Marketing Canada's Energy: A Strategy for Security in Oil and GasJames Lorimer & Company, 1. jan. 1983 - 150 strani Written in the early 1980s, author I.A. McDougall shows that as an import-dependent country, Canada was ill-prepared for possible disruptions in its oil supply. McDougall envisioned a future in which superpower rivalry over dwindling world reserves, coupled with rationing of supply by OPEC members and volatility in the Persian Gulf, would make Canada's dependence on foreign oil increasingly precarious. He asserted that the contemporary Liberal government's National Energy Program was a usueful first step in promotion an independent energy strategy. Marketing Canada's Energy is a passionate addition to the lively debate over Canada's independence during the 1980s. |
Vsebina
Canadian Import Requirements and the International | 1 |
Federal Regulation of Energy 26 | 26 |
Federal Regulatory Controls 57 | 57 |
A National Energy Marketing Commission? 97 27 | 97 |
State Involvement in the Oil and Gas Industries | 130 |
Notes | 138 |
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
Alaska Highway Alberta Anti-Inflation Reference application areas assume bl/d Canadian energy cent commercial concern consumers contract conventional costs crude decade decision discovery domestic market economic effective ensure established estimates exploration and development favour federal government fiscal frontier future gas exports gas industry Ibid incentive increased International Energy Agency international oil International Petroleum interprovincial investment involved issue jurisdiction legislation liquified natural gas major Mines and Resources National Energy Board National Energy Marketing National Energy Program natural gas needs NEP's off-oil oil and gas oil companies oil imports Ontario OPEC operation Ottawa overall PEMEX Pertamina Petro-Canada Petrobras Petroleum Import Compensation pipeline potential procedures producing provinces production prospects public interest Recommendation refineries refining regulation requirements reserves resource respect revenue Saudi sector sources Soviet spot market Statoil substantial Syncrude trade and commerce trends ultimately VEBA Western