TailingsPond + 1,012 GE Tuesday at 07:54 PM (edited) On 12/14/2024 at 1:59 AM, Ecocharger said: It's over and done. " Tesla deliveries are below expectations, Volvo has moved back its 2030 100% EV timeline, General Motors abandoned its 1-million-vehicle 2025 sales goal, and Ford has shifted some EV production back to internal combustion vehicles, the note reported. Meanwhile, EV startups are struggling. California-based Fisker declared bankruptcy, while luxury EV makers Rivian and Lucid, whose vehicles draw rave reviews from the automotive media, have seen shares drop precipitously this year as the companies fall short of sales goals. Look at this guy. "Over and done" too funny and so, so wrong. What has happened in reality? Tesla way, way up - meanwhile Ford is failing. It is the complete opposite of what this so-called economist predicted. Hide in shame. Edited Tuesday at 07:55 PM by TailingsPond Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TailingsPond + 1,012 GE Tuesday at 08:00 PM On 12/13/2024 at 11:42 AM, Ecocharger said: Oil prices are beginning to soar again as a sense of reality breaks into the oil markets. How is that soaring going? Are you going to argue down is up again? I clearly posted the price trend-lines. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ecocharger + 1,485 DL Tuesday at 09:11 PM (edited) It appears that Justin Trudeau is in serious political meltdown mode again, with the socialist party threatening to force him to resign and bring down his government. That would be good news for the Alberta government, whose ownership and direction of the oil industry puts them as natural opponents of Trudeau and his misguided climate agitation. The government of Alberta owns 81% of the province's oil and gas rights. https://www.alberta.ca/royalties#:~:text=Find out more about Alberta's royalty frameworks.&text=On behalf of Albertans%2C the,province - that's called a royalty. https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Alberta-Defies-Trudeaus-Emissions-Cap-Plan.html "Alberta believes the federal emissions cap will force production cuts and hurt the economy. The province argues the cap is unconstitutional and plans to fight its enforcement. Alberta's actions include declaring emissions data provincial property and potentially blocking federal officials from oil and gas sites." "The actions in the motion, if approved, would ensure that no provincial entity participates in the enforcement or implementation of the federal cap. It would also ban entry to any individual, including any federal official or contractor, into oil and gas sites unless these are specifically licensed to enter by the Government of Alberta. In one of the more controversial actions, the motion would declare all information on emissions as proprietary information exclusively owned by the Government of Alberta, and mandate that all emissions data be reported and disclosed at the province’s discretion." Edited Tuesday at 09:15 PM by Ecocharger 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TailingsPond + 1,012 GE Tuesday at 10:15 PM (edited) 1 hour ago, Ecocharger said: It appears that Justin Trudeau is in serious political meltdown mode again, with the socialist party threatening to force him to resign and bring down his government. It appears you once again have no clue. Alberta has barked for many years, nothing much happens. Oh other than the Trudeau government actually got the trans-mountain pipeline approved and built and they own the pipeline. While I hate pollution, Alberta oil does bring me money so either way I win. Address your other posts, where Ford was going to win, EV's lose, and oil soars. Run and hide or explain your clearly wrong posts. Edited Tuesday at 10:19 PM by TailingsPond Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TailingsPond + 1,012 GE Tuesday at 10:27 PM (edited) 1 hour ago, Ecocharger said: "The actions in the motion, if approved, would ensure that no provincial entity participates in the enforcement or implementation of the federal cap. It would also ban entry to any individual, including any federal official or contractor, into oil and gas sites unless these are specifically licensed to enter by the Government of Alberta. I guarantee you that will not be approved. It is in direct contradiction of numerous federal acts. For example the Fisheries Act and the Canadian Environmental Protection Act clearly grant federal agents to do law enforcement on oil sites. They also have the duty to assist the inspection. If only someone here was an expert on this subject... https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/f-14/FullText.html Powers of Fishery Officers and Fishery Guardians Marginal note:Inspection 49 (1) Subject to subsection (2), for the purpose of ensuring compliance with this Act and the regulations, a fishery officer or fishery guardian may enter and inspect any place, including any premises, vessel or vehicle, in which the officer or guardian believes on reasonable grounds there is any work or undertaking or any fish or other thing in respect of which this Act or the regulations apply and may (a) open any container that the officer or guardian believes on reasonable grounds contains any fish or other thing in respect of which this Act or the regulations apply; (b) examine any fish or other thing that the officer or guardian finds and take samples of it; (c) conduct any tests or analyses and take any measurements; and (d) require any person to produce for examination or copying any records, books of account or other documents that the officer or guardian believes on reasonable grounds contain information that is relevant to the administration of this Act or the regulations. Marginal note:Operation of data processing systems and copying equipment (1.1) In carrying out an inspection of a place under subsection (1), a fishery officer or fishery guardian may, (a) use or cause to be used any data processing system at the place to examine any data contained in or available to the data