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Chairman Harper and the Chinese Sell-Out

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    Chairman Harper and the Chinese Sell-Out

    Chairman Harper and the Chinese Sell-Out

    Who needs democracy? Secret treaty is a massive giveaway of Canadian resources and rights with no vote in Parliament.

    By Andrew Nikiforuk, 11 Oct 2012, TheTyee.ca

    Stephen Harper
    Nov. 1 three of China's national oil companies will have more power to shape Canada's energy markets as well as challenge the politics of this country than Canadians themselves. And you can thank Prime Minister Stephen Harper for this economic treason.

    The new agreement will not only support more foreign takeovers of Canada's natural resources, but pave the way for CNOOC's dramatic $15-billion purchase of Nexen.

    That controversial deal, which the majority of ordinary Canadians oppose, represents the largest-ever overseas takeover of any firm by a Chinese national oil company.

    Both the trade deal and Nexen sell-off prove that no one betrays Canadian interests better than a right-wing prime minister beholden to the interests of Big Oil and the myths of free trade.

    Now every literate Canadian recognizes that Harper, the libertarian economist, has been flying kites with pipeline lobbyists funded by China's national oil companies as well as the one-per-centers now ruling China for some time now.

    Given that oil consumption in the United States is steadily dropping and that the incompetent petro state of Alberta has flooded the market with bitumen due to bad planning, low royalties and sheer stupidity, Harper is frantically trying to save his Tory cohorts and their special petroleum interests by peddling bitumen to Asian refiners at any cost. He’s prepared to sell out Canada in the process.
    They call him Chairman
    In fact "Chairman Harper" (and that's what members of his own party are calling him) crafted an Omnibus Bill last spring that cancelled federal science programs, gutted critical environmental legislation, made it easier to pollute water, centralized federal power, diminished protection for endangered species and attacked environmental groups. The bill not only makes it easier to build Northern Gateway but to serve some of the least transparent and most corrupt corporations in China: Sinopec and CNOOC.

    But Harper's Omnibus Bill, which declared Canada’s formal entry into the ranks of dysfunctional petro states, was but window dressing for the Canada-China Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Act (FIPPA). It's the most significant trade deal since NAFTA, but you won't read much about it in the national press. Given its deplorable content Harper appropriately inked the massive give-away in Vladivostok last month and then quietly tabled the deal in Ottawa without so much as a press release.

    Osgoode law professor Gus Van Harten, an expert on such international doings, quickly found out why. After reading the brief document, he declared it a travesty and a formidable assault on Canada's democratic traditions. For starters the deal gives Chinese investors more rights and protections than Canadian entrepreneurs could ever win in China's incredibly corrupt markets.

    Moreover the deal "allows Chinese companies to sue Canada outside of Canadian courts. Remarkably, the lawsuits can proceed behind closed doors. This shift to secrecy reverses a longstanding policy of the Canadian government."

    Appallingly, the treaty would give Sinopec, one of the big Chinese backers of the Northern Gateway pipeline, the right to sue the government of British Columbia if it blocks the project. Sinopec could also demand that only Chinese labour and materials be used on the pipeline. Moreover the treaty gives Chinese state owned companies "the right to full protection and security from public opposition."

    The agreement, like all bad deals, comes wrapped in totalitarian paper. The deal does not require provincial consent. It comes without any risk-benefit analysis. And it can be ratified into law without parliamentary debate. The more Harper wants to do business with China, the more he acts like another tank in Tiananmen Square. Barring a revolt within Harper's own party, the trade deal automatically becomes law on Nov. 1.

    May calling for emergency debate

    To date Elizabeth May, leader of the Green Party, is the only politician demanding an emergency debate in parliament on a treaty that will deliver "reduced sovereignty" and "reduced democracy" and all "for more Chinese ownership of Canada's resources." The NDP now echo her concerns.

    This noxious trade deal, of course, supports an equally offensive bid for Nexen by the China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC). Now CNOOC is the smallest of China's three powerful state-owned oil companies. In recent years all have gone on a global buying spree heavily subsidized by the state to support China’s unsustainable economic growth. CNOOC is a big spender in Iran too.

    Dealing with dictators or overpaying for Canadian assets is par for the course. The central goal is prevent oil shortages and minimize price shocks for an petroleum guzzling economy that is quietly imploding.

