Tuesday, February 09, 2021

RIGHT WING CLIMATE SOLUTIONS
Investments in nuclear energy could help solve the economic and climate crises


As the United States faces several key challenges simultaneously - COVID-19, the economic crisis, social injustice and the rising threat of climate change - the federal government is looking for solutions that help address multiple issues at once. Recent commitments by President Biden are encouraging: by tying the post-pandemic economic recovery to investments in clean energy, we can tackle all four existential crises at the same time.
© Getty Images
 Investments in nuclear energy could help solve the economic and climate crises

During his campaign, Biden ran on a sweeping clean energy plan, pledging to achieve a carbon-free electricity sector by 2035 with net zero emissions economy-wide by 2050 as part of his "all of government" plan for climate. The president's proposed tech-neutral approach opens the door for an inclusive plan to combat climate change, which includes nuclear power - the nation's largest carbon-free source of energy. This marks the first time nuclear power has been a part of the Democratic platform since 1972.

Additionally, we have seen increasing bipartisan congressional support for nuclear energy over the last decade. The new administration can build on this strong foundation by accelerating its investment in advanced nuclear energy to create new opportunities in the clean power sector and take meaningful steps towards cost-effective decarbonization. The nuclear industry can be ready to accomplish this with advanced technologies and a commitment to align with the equity-centered approach of the new administration.


The Department of Energy (DOE) leaves the new administration well-positioned to deliver on the Biden administration's appropriately ambitious decarbonization goals by continuing to invest in the bright future of nuclear energy. DOE recently launched the National Reactor Innovation Center (NRIC) to support the demonstration of advanced reactors and pioneer best practices for community engagement with new nuclear technology. That's because DOE has already recognized the promise of advanced reactors, acknowledging they can help lower carbon emissions and create new clean energy jobs.

Last October, the DOE approved a multiyear cost-share award to Utah Associated Municipal Power Systems (UAMPS) to develop and construct the Carbon Free Power Project (CFPP), a 720-megawatt small modular nuclear reactor (SMR) located at the Idaho National Laboratory. This crucial award will help ensure that the CFPP is fully operational by 2030 and competitive with other baseload energy sources like combined-cycle natural gas plants, but with zero greenhouse gas emissions. And in December, DOE's Advanced Reactor Demonstration Program (ARDP) awarded two U.S.-based companies - TerraPower and X-energy - with $160 million in initial funding to build first-of-their-kind reactors, expected to be fully operational within seven years. This is progress the Biden administration can build on by continuing to invest in the next generation of nuclear energy.


A CHEAP FOSSIL FUEL ALTERNATIVE TO COAL
Video: Gas has to take priority in transition to green energy: OMV CEO (CNBC)


The ambitious timelines for the DOE's projects mean advanced nuclear energy can play a meaningful role in enabling communities to reach their climate goals, potentially directly replacing fossil plants and partnering with renewable energy and battery technologies. In the long-run, the investment in advanced nuclear technologies will also help provide local, high-paying jobs for the communities where they will operate as well as jobs in the emerging supply chains. And for communities facing coal plant closures - like in Michigan, Ohio, Nevada and North Carolina - advanced nuclear will be the most effective option to provide always-on, carbon-free energy to replace the baseload of fossil fuels, something that wind and solar power are not able to do quite yet.

But investing in the next generation of nuclear is about more than keeping the lights on. The Biden administration's strong commitment to fostering electric vehicle (EV) adoption in the U.S. requires a similarly strong commitment to ensuring nuclear power remains a big part of the equation for how to provide what will be an increasingly large amount of baseload power to the electric grid. EVs aren't very clean if they don't run on clean energy.

To help realize our clean energy future, the federal government must continue to give the clean energy community the investment it needs to succeed. With the possibility of a budget reconciliation process being discussed in Congress, it is vital that policymakers and legislators recognize the momentum the nuclear technology industry has right now and how vital it is to keep that going. Paired with its comprehensive plan to reach net zero emissions as rapidly as possible, the Biden administration can build a stronger, more resilient economy powered by clean, carbon-free energy sources. The nuclear energy sector is ready to help.