processing system; (b) reproduce any record or cause it to be reproduced from the data in the form of a print-out or other intelligible output and remove the print-out or other output for examination or copying; and (c) use or cause to be used any copying equipment at the place to make copies of any record, book of account or other document. Marginal note:Duty to assist (1.2) The owner or person in charge of a place that is inspected by a fishery officer or fishery guardian under subsection (1) and every person found in the place shall (a) give the officer or guardian all reasonable assistance to enable the officer or guardian to carry out the inspection and exercise any power conferred by this section; and (b) provide the officer or guardian with any information relevant to the administration of this Act or the regulations that the officer or guardian may reasonably require. Edited Tuesday at 10:33 PM by TailingsPond Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Old-Ruffneck + 1,256 er yesterday at 01:08 PM 14 hours ago, TailingsPond said: While I hate pollution, Alberta oil does bring me money so either way I win. That statement tells us who you really are, a liar with no moral code. You have negated all your previous posts by that one statement!!! Sad.... 1 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TailingsPond + 1,012 GE 23 hours ago (edited) 5 hours ago, Old-Ruffneck said: That statement tells us who you really are, a liar with no moral code. You have negated all your previous posts by that one statement!!! Sad.... No, it does not. Liking money and the environment are not mutually exclusive. I just pointed out that even if I get something I don't want (pollution) that pain is mitigated by getting something I do like ($). Imagine saying someone can't both like salads and pizza. Enjoying a pizza doesn't mean you can't think the salad is the better choice. Oil is the pizza, greasy, unhealthy, but enjoyable. We should consume more green energy. It is moot anyways as that garbage he posted will never materialize. The feds won't be bossed around that much by the provinces. Some do not understand that the individual provinces do not have anywhere near the power of a individual state. Edited 23 hours ago by TailingsPond Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TailingsPond + 1,012 GE 23 hours ago https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/EPA-Approves-California-Ban-Of-Fossil-Fueled-Cars-Starting-2035.html Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ecocharger + 1,485 DL 13 hours ago Coal is hot and getting hotter, with production and demand ramping up to all-time highs. EVs and coal in China are like bread and butter, you cannot have one without the other. https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/Worlds-Coal-Demand-at-Record-High-in-2024-IEA-Says.html This year, coal demand is on track to increase by 1% from 2023 to 8.77 billion tons, a record high, the IEA said today. "While coal demand continues to decline in the EU and the U.S. – although at slower paces than in 2023, China and India are set to see in 2024 another year of record-high coal consumption. China is on track for a 1% rise to 4.9 billion tons, and India’s coal demand is poised to increase by more than 5% to 1.3 billion tons—a level that only China has reached previously." "Although the share of coal in China’s electricity generation has been declining in recent years with the renewables boom, Chinese coal power generation and demand remains strong. Coal still accounts for about 60% of China’s power generation, despite a surge in hydropower earlier this year after abundant rainfall." 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TailingsPond + 1,012 GE 13 hours ago (edited) 8 minutes ago, Ecocharger said: Coal is hot and getting hotter, with production and demand ramping up to all-time highs. EVs and coal in China are like bread and butter, you cannot have one without the other. https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/Worlds-Coal-Demand-at-Record-High-in-2024-IEA-Says.html This year, coal demand is on track to increase by 1% from 2023 to 8.77 billion tons, a record high, the IEA said today. "While coal demand continues to decline in the EU and the U.S. – although at slower paces than in 2023, China and India are set to see in 2024 another year of record-high coal consumption. China is on track for a 1% rise to 4.9 billion tons 1% per year growth is pretty dismal. You called that "hot and getting hotter?" Tesla is +74.6% over the last year. Edited 13 hours ago by TailingsPond Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ecocharger + 1,485 DL 13 hours ago (edited) Trudeau is now toast, just a matter of when Parliament next meets. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cn54elwep72o "Polls indicate that if a Canadian federal election were to be held today, the official opposition Conservative Party would be handed a decisive victory." The socialist party has indicated that they will pull the plug on Trudeau at the first opportunity. "On Monday, NDP leader Jagmeet Singh for the first time called on Trudeau to resign, making the Liberal hold on power look increasingly shaky. The NDP's House leader told broadcaster the CBC that its members would vote in favour of a no-confidence motion if the prime minister was still leader in the New Year." Edited 13 hours ago by Ecocharger Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TailingsPond + 1,012 GE 13 hours ago (edited) 8 minutes ago, Ecocharger said: Trudeau is now toast, just a matter of when Parliament next meets. This effects you how? A non-confidence is highly unlikely. Waste of money when the election is not far away anyways. Trudeau has won many elections and has served for a long time (started in 2015)... perhaps too long. I do not fear change, so I have no problem with a change in leadership. Is P.P. my ideal replacement choice? no. Edited 12 hours ago by TailingsPond Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites