Maxman1
Army.ca Veteran
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I made it to be generic to apply to any topic, but you could probably change the pipe to any specific topic.Change the big guy to uniforms or reserve restricting and its the same meme lol

I made it to be generic to apply to any topic, but you could probably change the pipe to any specific topic.Change the big guy to uniforms or reserve restricting and its the same meme lol
Interesting that he’s announcing it in Prince Rupert.
VeryInteresting that he’s announcing it in Prince Rupert.
I wonder if Carney was able to convince BC…Very
Oil pipeline twinned to an existing LNG line?
I think at least Ontario and Manitoba have governments that're switched on enough, in their own ways, to make something of it.Hudson Bay will be a very interesting place. With the Northwest passage opening up, that opens up markets in both Asia and Europe.
A twinned line might be sellable.I wonder if Carney was able to convince BC…
I wonder if Carney was able to convince BC…
Not a word from her on the budget.Smith has been very quiet as of late. Maybe because of the Alberta stuff going on, or perhaps we might actually be getting a pipe.
Why does Quebec matter and Nunavut isn't big enough to matter.I think at least Ontario and Manitoba have governments that're switched on enough, in their own ways, to make something of it.
Less sure of Québec and Nunavut.
A twinned line might be sellable.
I wonder if Carney was able to convince BC…
Not a word from her on the budget.
Don’t bite the hand that feeds you.
For Hudson Bay? Neighbouring provinces and territories who could theoretically do something with improved ocean access.Why does Quebec matter and Nunavut isn't big enough to matter.
Ah. I thought you meant on pipeline development to Churchill.For Hudson Bay? Neighbouring provinces and territories who could theoretically do something with improved ocean access.
With less than one year to go before the provincial election, the economic vision for Quebec that Legault presented Monday was largely a rehash of measures already put forward by his government.
He touted Hydro-Québec's already announced plan to invest $200 billion between now and 2035 to increase the public utility's energy capacity, a project he said will help the province weather the pain from tariffs imposed by the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump.
Minimally, access to the South that's less seasonal and not dependent on what I understand to be a fairly limited road and rail network for all of the communities along that coast wouldn't hurt, and might make extraction (and local processing) of whatever resources are there feasible.Ah. I thought you meant on pipeline development to Churchill.
I guess Quebec could use Hudson bay for quicker transit to Asia, but their economy is very much centered around the st Lawrence river, so I don't know if they have it in them to look north in that capacity.