Todd Allen is the chair for Nuclear Engineering and Radiological Sciences at the University of Michigan and executive director of Fastest Path to Zero, an initiative that supports communities as they plan for and pursue full decarbonization.

Suzy Hobbs Baker is the creative director of Fastest Path to Zero and co-founder of the Good Energy Collective, which seeks to make the progressive case for advanced nuclear as part of the climate change agenda.
Amazon's own investors are reportedly telling the company to stop pressuring warehouse workers who have begun to vote on forming the firm's first union

© Provided by Business Insider Amazon has faced criticism over its extensive surveillance of workers and its poor safety record. 
Patrick Fallon/Getty Images

Amazon investors are telling the firm to stop interfering in a unionization vote, the FT reported.

Alabama warehouse workers are currently voting on whether to form the firm's first-ever union.

Amazon reportedly posted anti-union messaging in the bathrooms of the Alabama warehouse.

A group of more than 70 Amazon investors is telling the company to stop interfering with a unionization vote in Alabama, according to a report from the Financial Times.

Nearly 6,000 workers at an Alabama warehouse are voting on whether to form a union, the first in the history of Amazon, which has long been staunchly opposed to its employees unionizing. The workers were due to receive their ballots on Monday as part of a mail-in election and have until March 29 to place their vote.

The investors calling for Amazon to cease pushing back on the unionization efforts collectively hold more than $20 billion worth of the company's shares, the FT notes. The group includes the comptrollers for the state of New York as well as New York City, BMO Global Asset Management, (CANADIAN) the Church of England Pensions Board, and Sweden-based Folksam and Ohman Fonder, per the report.

In a letter, the investors reportedly pointed to Amazon's stated "human rights principles," which include statements on respecting workers' rights to join and form or not to join a labor union "without fear of reprisal, intimidation, or harassment."


"As these workers seek to organize with [the union] for health, safety, and protection, Amazon's investors are watching," New York City comptroller Scott Stringer said, according to the FT. "There is power in their unity and power in labour, and they have my full support as they fight for a safe, fair workplace."

Amazon did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.

Amazon has a history of working against employee efforts to form a union. Last week, the Washington Post reported that Amazon had posted anti-union messaging in the bathrooms of its Bessemer, Alabama, warehouse, the facility whose employees have begun voting on unionizing.

"Where will your dues go," a sign read on the back of a stall door according to The Post, referring to union fees.

DUES ARE THE BEST TAX CREDIT A WORKER CAN GET
THEY ARE 100% DEDUCTABLE COME TAX TIME

Read more: More than 40% of surveyed Amazon employees say they wished they were in a union, a new Insider survey shows

The company listed before quickly removing a job opening in 2020 for an analyst that would monitor worker activities around organizing.

Amazon has also used a tool to monitor dozens of private and public social media groups to find drivers that were organizing protests or strikes, per a Motherboard report from September. And in November, reports surfaced that Amazon had hired detectives with the infamous Pinkerton spy agency to monitor European workers' labor union organizing efforts.


OPINION | It's time to take action against growing (WHITE RACIST) extremism in Alberta

On Jan. 6, Canadians watched in horror as an angry mob stormed and terrorized the U.S. Capitol building.

If you were on social media in the days following, you might have seen some variation of the familiar "thank goodness we live in Canada" type posts and sentiment that we've been laughing a lot at these past four years.

 
© Scott Neufeld/CBC 
Members of the anti-immigration group Soldiers of Odin attend a yellow vest rally in Edmonton. Researchers are concerned that far right groups in Alberta are gaining steam, and members.

It's a convenient punchline to shrug off the dramatic, sometimes violent politics that seems to be surging south of the border.

But here's the thing: we're not immune. Moreover, we're overdue to take action on growing right-wing extremism in this province.

Just because we don't have protestors storming the Legislature in Edmonton doesn't mean we shouldn't be addressing this threat with pre-emptive urgency.

In Alberta, one only needs to look to the events that occurred this past year to know that we need to take action.

