scholarly journals Energy and the New Constitution

1985 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 101
Author(s):  
Brian W. Semkow

The Constitution Act, 1982 contains two natural resource provisions which amend the British North America Act. On the face of these provisions, the formal jurisdiction which provinces can exercise over natural resources in general, and over onshore oil and gas in particular, has been substantially bolstered. It is unclear, however, whether these provisions add very much substantively to the powers the provinces possessed (or were exercising) prior to the passing of the Constitution Act, 1982. This paper will analyse the new natural resource provisions to determine how they will affect the jurisdiction provinces will have over the future development of onshore oil and gas, and the revenues to be derived therefrom.

Author(s):  
Chris Armstrong

This chapter examines a variety of views about the nature of society’s putative duty to conserve natural resources for the future, with a focus on the contested idea of sustainability. This chapter examines competing conceptions of sustainability and their implications for natural resource conservation across generations. Sustainability is a very popular concept, but there are many different positions on what might be called the “sustainability of what?” question. The chapter examines a number of competing views and shows how controversy here has informed the debate between so-called weak and strong conceptions of sustainability. It concludes with an examination of the politics of sustainability, and in particular the connections and possible tensions between goals of natural resource conservation and of global justice.


Minerals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 192 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergey Krivovichev

The Arctic zone of the Earth is a major source of mineral and other natural resources for the future development of science and technology [...]


Author(s):  
Gloria Kembabazi ◽  
John Osapiri

This paper examines the legal foundations of taxation of minerals examining legal provisions concerning natural resources generally and, mining as a sector - with oil and gas as one of the emerging sub-sectors for regulation. The paper examines the challenges and offers potential solutions with a view that economic policymaking is critical and the legal and policy framework must be critically structured and carefully implemented to allow for maximum government revenue and positive natural resource governance.


Federalism-E ◽  
1969 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-8
Author(s):  
Kelsey Sitar

There are very few issues arising in Canadian politics that are not, in some way, affected by our federal system of government. The British North America Act of 1867 outlined how Canada would operate. Obviously oversimplified, this document stated that the two recognized levels of government, federal and provincial, would divide powers in most issues, with only some shared or concurrent by both federal and provincial governments. In this sense, Canada was already quite distinctive, because most of the other federal countries tended to share powers with only a few designated to fall under only one government’s jurisdiction.


Worldview ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 24 (5) ◽  
pp. 21-23 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard S. Kay

A strange assortment of lobbyists is converging on the British Parliament at Westminster. They include partisans of French language and culture in Quebec, support ers of local control over oil and gas resources in Alberta, and advocates of native rights in the Yukon. Since it has been assumed for many years that Canada is an independent country, one is justified in asking why any of this is the business of M.P.s from Birmingham, Glasgow, and Londonderry.The business is the Canadian constitution, and, legally speaking, there is no more appropriate forum for it. The Canadian constitution–more precisely the British North America Act of 1867 as amended–is a statute of the United Kingdom, and its amendment is within the authority of the body that enacted it.


2016 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Ching-Chung Lin ◽  
Hyacintha O. Faustino ◽  
Shih-Ju Chan

<p>The study is to examine the contemporary trends of the Taiwanese economic involvement in<br />Africa and includes both Taiwanese and Chinese policy toward Africa. Emerging countries<br />are standing side by side in so-called “South-South” cooperation, and are taking advantage of<br />the decreasing image of Western nations following the economic crisis. We are challenging<br />the biased opinion portrayed by the Western press, which is negative toward Asian<br />involvement in African states, and that states the investors (China and Taiwan) are only<br />gaining from their investments. The ambitions on the continent are far from innocent, and<br />nations, such as China are looking to fulfill their demands for natural resources. We intend to<br />emphasize on whether the Chinese presence in Africa is purely resource-based, or if this<br />cooperation is bearing fruit in the future development of African states. The originality of this<br />study lies in its focus on a triangular (China, Taiwan, and Africa) view point of economic<br />interactions and implications because it includes Taiwanese economic involvement in African<br />markets. We hope that these findings, based on sources other than controversial Western<br />articles enable the reader to obtain a better understanding of the current situation, and form<br />their own opinion.</p>