    China's rulers don't give a damn about democracy or boreal wetlands but want to corner markets. Nor is CNOOC buying Nexen for that firm's under-performing and debt-ridden Long Lake steam operation in the tar sands. CNOOC, however, covets Nexen for its valuable shale gas plays in northern British Columbia, certain high performing African assets, a seven per cent stake in Syncrude, Nexen's bitumen upgrading technology and a window on the operation of the Brent oil market. As a 2012 Deloitte report put it: "The deep wallet of the Chinese government allows it to secure supplies in a way that other countries cannot."

    The Chinese state, of course, can count on Natural Resource Minister Joe Oliver for extraordinary assistance in this oil game. (When not delivering Mao-like rants against so-called foreign funded radicals, Oliver has said, last year, "Our government believes that the free market is the most efficient and cost-effective means to ensure the proper allocation of resources for the development and supply of energy.")

    The investment banker never explained how a highly subsidized industry whose leaders are appointed by a secretive human resource division of the Communist Party of China qualify as free market agents. But investment bankers don't live in the same world we do.

    How Sinopec operates

    Every now and then China's new power brokers shed some clarity on their global ambitions. Chairman Wang Yilin, the comrade directing CNOOC, recently told a Beijing crowd that "Large-scale deep-water rigs are our mobile national territory and a strategic weapon." Perhaps Harper's real energy strategy is to sell out to nations with a strategy.

    One prominent Chinese academic recently explained to the Washington Post how China's national oil companies (and Sinopec in particular) really worked: they "don't operate in the framework of a full market economy but operate in the framework of power," he said. Moreover, the average citizen in China recognizes these companies as highly corrupt enterprises that primarily enrich China's one per cent.

    Harperites, however, call the Nexen purchase a "no-brainer" (every sell-off these days from Saskatchewan farm land to British Columbia shale gas seems to be a Tory no-brainer). In particular the Harperites say the Nexen deal will bring fresh capital to a dangerously bloated project already overproducing a third rate resource with extreme carbon liabilities and poor energy returns.

    Harper's gang, you'll recall, dubbed Sinopec's $4.6 billion purchase of a nine per cent interest in Syncrude a no-brainer too in 2010. That clever deal give Asia's largest refiner the right to veto whether Syncrude upgrades bitumen in Canada or ships it raw like a good global coolie. Industry Minister Tony Clement, another robust patriot, declared the deal a "net benefit" to Canada.

    But here's what Harper and the gang are not telling Canadians about CNOOC, one of Mitt Romney's favourite investments.

    In 2011 Transparency International ranked the world's 105 largest companies on the basis of their openness and ability to fight corruption. CNOOC (unlike Nexen) didn’t do well. On a score of 0 to 10 CNOOC got a failing grade at a 3.9. So, too, did Petro China. In fact CNOOC kept company with such ethical firms as Philip Morris International, the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China and scandal ridden Citigroup (it also handling the Nexen deal). Not surprisingly, the company that scored the lowest (a score of 1.1) was another CNOOC comrade, the Bank of China.

    In a separate 2011 report on corruption and accountability in the oil and gas industry Transparency International offered this old truth which Harper's Communist-leaning Tories might well ponder. "When revenues from the extractive sector are not managed with transparency and accountability, mineral and petroleum wealth can fuel large scale corruption, as well as poverty injustice and conflict." CNOOC, by the way, scored at the 28th percentile in that report, and just below Petro China and Sinopec.

    'Battle for energy resources'

    Next comes the Bohai Bay spill scandal. Last year two offshore wells owned by CNOOC and Conoco Philips, leaked like hell and contaminated an ocean area nine times the size of Singapore killing fish and ruining tourism. The ever transparent CNOOC waited a month to confirm the spill.

    The Financial Times noted that "lax environmental standards in the world's second-largest economy have left China with chronic pollution and the Bohai Bay spill last summer."

    In addition a major U.S. lawsuit on behalf of U.S. investors in CNOOC accuses the company of not being in compliance with environmental laws or regulations and of concealing the extent and severity of the spill.

    Captain David Hayward, an Australian defence analyst, recently took a hard look at China's aggressive oil purchases around the world from Nigeria to Iran.

    He reasoned that "bludgeoning Chinese investment in the oil/gas industry across many nations" will rewrite geopolitical, economic and military arrangements within the present global system. "It is a serious battle for energy resources." No kidding.

    History sometimes "demonstrates that nations often stockpile oil/gas (and other energy resources) in preparation for regional conflicts and potential conflicts with energy-hungry competitors and adversaries. In the climate of worsening weather patterns, continuing global financial meltdown and increasing energy resource scarcity, the probability of a military confrontation... has dramatically heightened."

    You'd never hear that sort of talk from a Harperite. Instead Harper has lowered Canadian standards to strip and ship resources. He has insulted our best trade partner, the United States. He has changed legislation to ease resource extraction. He has debased the nation’s global reputation to serve Big Oil. And he has given over certain rights and powers to China's national oil companies that effectively undermine our sovereignty. And all in the name of bitumen.

    And like his new-found buddies in the Communist Party of China, Harper doesn't want to debate the issue either. [Tyee]

    Award-winning journalist Andrew Nikiforuk writes about energy for The Tyee and others. Find his previous Tyee articles here. His new book is The Energy of Slaves: Oil and the New Servitude.

    #2
    Everyone knows the oil companies from china have state involvement.

    You have to wonder how stupid our canadian politicians are getting.

    A free market doesn't use money from governments to hide their agenda.

    ANything to with China from the Nexen deal to the recent land deals stink - pure and simple. They are subsidized deals from the government of china.

    Canada won't to war with or against them, but instead be sucker punched into slavery.

    Comment


      #3
      If I wanted a cut and paste seven page
      report, I would go out and seek one. How
      many people on here actually read these
      mile long posts???

      Comment


        #4
        I do, freewheat.

        There are plenty of fighting, and pulling your strings words in cc's posts. Take a run at one!!

        The one that China will never employ is going to war against the "sell out" countries that contain the crude they require to ship it back as a product.

        Unless they are prepared to occupy us, I see crude as a peacemaker.

        Comment


          #5
          Excuse me... BUT:

          http://www.ctvnews.ca/politics/ottawa-blocks-bid-for-calgary-natural-gas-company-1.1003638

          "CTVNews.ca
          Published Saturday, Oct. 20, 2012 9:04AM EDT
          Last Updated Saturday, Oct. 20, 2012 11:19PM EDT


          The federal government has rejected a $6 billion bid by Malaysia’s Petronas to take over Calgary natural gas producer Progress Energy Resources Corp., although the company has 30 days to revise and resubmit its offer.

          In a statement released at 11:57 p.m. Friday, Industry minister Christian Paradis said a notice letter was sent to Petronas explaining the proposed investment was not likely to be of net benefit to Canada.

          “I came to this decision after a careful and thorough review of the proposed transaction,” Paradis wrote in the statement, adding that he would not make any further comment on his decision.

          Under the Investment Canada Act, Petronas will have up to 30 days to make adjustments to its bid. Paradis can extend the allotted time.

          If the proposed investment is resubmitted to Ottawa, Paradis said he will either confirm his initial decision or approve the acquisition.

          “Canada has a long standing reputation for welcoming foreign investment. The Government of Canada remains committed to maintaining an open climate for investment,” Paradis wrote.

          Ottawa agreed to extend the review of the proposed takeover by Petronas on Oct. 5, allowing the government to reach a decision by Oct. 19.

          Petronas and Progress entered a partnership last year after a joint decision to develop shale natural gas in northeastern B.C. The joint venture was aimed at exporting gas off the West Coast in liquid form.

          In a statement released late Saturday, Progress said it was “disappointed” in the decision.

          "Progress will be working over the next 30 days to determine the nature of the issues and the potential remedies" Michael Culbert, Progress’ president and CEO, said in the statement.

          "The long-term health of the natural gas industry in Canada and the development of a new LNG export industry are dependent on international investments such as Petronas’."

          Friday’s decision coincided with the ongoing review of a bid by another Asian-based firm, China National Offshore Oil Co., or CNOOC, which is vying to buy Nexen. The review of the proposed $15.1 billion takeover of the Calgary oil company has been extended until mid-November.

          Political scientist Wenran Jiang told The Canadian Press that the biggest challenge for Ottawa will be to show consistency in how it applies the Investment Canada Act’s key net benefit test to foreign deals.

          “They will have to appear that they use the same set of rules to evaluate, rather than using different tailor-made rules,” said Jiang. “They will have to show some seriousness as well as consistency.”

          Analyst Rob Warren said the Chinese government is likely watching the Petronas-Progress situation very closely.

          “It gives Chinese partners cause to pause and think about what’s going on,” Warren told CTV News. “And they’re going to want to find out what was really behind the decision, and is it going to have an impact on what they’re doing, as well.”

          The NDP has urged the Conservatives to reject the Nexen bid, citing concerns over national security, as well as environmental safety and human rights.

          NDP natural resources critic Peter Julian called out the federal review process for being too secretive.

          “A decision made at midnight on a Friday night is not one designed to enhance public confidence in the process, and enhance transparency,” he said.

          With a report from CTV’s Richard Madan


          Read more: http://www.ctvnews.ca/politics/ottawa-blocks-bid-for-calgary-natural-gas-company-1.1003638#ixzz29yYXYdgq"

          Why do you think OUR government just turned this down?

          Democracy at work is more like it.

          God Bless Canada!

          Cheers!

          Comment


            #6
            No approval of CNOOC deal for China = no approval
            by China for Glencore/Viterra deal...

            Comment


              #7
              Second report from Bloomberg in as many days, and way too much information for some to get through before there was synaptsing failure but "Petronas rejection casts doubt on Cnooc $15.1 billion bid" is the headline.

              Comment


                #8
                Buying opportunity tomorrow, oil and gas on sale!

                Comment


                  #9
                  Tom: Maybe Petronas forgot to send the brown paper bag of cash when they sent in their bid?
                  "Democracy in action".

                  Comment


                    #10
                    If the CNOOC deal goes through, expect to see chinese workers in the oil patch. All they have to do is advertise for workers in the papers for $20/hour and after noone bites, in come the workers. THey did it in northern BC for the coal mines they are now running....

                    Comment


                      #11
                      The Malaysians{petronas} Thought by our actions with China that we were Open for business. Any business.

                      Harper has the chinese so far up his b### that he starting to talk with a mandarin accent.

                      We have to get this gov't OUT OF OFFICE while we still have a country left.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Okay....we don't want a foreign company owned by a foreign government coming in here and investing in our resources?
                        But wait a minute....we already have state owned companies in here from Norway, France, Korea, India, China, Saudi Arabia, UAE?

                        Why not Malaysia?

                        How about the people who own Progress Energy.....shouldn't they be able to sell their property? I didn't see any Canadian companies stepping up to the plate? Or are the owners supposed to sell it for peanuts so some Canadian company can steal it? Is that fair?

                        When you start putting restrictions on who can buy and sell....just how free are you? The right to own private property means you have the right to sell that property to whoever you want! When the government starts putting restrictions on who you can sell your property to, for "the net benifit of Canada", it means you don't really own anything!

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Most of these deals are started by offers to buy, not for sale notices.
                          If it's not for sale why the hell does another monster corp, state owned or other wise be allowed to buy our smaller corp?
                          Viterra perfect example.
                          I say keep it smaller, keep them Canadian as much as possible.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Andrew Nikiforuk never met a portion of the oil and gas industry that he didn't hate. I find his histrionics puzzling considering that the oil and gas industry is the only reason that Canada is not in the same depths of recession that the U.S. is. But I guess we can make our economy boom with enough windmills and solar panels, just like in Europe, huh?

                            Comment


                              #15
                              sooo

                              When Brad Wall told PM Harper to leave SK potash alone... did PM Harper do the wrong thing?

                              I think NOT.

                              PM Harper is an incrementalist... and he does listen to his MP's.

                              Stephen has no more to gain than any one of us... or our Conservative MP's from western Canada. Our objective is to build a better Canada for the next generation.

                              Mustard I think you have been drinking deeply of ND/Bloc/LiB waters again!

                              I wouldn't expect anything different than BHP... either decrease concentration in the industry... or it will be thumbs down... would be my best estimate. 80 percent of CDNs would agree with me... wouldn't they?

                              Cheers!

                              Comment

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