Stories tagged with coalbed methane

From ASPO-USA to MinExpo - a Study in Contrasts

It seems as though I have inhabited two different worlds in the past 24 hours. I went from the relatively small (500 folk) meeting in Sacramento where Peak Oil is viewed as imminent, to the halls of the Convention Center in Las Vegas, where the Quadrennial MinExpo is showcasing the latest machines to over 41,000 folk involved in the Mining Industry. It overflows that very large (600,000 sq. ft) building and extends out into the parking lot. Here, with an industry in considerable profit, the displays were large and much more optimistic than I have seen them in previous years. The two meetings were, however, joined by a common complaint that the human resource, the engineers and scientists needed by both communities, are in critically short supply.

Wandering the booths, with only one day to catch all the new and different products, I did come across a couple of items that are, I believe, worth a brief comment before I write a concluding post to wrap ASPO-USA 4. In that post, I will give some of my own interpretation of the conference.

The Round-Up: June 19th 2007

Royal Dutch Shell Inherits Explosive BC Conflict

When Royal Dutch Shell's directors took the reins of Shell Canada earlier this month, they inherited a brewing resource conflict in a remote corner of British Columbia that bears a striking resemblance to Royal Dutch's difficulties in other parts of the world.

The setting is a remote alpine basin southeast of Dease Lake, where the shared origin of the Nass, Stikine and Skeena Rivers gives the area its local name: the Sacred Headwaters. A stunning, expansive wilderness, it is the territory of the Tahltan people, who have hunted and trapped there for generations. It also happens to be underlain by one of British Columbia's largest potential coalbed methane deposits, to which Shell Canada -- and now Royal Dutch Shell -- holds drilling rights.

The Round-Up: April 3rd 2007

Trust bounty slips away

Most income trusts that have sold themselves -- since Ottawa decided to increase taxes on these investments to stem tax leakage -- have ended up in the hands of entities that don't pay Canadian taxes.

Twelve income trust deals with a total enterprise value of $7.3-billion, including yesterday's proposed sale of KCP Income Fund, are pending or have closed since the end of October. Nine of these transactions, worth $5.76-billion, are set to end up in the hands of foreign private equity shops, foreign corporations, Canadian private equity or Canadian pension funds -- all outfits that don't pay taxes into Ottawa's coffers. The findings were made by Chris Rankin, an analyst at Canaccord Adams....

...."We're seeing cash flow moving from taxable Canadian investors' hands to offshore investors and non-taxable hands," said Sandy McIntyre, a fund manager at Sentry Select Capital Corp.