disturbing. They run counter to my values as well as Nintendo’s beliefs, values and policies.
35 IMAGES


The email reportedly goes on to explain that Nintendo is committed to providing an “open and inclusive” workplace and expects the same from the industry and its partners. Bowser also states that Nintendo has been “in contact with Activision, have taken action and are assessing others.” Although the email apparently stops short of giving further details.

However, the Nintendo chief does reportedly confirm that the company has been working with the ESA – a lobbying organization in which both Nintendo and Activision Blizzard are members. Bowser wrote that Nintendo has been working with the ESA since last week in order to “strengthen its stances on harassment and abuse in the workplace”.

“Every company in the industry must create an environment where everyone is respected and treated as equals,” the email reads. “And where all understand the consequences of not doing so.”

IGN has reached out to Nintendo of America for comment but has yet to receive a response at the time of publishing.

Xbox Boss 'Disturbed and Deeply Troubled' By Latest Activision Reports - IGN Now

Nintendo’s comments follow PlayStation CEO Jim Ryan who is said to be "disheartened and frankly stunned" by the Activision Blizzard scandal. Xbox boss Phil Spencer also added that he is “disturbed and deeply troubled” by the ongoing events.

Activision CEO Bobby Kotick has found himself under pressure to resign, and has reportedly told the company he would consider stepping down if he’s unable to quickly fix the ongoing issues at the company.

Ryan Leston is an entertainment journalist and film critic for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter.

Nintendo Of America President Joins PlayStation And Xbox Counterparts In Criticism Of Activision Blizzard

"They run counter to my values as well as Nintendo’s beliefs"

Doug Bowser
Image: Nintendo

Update: Nintendo has now officially confirmed this in a PR response to Fanbyte:

“We can confirm the content of Doug Bowser’s internal email to Nintendo of America staff is accurate. We have nothing further to share on this topic.”


Nintendo of America's president Doug Bowser last week issued an internal response to ongoing reports about allegations of misconduct at Activision Blizzard.

Bowser's email, which has been publicly shared by Fanbyte, was sent out on 19th November and reached "all levels" of Nintendo of America - including internal development houses such as Retro Studios (Metroid Prime 4) and the recently acquired Canadian team Next Level Games (Luigi's Mansion 3).

Bowser mentioned how "distressing and disturbing" the reports were and said every company in the industry was responsible for creating an environment where everyone is treated as an equal:

“Along with all of you, I’ve been following the latest developments with Activision Blizzard and the ongoing reports of sexual harassment and toxicity at the company. I find these accounts distressing and disturbing. They run counter to my values as well as Nintendo’s beliefs, values and policies.”

“Every company in the industry must create an environment where everyone is respected and treated as equals, and where all understand the consequences of not doing so.”

His email further states how Nintendo has committed itself to an open and inclusive workplace - welcoming everyone - and expects the same from the rest of the industry and its partners.

Nintendo's representatives have apparently been “in contact with Activision, have taken action, and are assessing others." Bowser mentioned how Nintendo has been working with the ESA (a lobbying organisation Activision is also a member of) encouraging it to strengthen its stances on harassment and hold its members to the highest standard.

Both Sony and Microsoft are also reportedly re-evaluating their relationship with Activision Blizzard. You can read more in our previous stories:


 

No More Hellcats: Dodge CEO Says Plug Is Getting Pulled After 2023, EV Muscle Cars Coming

We knew this day was coming, but at least now we have somewhat of an expiration date. The Hellcat represents the pinnacle of internal combustion engine muscle cars. The result of 70 years of progress. Yet, according to Dodge CEO Tim Kuniskis, the Hellcat’s days are numbered, and the future is clearly fully electric.
 7 photos
Dodge Hellcat modelsDodge Hellcat modelsSupercharged HEMI V8Supercharged HEMI V8Dodge Challenger HellcatDodge Challenger Hellcat
Kuniskis sat down with Motor Authority at the 2021 LA Auto Show and talked about Hellcats, as well as what we can expect from future Dodge muscle cars.

“I will have this car, this platform, this powertrain as we know it through the end of ‘23. There’s two more years to buy a Hellcat, then it’s history.” History indeed. What a good choice of words.

He then shared a small piece of cardstock dubbed “24 Months of Muscle”, serving as a roadmap to 2024. This calendar featured 26 garage doors, with only four of them having been opened so far – revealing the revival of a performance part program, Jailbreak versions of the Charger and Challenger Redeyes and so on.