Over the years, we've become familiar with the yellow vesters and Wexit fringe. But they've seemingly rebranded, mingling with QAnon flag flyers and holding up ominously scrawled "Save The Children!" signs on Alberta streets last summer and "marching for freedom" against masks in the fall.

Even spiritual leaders in Alberta have noted the proliferation of QAnon and similar conspiracies among their congregations.

Peaceful gatherings of conspiracy theorists are one thing, but they've bubbled over into related, shockingly violent incidents.

In the fall, we watched a video of the assault of an anti-racism activist in Red Deer and the attempted hit and run on protestors during an racial justice march in Ponoka. And there was also a parking lot altercation between right wing and anti-racism groups that took place in Edmonton.

I spoke to Taylor McNallie, an anti-racism activist who runs Inclusive Canada (formerly known as Rural Albertans Against Racism) and whose demonstrations were targeted by right wing groups last summer.

She told me her group had been holding family friendly anti-racism discussion events and picnics in public parks across Alberta for years.

But after a right wing "patriot" group member punched her partner in the side of the head in Red Deer during an event in late September, her group was forced to move the majority of their discussions online.

Even then, she says, "You can't even have an online event without them recording the conversations, and trying to locate the people who took part."

Women in particular, McNallie claims, bear the brunt of threats for taking part in anti-racism events.

One woman who attended some events as an observer received text messages warning her to "Stay the F--k out of Red Deer," while another female activist was forced to take leave from her job and leave the province for some months.

And it's not just a couple of worrisome events here and there; research indicates right wing extremism is on the rise in Alberta.

Police reported hate crimes rose in the province between 2016 and 2018, and appeared to continue to rise into 2019 and 2020, although Statistics Canada has not yet released its full report.

And far right groups are gaining steam.

John McCoy, founder of the Edmonton-based Organization for the Prevention of Violence, noted that Alberta law enforcement is dealing with increasingly larger gatherings of right wing extremist groups in the province.

"Where these guys would organize an event and two or three people might show up years ago, now they've got 15 to 20 showing up," McCoy says.

An undercurrent of anti-authoritarianism lies behind these trends that some might argue has always existed in Alberta, but it is now interlaced with the lure of conspiracies like QAnon.
© Helen Pike/CBC We’ve become familiar with the yellow vesters and the Wexit fringe in Alberta. But according to Claire Porter Robbins, many groups on the far right have rebranded and now pose a much more serious threat.

But why now, and why Alberta?

The obvious factor here is economic insecurity.

About 11 per cent of Albertans are unemployed, and they're anxious. Premier Jason Kenney said he'd bring good oil jobs back to the province, but six years after Canadian oil prices started to tank, very little has changed.

Moreover, people are growing more and more frustrated — and their fears have been compounded by the pandemic.

Economically, things have gone from bad to worse. But more importantly, social isolation has forced those already vulnerable to the easy answers that extremist rhetoric provides farther into the margins.

Some of us spent quarantine time searching the internet for foolproof sourdough recipes; others channeled their loneliness, frustrations and prejudices into conspiracies and far-right online communities.

These far-right online communities are also all too eager to provide a space to validate these angry feelings and give a sense of purpose and meaning to others.

But the less obvious, more nebulous factor at play here is that we haven't adequately prepared and protected our society from racist and extremist overtures.

We can start with our schools.

We're at a juncture where the need for a provincial media literacy curriculum has never been more urgent. If adults can't differentiate between real events and inane conspiracies, how can we expect their children, who are growing up immersed in digital and social media, to do any better?

As political partisanship increases, educating the next generation on how to identify extremist rhetoric will have a longer term impact than debates about social media censorship.

Similarly, police services must continue to have conversations about how to identify bias and extremism, both in the public and within the ranks. The fact that the U.S. Capitol rioters included members of the military and police demonstrates the sad fact that law enforcement agencies are not immune to radicalization within their ranks.

Beyond direct involvement, this year has taught us an abundance of anti-bias and anti-extremism training can only benefit the relationship between police and the public. Like the Red Deer police officer who blamed "both sides" for this fall's violence, those tasked with protecting us must have a better understanding of how to address and police extremist gatherings.

Further, law enforcement will need to work in conjunction with social and health services to identify individuals at risk of radicalization or likely to undertake violence on behalf of ideological biases.

On a preliminary basis, further investment in mental health services for isolated individuals at risk of radicalization can combat the hateful, prejudiced worldview many far-right online communities espouse. And for those already engrossed in conspiracies and extremism, investments in rehabilitation, within both our prisons and the community at large, can pay dividends for long-term public safety.

As it stands, we're still in the thick of this pandemic, and Alberta's economic future has few bright spots. Extremism and conspiracy theories have fertile soil to grow here in this province — in fact, they've already taken root.

So we're faced with a choice: continue to deny and contrast our situation with our neighbours to the south, or act now to limit the progression of hatred and violence in our province.


© CBC Editor’s note: The opinions in this article are the author’s, as published by our content partner, and do not necessarily represent the views of MSN or Microsoft.


Questions arise over protections from reinstated Alberta coal policy



EDMONTON — Doubts are being raised about the Alberta government's decision to restore a policy that protects the Rocky Mountains from coal mining.

Energy Minister Sonya Savage on Monday brought back a 1976 policy that keeps open-pit coal mines out of most of the Rockies and foothills.

University of Calgary resource law professor Nigel Bankes says the ban doesn't apply everywhere, despite Savage's assurances that mountaintop removal mines are prohibited.

That means Benga Mining's proposal for such a mine, now before a review panel, could still go ahead.

Bankes also points out exploration already permitted can still go ahead, so hundreds of drill sites and kilometres of roads could still be built despite return of the policy.

Environmentalist Kevin van Tighem calls bringing back the coal policy a "bait and switch."

He says the energy minister's letter to the Alberta Energy Regulator still allows for the possibility of open-pit mines.

The Canadian Press
ALBERTA UCP PLANS TO KILL SAFE INJECTION SITES
'A matter of life and death': U of C study details benefits of threatened opioid treatment program

An opioid dependency program facing looming closure by the UCP government has not only helped patients curb their mental health struggles and reliance on illicit drugs, but is the reason why many feel they are even still alive.  
© Provided by Calgary Herald 
The Sheldon M. Chumir Health Centre in Calgary houses one of two injectable opioid agonist treatment pilot projects in Alberta.

That’s according to a new University of Calgary study led by Jennifer Jackson, a registered nurse and assistant professor in the Faculty of Nursing.

Injectable opioid agonist treatment (iOAT) clinics in Calgary and Edmonton provide a form of treatment for people with an opioid addiction, for whom oral treatments such as methadone or suboxone have been unsuccessful. The service has been described as “the last chance for recovery” for patients.

Alberta’s iOAT pilot began under the former NDP government in 2018. But those clinics could close next month, pending the outcome of an ongoing legal challenge , after Premier Jason Kenney’s government indicated last year it would not renew a grant dedicated to the service past March 2021.

Jackson’s research, which was published Monday, concluded that the lives of patients “had drastically improved through the iOAT program.”

“Several participants shared that they were fearful they would be dead if the program were to cease operating,” she wrote.

The study included qualitative interviews with 23 iOAT patients in 2019, all of whom had chronic opioid use disorder. Thirteen participants accessing iOAT services were referred through supervised consumption services.

Patients described their lives having been “transformed” for the better by enrolling in iOAT. They cited a decreased reliance on street drugs, a decline in withdrawal symptoms and an improvement in their mental health, with fewer anxieties stemming from previous drug-related behaviours.

Many patients said they experienced life-threatening overdoses prior to participating in iOAT, but none reported any overdoses after enrolling in the program. Some said the program helped them step away from a previous lifestyle that involved crimes like theft and selling drugs.

Participants reported they were better able to care for themselves, rebuild relationships and find financial stability and secure housing after enrolling in iOAT.

“The only fear is I’m scared what’s gonna happen if the program ever stops,” one said. “What would I do? Like, that’s a scary thought.”

Jackson said the primary benefit of the program for many patients, according to their interviews, is the relationships they have built with clinic staff.

One participant said iOAT granted them “a place where I can come where I feel safe… where people don’t look at me like a junkie, like an addict.”

“They look at me like a person,” they said. “They talk to me like a person.”

Related

Open letter calls on province to reverse decision ending a 'life-saving' opioid dependency program

Jackson said she was surprised “by how significant the benefits were,” noting the program “is on par with the gold standard in other places.” Other studies of similar programs in the Netherlands and B.C. showed that when services were taken away, between 13 and 20 per cent of patients died.

“I’m confident that if this was a service that provided support for people with cancer or people with diabetes, we would see one in every town in Alberta,” Jackson said.

“Patients are aware that if this program is closed, people will die from it. I hate to say so with such certainty because it’s a really awful reality. It’s not hyperbole to say that this is a matter of life and death.”

Elaine Hyshka, an assistant professor at the University of Alberta’s School of Public Health, said closing iOAT clinics would remove “a fundamental component of the continuum of care for opioid addiction in Alberta.”

“There has been research done on what happens when people are cut off from medications and from medical care that they’re provided. It’s not good,” said Hyshka, who was not involved in the study.

“We know it’s very likely that many people return to street drug use and so they will relapse and no longer be in recovery. The drug supply is so toxic in Alberta and across Canada right now that there is a real chance that patients will die as a result of the decision.”
© Provided by Calgary Herald 
Edmonton lawyer Avnish Nanda says if the program closes, 
the potential for fatalities is “staggering”.

Last September, 11 chronic opioid use disorder patients issued a legal challenge against the provincial government’s decision to halt iOAT services, alleging it violates their constitutional rights. The government has said it intended to transition clients to “other appropriate treatment options.”

The office of Jason Luan, associate minister of mental health and addictions, declined to comment.

A court will hear arguments Wednesday for an injunction, which would prevent all iOAT patients from being denied the treatment until the lawsuit reaches a conclusion, even if the matter is still before the courts beyond March.

Edmonton lawyer Avnish Nanda, who represents the patients, said the potential for fatalities associated with the looming program closure is “staggering.”

“If that were any other treatment regime or medical program, I think that would alarm a lot of folks,” he said.

Nanda said Jackson’s research is “consistent with what everyone has said about this program and its effectiveness.”

“The science is clear that if this program is cut, we should anticipate between 13 to 20 per cent of these iOAT patients, these Albertans, are going to die within a year because of their condition, because they are unable to access this treatment.”

Jackson said she sent the findings of her research to Luan, along with the premier and Health Minister Tyler Shandro. She hasn’t received a response.

“I hope that they have the courage to keep what we have because it’s already working,” Jackson said.

“We’re not asking for anything new. We’re asking that what we have, we keep. That’s the quickest possible policy win.”

— With files from Alanna Smith

shudes@postmedia.com
Penguins protest: Calgary students set up display in fight against education cuts

CALGARY — A snow penguin protest that generated buzz in Edmonton is now in Alberta's biggest city.
© Provided by The Canadian Press
FRONT STEPS OF THE LEGISLTURE BLDG EDMONTON

Representatives in Calgary for the Council of Alberta University Students say they have built about 250 snow penguins outside the provincial government's McDougall Centre to protest cuts to post-secondary education.

Late last month, students from Edmonton's University of Alberta and McEwan University used snow moulds to build about 800 penguins on the grounds of the legislature for the same cause.


Groundskeepers destroyed most of them the next day, as the government deemed them tripping hazards.


Marley Gillies, vice-president of the University of Calgary Students' Union, says the group has been in contact with management at McDougall Centre and hopes the penguin display will last longer.

Gillies says students in Calgary want to bring attention to a 22.5 per cent rise in tuition over three years and to cuts to Alberta's post-secondary institutions.

"This is something we are all really united on," Gillies said Monday.

The snow penguins may show up in Lethbridge, Alta., next, she said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 8, 2021.

The Canadian Press



A Canada-U.S. flap over protecting migratory birds takes new twist

This story is part of Watching Washington, a regular dispatch from CBC News correspondents reporting on U.S. politics and developments that affect Canadians.
© Mike Segar/Reuters More than 1,000 migratory bird species are affected by a proposed U.S. regulation, including the sandpiper, seen in the foreground, and geese, seen in the background of this 2007 photo from New York City.There are competing schools of thought on when to punish someone for killing a migratory bird, and the Canadian government found itself at odds with the Trump administration.

There's the broad, existing practice: that penalties should apply to industries whose products and activities accidentally kill birds, such as oil wells, buildings and power lines.

Then there's the narrower interpretation: that punishment be limited to people who intentionally kill a bird unlawfully — by poisoning, trapping or shooting without a licence.

The Canadian government supports the existing interpretation of a century-old international treaty that protects hundreds of species that flutter across the border.

The Trump administration planned to limit penalties under a new regulation that was going to take effect this week on U.S. territory.

Now that move has been delayed by the new U.S. administration. Apparently some chirping from Ottawa played a role in that pause.

On Tuesday, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced a one-month delay to allow further public comment on the new regulation.

The rule would protect normal industrial activity from liability, and would reserve fines for those who intentionally set out to unlawfully kill birds.

It would apply to more than 1,000 bird species, according to a U.S. government's environmental study, including ducks, geese, swans, herons, cormorants, plovers, hummingbirds and sparrows.

The study said hundreds of thousands of birds were killed over a recent nine-year period in the U.S. by regular human activity, including things such as buildings, communications towers and oil pits.

Fines and civil penalties associated with accidental cases totalled about $105.8 million US over that same period from 2010 to 2018.

The U.S. federal study notes that bird populations are already in decline.

But it says illicit activity is only responsible for a small portion of those deaths. The Fish and Wildlife Service estimates, for example, that about 1,000 golden eagles are illegally shot each year in the U.S., which covers roughly 17 per cent of all golden eagle deaths.
What's the Canadian role

Enter the Canadian government.


Ottawa complained that the move violated the spirit of a 1916 cross-border agreement. It said the Trump administration move would imperil the 80 per cent of migratory birds in Canada that pass through the U.S. Canada submitted a formal complaint as part of the U.S. rule-drafting process but the last administration rejected it.

Now, the new administration has cited three reasons for hitting the pause button: environmental concerns, potential litigation, and the effect on several treaty partners.

The U.S. administration specifically mentioned the Canadian objection in announcing the one-month pause.

"The public has a strong interest in conserving the migratory bird resource and fulfilling shared objectives and obligations with a treaty partner, Canada," said Tuesday's regulatory announcement.

"These interests could be harmed by allowing this regulation to take effect on its current effective date."
What's next

A period for public comment has been reopened. People are invited to submit reactions to the proposed change.

Comments are allowed until March 1.

The new rule, which was supposed to kick in Feb. 8, has now been delayed until at least March 8. 

That's if the Biden administration doesn't cancel the rule entirely. 

The new administration has told a Federal Court that it could completely withdraw the Trump-era rule.
HYDROCARBONS ARE AN ALBATROSS
SNC-Lavalin shares spike after announcing sale of resources oil and gas business


SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. shares surged more than 11 per cent after the company took steps to reduce risks by moving away from construction and oil to focus on its engineering services business.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

The shares gained $2.52 to $25.31 in Tuesday trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange after dipping to an intraday low of $22.62.

The gains came after the Montreal-based company signed a deal to sell its resources oil and gas business to Kentech Corporate Holdings Ltd.


The business, which represents about 90 per cent of SNC's resources segment revenues, includes a backlog of $745 million and about 7,100 employees.

The transaction is expected to close in the second quarter, subject to regulatory approvals and customary closing conditions.

SNC said the oil and gas business will be classified as an "asset held for sale" in its fourth quarter of 2020 and is expected to result in a fair value writedown in the range of $260 million to $295 million.


At closing, the company said the transaction is expected to generate a gain on the sale in excess of the fair value writedown, after accounting for the elimination of a foreign exchange adjustment.

A charge of $95 million on the retained resources business will also be taken in the fourth quarter of 2020.

"The sale of the oil and gas business further simplifies ... our business and allows us to enhance our focus on growing our high potential core engineering services business," stated CEO Ian Edwards.

SNC decided to dramatically alter its business strategy in July 2019 after sustaining heavy losses from large projects that often generated cost overruns.

The company also announced that it has completed a review of its legacy litigation and commercial claims and will increase its provisions by $140 million and reduce its commercial claims receivable by $155 million.

In addition, following a review of its remaining three Canadian light rail infrastructure projects, SNC says it will take a $90-million charge, most of which it says is due to COVID-19 challenges and the decision to not recognize associated revenue at this time.

It said the projects are progressing well but strict lockdowns have restricted the number of workers it can get to these sites.

The REM electric train project in Montreal is 40 per cent complete, the Trillium Line in Ottawa is expected to be 80 per cent done by the end of the year, and the Eglinton Crosstown in Toronto is most advanced at 80 per cent complete.

Edwards told analysts during a conference call that the company's efforts are better focused on growing its business than continuing to toil to make the oil and gas business being sold more profitable.

Industry analysts said the changes should allow SNC to alter its focus.

"Overall, the charges/provisions cause noise in the near-term, but these announcements do put the oil and gas business in the rear view, and should allow the company to focus on the engineering services and nuclear business going forward," stated Sabahat Khan of RBC Dominion Services.

Added Benoit Poirier of Desjardins Capital Markets: "We believe these announcements will significantly derisk the story by reducing the company’s exposure to resources LSTK (lump-sum turnkey) projects, the biggest source of risk for SNC."

The company's financial results should be much more predictable beginning in the first quarter, which should trigger a narrowing in the valuation gap between SNC and its peers, added Yuri Lynk of Canaccord Genuity.

"Once the REM, Trillium, and Eglinton LSTK projects are completed, the company will be operating essentially as a highly predictable and cash generative fee-for-service business."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 9, 2021.

Companies in this story: (TSX:SNC)

Ross Marowits, The Canadian Press
State actors have done 'significant harm' to Canadian companies, says head of spy agency

NO MENTION OF USA CIA 

© Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press CSIS director David Vigneault holds a press conference on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Thursday, July 16, 2020. In a speech today, he warned that "the greatest strategic threat to Canada's national security comes from…

The head of Canada's spy agency said today Canadian companies in almost all sectors of the economy have been targeted by hostile foreign actors — and named Russia and China as two of his main sources of concern.

"The threat from hostile activity by state actors in all its forms represents a significant danger to Canada's prosperity and sovereignty," said David Vigneault, director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, in his first public speech in three years.

"Our investigations reveal that this threat has unfortunately caused significant harm to Canadian companies."

Vigneault said Canada's biopharmaceutical, health, artificial intelligence, quantum computing, ocean technology and aerospace sectors face particularly severe threat activity because they work largely within academia and small start-ups.

"They have been compromised and have suffered losses from human and cyber-enabled threats," he said in a virtual speech to the Centre for International Governance Innovation.

"CSIS has observed persistent and sophisticated state-sponsored threat activity for many years now and we continue to see a rise in the frequency and sophistication of this threat activity."

Vigneault's speech builds off his 2018 address sounding the alarm over economic espionage — a growing source of concern for the intelligence agency, which historically has focused on countering violent extremism.

"While violent extremism remains an ongoing threat to our safety and a significant preoccupation for CSIS, the greatest strategic threat to Canada's national security comes from hostile activities by foreign states," Vigneault said today.

"Historically, spies were focused on obtaining Canadian political, military and diplomatic secrets. While these secrets are still attractive, today our adversaries are more focused on intellectual property and advanced research held on computer systems in small start-ups, corporate boardrooms, or university labs across the country."

State actors target employees, students

The director singled out Russia and China as bad actors — another shift for the intelligence community in the past few years.

"It is no secret that we are most concerned about the actions by the governments of countries like Russia and China. But we should also not discount that threat activity evolves and can originate from anywhere in the world," he said.

Hostile actors are known to target employees, former employees, students, professors, contractors and business associates to gain access to an organization's IT systems, he said.

