Description
Is a national consensus on hydrocarbon development possible?
The ongoing debate in Canada over the extraction of hydrocarbon resources and their transportation to markets exemplifies the country's political polarization. Breakdown explores these tensions through economic, environmental, and political perspectives.
The Trudeau Liberals and Alberta's one-term NDP government attempted to find a compromise that satisfies the concerns of British Columbia, Canada's First Nations, and environmentalists. But they still could not break the impasse on the Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion. With new players now at the table, can Canada find a reasonable path forward?
About the Author
Dennis McConaghy is a Canadian energy executive who has nearly forty years of industry experience in infrastructure development and is the author of Dysfunction: Canada after Keystone XL. He lives in Calgary.
Reviews
Breakdown addresses arguably one of the most contentious and consequential sets of policy issues facing Canada today - the nexus of resource development, climate change, Indigenous rights and Alberta alienation. It presents the history of four pipeline projects and overlays the political decisions that have resulted in many projects not being supported or being delayed significantly. McConaghy outlines several pragmatic strategies that can be used to reduce or remove the bottleneck to move large infrastructure projects forward (or create earlier certainty that they should not) so that investment (domestic and foreign) will be attracted to Canada. * The Donner Prize jury citation *
Awards
Winner of The Donner Prize 2019 (Canada).
Book Information
ISBN 9781459745087
Author Dennis McConaghy
Format Paperback
Page Count 216
Imprint Dundurn Group Ltd
Publisher Dundurn Group Ltd
Weight(grams) 318g
Dimensions(mm) 228mm * 152mm * 17mm