The calendar should end with the unveiling of a fully electric Dodge muscle car, which will arrive in showrooms in 2024. Before that happens, the carmaker will showcase a concept version of the EV muscle car, and this should take place soon, in Q1 of 2022. The concept is said to be a working model capable of high-performance driving.

Dodge will also reveal the EV’s performance specifications, with Kuniskis adding that his company will “do electrification different than anybody else,” which sounds exciting.

Also in the works is a plug-in hybrid model, which according to the CEO will be a “new, new car,” – so not a PHEV version of a current model.

Finally, there will be a third big reveal next year, but Kuniskis wouldn’t give out any hints, except for suggesting it’s something we should get excited about.

Reading about all this has to be somewhat bittersweet. We’re going to miss Hellcats, with their rowdy supercharged HEMI V8 units. That being said, we’re pretty sure EV muscle cars will be even quicker, especially over a quarter mile.



Anti-vaccine groups 'boycotting' Chapman's ice cream
MISSING OUT ON THE BEST ICE CREAM IN CANADA

Scott Miller
CTV News London Videographer
The Chapman's ice cream factory in Markdale, Ont. is seen Monday, Nov. 22, 2021. 
(Scott Miller / CTV News)

Published Nov. 22, 2021

MARKDALE, ONT. -

The Chapman family’s specialty is making ice cream, which they never thought would put them in the crosshairs of Canada’s most militant anti-vaccine groups.

“In fact, I got a threatening package this morning from Druthers, saying 'the hundreds of employees you’ve fired,' now we’re going to come out with an article, and that will show you who’s boss,” says the vice-president of the family-run ice cream company, Ashley Chapman.

Druthers is an anti-vaccine, anti-COVID-19-restriction alternative publication.

On Nov. 7, Chapman’s started twice-a-week rapid testing for about 100 of their 850 employees, who had decided against getting vaccinated. Five employees refused, and are currently on unpaid leave.

On Nov. 12, Chapman’s announced they’d be giving their fully-vaccinated employees a $1 per hour raise by month’s end. Disgruntled employees leaked the raise news to some anti-vaccine groups, who have in turn launched a boycott of Chapman’s products.

“The far-right anti-vaxxers have taken it up, as in, we’re horrible people, and we need to be taught a lesson,” says Chapman.

So far, Chapman says the boycott has not impacted sales of their ice cream treats at all. He calls the boycott “frustrating” since the company was trying to find a middle ground, by deciding against a vaccine mandate, as many other organizations and businesses have.

“We’re really trying hard to work with these people, but it can be tough at times, especially when you’re being boycotted for this. It seems a bit ridiculous,” he says.

The “Chapman’s boycott” has actually started a counter movement #IStandwithChapmans, of supporters who are promising to buy even more ice cream in the coming months to support the Markdale-based company.

“It’s been overwhelming on the other side of things, it’s just that the negative comments, they hurt. We’re trying to do good in everything we do, so this was somewhat unexpected,” he says.

The $1 per hour premium for fully-vaccinated Chapman’s employees takes effect Nov. 28. The unpaid leave for the five employees who refused rapid testing started Monday.



Chapman's ice cream is seen on the line at their factory in Markdale, Ont. on Monday, Nov. 22, 2021. (Scott Miller / CTV News)
Lush Cosmetics to deactivate Instagram, Facebook, TikTok and Snapchat accounts


Holiday shoppers browse at Lush, a cosmetics store at Cherry Creek Shopping Center in Denver, Colo. on November 24, 2017. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP, Tatiana Flowers


Tara Deschamps, The Canadian Press
Published Monday, November 22, 2021 

Lush Cosmetics will deactivate its social media accounts later this week in a bid to get tech companies to make online platforms safer.

The U.K. retailer, which sells bath and body products and has a large footprint in Canada, announced its plan Monday to cease posting on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok and Snapchat accounts by Friday.

The company, which likened social media to “a dark and dangerous alleyway,” said the deactivation decision is meant to address consumers' mental health challenges and will not be reversed unless the platforms are made safer.


“There is now overwhelming evidence we are being put at risk when using social media,” said Lush co-founder Mark Constantine, in a news release.

“I'm not willing to expose my customers to this harm, so it's time to take it out of the mix.”

Facebook, Instagram and TikTok refused to comment on the campaign, while Snapchat did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Instead of using the platforms, Lush will invest in new ways to connect and for now can still be found on Twitter and YouTube.

Lush had previously tried to abandon social media in 2019 with just its U.K. accounts, but came back when the COVID-19 pandemic began.