"An insider acting at the behest of a threat actor can compromise a system and cause damage, or open a backdoor to allow access from across the street or across the ocean. They can steal information outright, and walk it out the door on a flash drive," Vigneault said.

While Vigneault has talked about the covert actions of Russia and China in front of parliamentary committees, his comments today mark the first time he has named the two countries in a speech.
Food, supply flights grounded, operations halted as protest continues at Nunavut mine

IQALUIT, Nunavut — Flights have been grounded and most operations suspended at an open-pit iron ore mine on Nunavut's Baffin Island as protesters upset about its expansion plan continue to block the site's road and air strip.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

Hunters from Arctic Bay and Pond Inlet set up the blockade last Thursday, after travelling two days by snowmobile to get to Baffinland's Mary River mine.


The mine, which is about 150 kilometres south of Pond Inlet, works on a rotating schedule, with employees flying in and out every few weeks. The company said there are 700 workers currently at the site.

"Food and supply flights have been suspended, as well as employee and contractor transfers, search and rescue flights, and other North Baffin air traffic support services provided by the Mary River airstrip," Baffinland said in a statement Monday.

The company said it has had numerous meetings with organizers at the blockade and in Pond Inlet. It also said it has asked the hunters to "relocate off the airstrip and allow runway maintenance to take place and flights to resume.

"So far these discussions have not yielded any progress," Baffinland said.

The hunters said they set up the blockade because their voices aren't being heard at environmental hearings on the mine's proposed expansion.

The expansion, if approved, would double its iron ore output to 12 million tonnes and build a 110-kilometre railway from the mine to the ocean to transport it. The railway would be the first in Nunavut and the most northern one in Canada.


Some hunters and community members in the North Baffin region have also said they worry the mining company is moving too fast and not properly considering the effects an expansion would have on wildlife, including narwhal and caribou.

The protest group stationed at the air strip and mining road has grown to include 15 hunters. Rallies in support of the hunters also took place across Nunavut on Monday.

In Iqaluit, where the temperature hovered around an unusually warm 3 C, a group of about a dozen people gathered outside the elders' centre.

Abraham Kublu, who grew up in Pond Inlet and sat on its hamlet council for 17 hears, held a sign in Inuktitut that said Baffinland is rushing its expansion.

"We should be respecting our land. For so many years, the community of Pond Inlet has been raising a lot of concerns," Kublu said.

Kublu said he believes Baffinland doesn't have enough information about how the mine's expansion would affect wildlife on the north side of Baffin Island.

In Taloyoak, in western Nunavut, protesters gathered carrying cardoard signs, with some reading, "We support Pond Inlet and Arctic Bay" and "No to Baffinland."

In Pond Inlet on Friday and Saturday, when the temperature was about -38 C, protesters gathered outside the community hall while hearings on the mine's proposed expansion took place.

Among the concerns are that caribou will not be able to cross the proposed railway and increased ship traffic will drive away marine mammals.

The mine’s shipping port in Milne Inlet opens onto narwhal habitat and lies within Tallurutiup Imanga, a national marine conservation area. The proposed expansion would see 176 ships travel in and out of Milne Inlet each year.

“If they start doing 12 million tonnes a year, our marine mammals will be completely extinguished in our area," Inuarak said.

Mumilaaq Qaqqaq, Nunavut's member of Parliament, said in a statement her office has reached out to federal Minister of Natural Resources Seamus O'Regan "to attempt to mediate the situation at Mary River."

"The ongoing protests are about encouraging continued consultations and dialogue. I look forward to Baffinland, the minister and community members being able to sit back at the table and discuss how to move forward in everyone's best interests," Qaqqaq said.

Baffinland has said its expansion plans will include mitigation measures to protect wildlife, such as caribou crossings on the railway and reduced ship speeds to minimize disturbances to marine life.

The company has also signed a benefit agreement worth $1 billion over the life of the mine with the Qikitani Inuit Association, the regional Inuit organization that represents the affected communities. The agreement will only take effect if the expansion is approved.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 8, 2021.

Emma Tranter, The Canadian Press