Author(s):  
Robert B. Gordon ◽  
Patrick M. Malone

As people in northern Europe and North America industrialized their societies, they transformed the scale and the social setting of work and created opportunities for the use of new skills. They consumed forest and mineral resources, diverted rivers, and discarded wastes on a scale previously unknown. They placed rural and urban workplaces and transportation networks on the face of the land and increasingly detached patterns of daily life from their agricultural roots. With their new transportation and communication systems, Europeans, joined later by Americans, spread the influence of Western industry worldwide, first in the exploitation of distant, natural resources for use by the industrial nations and, later, by the delivery of industrial products to traditional societies. Until about A.D. 1000, Europeans used technology in much the same way as peoples in other parts of the world, but their adoption of water power for industry was a harbinger of change. In 1086, the Domesday survey of England revealed one water-powered grain mill for every fifty households. Europeans began using mechanical power in tasks that included beermaking, fulling, tanning, and ironmaking. A conjunction of conveniently available natural resources, weak national governments, and religious beliefs that assigned dignity to work and that did not hinder technological enterprise helped Europeans to nucleate industrialization. They subsequently brought their industrial heritage to North America. In the early decades of the republic, Americans began the stage of industrialization that soon came to dominate much of the landscape and most people’s lives. The rate at which Americans created an industrial society was slow compared with the rapidity with which they are now dismantling it. Already young Americans have lost most of their opportunities to see or experience the transformation of materials into finished products or to learn about the properties of wood and steel or about the handling of tools through personal experience. During the years of industrial growth, the village smithy often stood under a spreading chestnut tree, a place where . . . . . . children coming home from school Look in at the open door; They love to see the flaming forge, And hear the bellows roar, And catch the burning sparks that fly Like chaff from a threshing-floor. . .


2017 ◽  
Vol 25 (4) ◽  
pp. 579-589
Author(s):  
Richard M. Temple

In Africa, legal certainty has been a much craved ideal by investors in the natural resources sector. A key feature of legal certainty in long-term natural resources contracts is to make sure that if new laws are passed or existing laws amended which adversely affect the sponsor, compensation is paid for such changes. When natural resources prices are rising companies are often prepared to take a robust commercial view on the stabilisation risks. It is often seen as falling in the catastrophic risk category but unlikely to occur. However, with the current challenges in oil and gas and commodities in world markets and the global competition for capital, the strength and enforceability of contractual stabilisation covenants in long-term natural resources contracts in Africa in an increasingly risk-adverse world are ever more important. While there is always much debate over the fiscal package in natural resources deals, the stabilisation provisions rarely receive the attention they merit. How to value contractual stabilisation legal protections against more easily quantified fiscal provisions remains an anathema. What is clear is that companies will be well served to devote attention to stabilisation clauses as the temptation for African governments to tweak laws in the face of dwindling revenues can become overwhelming. This article looks at stabilisation issues in African natural resources contracts (in the context of a change of law by a host government) and how best to enhance the chances of a successful and legally binding stabilisation clause drawing on examples from throughout the African continent.


2019 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 275-294 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jordan L. Musetta-Lambert ◽  
Eric M. Enanga ◽  
Sonja Teichert ◽  
Irena F. Creed ◽  
Karen A. Kidd ◽  
...  

Much of Canada’s industrial sector is driven by natural resources and relies heavily on provisioning services supplied by the boreal zone. However, the sometimes intensive processes used by resource-based industries and their associated infrastructure have significantly altered the region, creating concerns over the future socio-ecological health of the boreal zone. Addressing these concerns will require industries reliant on natural resources from the boreal zone to innovate their processes, management, and infrastructure to improve extraction efficiency while contributing to society’s increasing expectations related to sustainability. Here, we explore past, current, and future trends in industrial innovation and infrastructure in the boreal zone for forestry, mining, pulp and paper, oil and gas, and renewable sources of power generation. We assess the role of innovation on the future socio-ecological state of the boreal zone by considering interactions between innovation in industry and infrastructure and other key drivers of change in the boreal, such as atmospheric changes, changing demands for nonprovisioning and provisioning ecosystem services, governance, and demographics and social values. We present future scenarios highlighting three divergent trajectories of change in boreal ecosystems based on past and current states of innovation in industry and infrastructure. We suggest that minimizing impacts of natural resource extraction activities in the boreal zone will only be possible through innovation directly focused on reducing the human footprint on the landscape. Innovation in the information technology sector related to process, management, and end products within these industries and placing greater emphasis on cross-sectoral collaboration will be key to achieving this goal.


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