Lush is now bringing back the deactivation and applying it to all 48 countries it operates in because its “resolve has been strengthened” by information from whistleblowers who recently laid out harms young people face because of algorithms and “loose regulation.”

Over the last few months, Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen accused the company of prioritizing engagement and user growth over online safety.

Documents from the former Facebook data scientist suggested the social media giant knew about the harms its products cause and often did little or nothing to mitigate them.

Courtney Radsch, a senior fellow at the Centre for International Governance Innovation, said it's hard to tell how much success Lush will have with its deactivations because it didn't release a specific list of demands from the social media companies.

Getting the platforms to take action, she said, is typically a “long slog” made more difficult because “a couple of social media platforms have held the world hostage by becoming the walled gardens where all of our communication takes place.”

Companies have tried to push Facebook to adopt more consumer-friendly policies before, but the tech giant has not relented.

For example, Vancouver athleticwear companies Lululemon Athletica Inc., Mountain Equipment Co-op and Arc'teryx pulled their paid ads from Facebook in July 2020 as part of a global StopHateForProfit boycott supported by Coca-Cola, Unilever, Honda America, Patagonia and more.

The companies wanted to boycott Facebook because they believed it had not done enough to keep racist, false and dangerous content or white supremacists off its platform.


StopHateForProfit's website said studies completed since the boycott found “no platform has made significant structural changes” and Facebook made the least progress toward meeting the coalition's demands.

So far, Lush hasn't had any other businesses take up its fight, which could blunt the campaign's effectiveness.

“Companies will wait and see what type of coverage this generate in terms of free earned media for Lush versus having to spend on advertising right around the holiday season,” said Radsch.

“And then of course, they will also want to see the impact on sales and traffic revenue.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 22, 2021.

 BC Business  

Wineries seek permanent change to deliver directly to consumers

Disaster highlights red tape

Last week's closure of all highways connecting the Lower Mainland to the rest of B.C. highlighted the fragility of the province's supply chains.

Recent torrential rain prompted mudslides and several sections of the Coquihalla Highway to collapse – something that could happen again, given the global trend toward more extreme weather events.

B.C. winery owners, who during the COVID-19 pandemic shifted business models to include more direct shipments to customers and to wine-club members, believe they were unnecessarily affected by the disruption.

For years, they have been trying to get Victoria to snip red tape that limits how they can deliver wine to the public.

Pre-pandemic, the B.C. government forbid winery owners from taking products stored in off-site warehouses and delivering them directly to individual customers. Winery owners were allowed to store products at warehouses far away from their winery sites, but products in those far-flung facilities could only be directly delivered to restaurants, bars and retail stores.

The B.C. government, in 2020, changed this restriction on a temporary basis, to allow wineries to directly deliver products to the public from off-site warehouses.

The temporary change is set to expire at the end of December, and, as such, has not garnered much uptake from winery owners because putting in place new delivery systems costs money that would be capital down the drain if the new systems are not permanent.

"None of us are going to do that for a temporary measure," said Okanagan Crush Pad owner Christine Coletta.

She wants the B.C. government to make its change permanent so she can put in place a new storage and delivery system, and hire management staff.

Coletta stores some wine at ContainerWorld's bonded warehouse in Richmond, but she is not able to touch product in that warehouse, as ContainerWorld makes all deliveries.

If she knew that she could permanently deliver wine directly to the general public, she would lease space in a non-bonded warehouse, perhaps jointly with other wineries, and hire people to manage the purchase orders.

"When we're selling to the public, we're selling mixed cases of wine," Coletta explained. "There would have to be a warehouse set up where we could pick and pack and ship. That's a major undertaking, and it would probably involve several different wineries getting together, and having a warehouse business."

The math makes sense to invest capital into that initiative because shipping prices have soared.

Colletta said delivery-company fuel surcharges make the cost of shipping wine from the Okanagan to the Lower Mainland $20, instead of what was $10 not long ago.

"We could have the same delivery go from Vancouver for $7, so it would be a massive cost saving for us," said Colletta, who ships about 20% of her winery's 20,000-case annual volume directly to the public.

B.C.'s Ministry of Public Safety and Solicitor General said in an email that it expects to announce by the end of the November whether it will make permanent its temporary policy on wine deliveries to the public.

"There are significant considerations in making this temporary authorization permanent, such as B.C.’s international trade obligations," the ministry said.

Wine lawyer Mark Hicken, however, says making the change permanent should not be a problem.

