Now this is interesting. Notably absent is Exxon-Mobil.
http://www.maritime-executive.com/article/oil-majors-call-for-carbon-pricing
http://www.maritime-executive.com/article/oil-majors-call-for-carbon-pricing
That's because they want to keep the base rates low so the Premier can continue to claim that Hydro rates are competitive when the real cost is the highest in NA.Delivery costs from Hydro One is just about equal to the cost of electricity itself...
You have a problem with lawyers running the entire world??Isn't this a path toward never ending litigation?...
So how can we put a tariff on goods if all the free trade acts ban tariffs?...
Isn't this a path toward never ending litigation?...
WTO enforcement currently penalizes violations of trade agreements by permitting other countries to tariff the offenders.
Gee, I paid for that too. Didn't know I owned a chunk of rain forest.Ontario Hydro bought sections of the Rainforest in prep for the carbon cap and trade scheme that was under discussion years ago.
Borrowing from the Grist article on this issue, I tend to agree with Woodgeek that this is all about gas, NG. By shifting to NG, burying coal, the argument is that carbon goals can be met, and painlessly from Big Gas (Oil) perspective. Looks a little like a shell game. Big Oil > Big Gas
Gee, I paid for that too. Didn't know I owned a chunk of rain forest.
On that note, it looks like the IMF is assessing the "true costs" of fossil fuel. This from one of the members examining the issue:The big question is if, a la the ACA, if some states decide to opt out of the plan and sue the EPA instead, how do the Feds penalize those states to avoid the whole country getting punished for their over-emission via a WTO mechanism (or equivalent external enforcement mechanism)?
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