"It's commonplace," said Hicken, who in 2018 chaired the B.C. government-created Business Technical Advisory Panel (Liquor Policy), and recommended a slate of 23 recommendations for how the government should modernize liquor regulations in B.C.

"Nearly every other jurisdiction in the world allows that to happen. I think it's a very sensible, logical change to make it permanent, and allow wineries to deliver direct to consumers from secondary warehouses."

Wine Growers BC CEO Miles Prodan says his organization, which promotes B.C. wine, has been after this change for many years.

"Selling wine direct to consumer makes the best sense for wineries because that is how they make the highest margin on the sale – directly from the winery," he said.

When wineries sell wines to the public via retailers, the retailers take a cut of the profit.

Wineries would still need to register their off-site warehouses with B.C.'s Liquor and Cannabis Regulation Branch, and would have to adhere to government regulations, he added.

"These wouldn't be fly-by-night operations," said Prodan.

Cobalt Is the New Oil









A New York Times investigation details China's rapid acceleration of cobalt mining as countries gear up for a rapid rise in renewable energy and battery demand.

By
Mack DeGeurin

The U.S. and China may be on a collision course over scarce resources, the fallout of which could have a massive impact on developing countries.

Superpowers fighting worried over valuable goods might sound familiar in the context of oil and gas. But the new resource struggle is over the metals and minerals that will power the future from electric vehicles to clean energy technology.

That’s according to a recent New York Times investigation, which used formerly classified diplomatic cables and interviews with more than 100 people spread across three continents to paint a picture of the fight for cobalt. The investigation zeros in specifically on the southwest region of the Democratic Republic of Congo called Kisanfu, which is home to one of the world’s largest cobalt reserves. Congo as a whole is responsible for producing over 70% of the world’s cobalt supply, according to Reuters.

The report traces Chinese companies ramping up cobalt extraction in Congo back to 2016, when a major U.S. mining firm sold off two massive cobalt reserves to a Chinese conglomerate China Molybdenum. Chinese mining firms have since been on a buying spree in the county, locking up much of the global cobalt supply chain.

According to the Times, 15 of the 19 cobalt-producing mines in the country are now owned by Chinese companies that have received at least $12 billion in loans and financing from state-backed institutions. The five biggest companies have a line of credit hovering around a whopping $124 billion. The U.S., meanwhile, has fallen behind—and even let cobalt assets slip out of its grasp. That’s set the stage for a major fight for the energy of the 21st century, with Congolese workers and residents caught in the middle.

Congolese officials have accused one of those mining companies, China Molybdenum, of withholding payments to the government. As cobalt production has rapidly increased since the Chinese firms took over, at least a dozen employees and contractors at a Tenke Fungurume mine complained of a “drastic decline in safety and an increase in injuries, many of which were not reported to management.”

The report comes as the U.S. Senate prepares to vote on the Build Back Better bill, which would include $320 billion in expanded tax credits for renewable energy and electric vehicles and another $110 billion to improve U.S. renewable energy technology supply chains. Those investments will be crucial if the country and carmakers have any shot at meeting EV and clean energy targets outlined for the next decade. For some context, President Biden has promised to decarbonize the grid by 2035 and set a target of making half of all new U.S. car sales electric by 2030. He has used the weight of the federal government to start the EV transition, and Build Back Better would add more juice to it and the clean energy goals. But there’s a lot of work to do between now and then; a report from LMC Automotive suggested that that share is expected to be less than 4% this year.

But analysts and experts are already warning of a coming EV battery shortage that could resemble the current global semiconductor scarcity rattling supply chains. In the U.S., EV carmakers like Tesla as well as traditional brands like General Motors and Ford are gearing up to dramatically increase their cobalt and lithium demand in coming years as they ramp up EV production. That could strain already shaky supplies.

Some of those effects are already being felt according to a report released last month by Benchmark Mineral Intelligence, which found an increase in battery cell prices in tandem with an increase in raw material prices, especially for lithium. If countries continue towards their path of meeting needed climate goals, the International Energy Agency warns supplies from existing mines may only be able to meet half of lithium and cobalt requirements by 2030.

Biden, for his part, made clear his administration’s ambition to ramp up the mineral race with China during a visit at a General Motors facility last week, the Times notes.

“We risked losing our edge as a nation, and China and the rest of the world are catching up,” Biden said. “Well, we’re about to turn that around in a big, big way.”

So far, the global push towards renewable energy technology appears poised to follow a familiar script, with a handful of large players fiercely competing on the global stage to extract valuable resources, likely at the expense of local geography, ecology, and communities.