The “long-simmering dispute” is really the Alcan intention to dismantle its 1950 agreement with the people of B.C. and to grab the whole Nechako River for itself, for its power, for Alcan to sell at kidnapper prices (with the active support of Gordon Campbell).
In 2002 Alcan presented a Province wide river energy plan to Gordon Campbell, a planned privatization – in fact a suggested policy of theft of every hydro capable river. And in this case – of the Nechako River - it wanted the people’s ownership delivered to it before New Year.
Working as he does for Private Corporations and not for the B.C. people, Gordon Campbell used the Alcan presentation as a model for all B.C. rivers being transferred into private hands under “his own” new energy policy. He has been wrenching rivers from public ownership and guardianship as fast as he can, delivering them to private, often foreign corporations.
Campbell is doing that in an active breach of trust, lying, deceiving, using secret deals, and gag-legislation, hiding all that he can from British Columbians (with the active support of the Private Corporate Press and Media in Canada).
Globe and Mail coverage is “poor Alcan”. Or as Konrad Yakabuski has it: “Alcan might rue the day in 1952 it set up shop in B.C. were it not for all that money it’s made.” (Globe and Mail, Jan 1 07 B1)
A few facts leak into the Globe and Mail coverage, and Konrad Yakabuski does a fair job under the misleading headline: “How B.C. threw Alcan a curve”. That’s intended as another “poor Alcan has been unfairly wounded” lead.
From Yakabuski’s article and from research we know (1) Alcan is the author of Campbell’s water energy policy. (2) Campbell supports actively the betrayal of B.C. energy users. (3) Kitimat municipality has a suit “against the government which the town argues has failed to enforce the original 1950 agreement that gave Alcan Kemano water rights to produce electricity only to make aluminum and not to sell power willy-nilly”. (Yakabuski, Globe, Jan 1 07 B7)
The Kitimat town’s case is strong. But it needs to be defeated so Gordon Campbell can hand the Nechako – no strings attached – to Alcan. To do that Wally Oppal, Attorney General of B.C. and highest law officer of the Crown, has his name on the case as fighting the people of Kitimat on behalf of Alcan. Pretty.
(4) In typical fashion, Alcan tried to argue – with Gordon Campbell’s support – that its quiet $2 billion contract with B.C. Hydro should be kept secret. Some of the secrecy was broken by the demands of citizen groups. (Remember the dirty, secret, still not-fully-disclosed sale of B.C. Rail – with criminal court cases still hanging on to it?) In Yakabuski’s words about Alcan, “everything about the sales contract [just stopped by the B.C. Utilities Commission] – its negotiation, its terms, its objectives – is shrouded in mystery”.
Worse still (5) only the implacable determination of Kitimat’s mayor, Richard Wozney, has forced the matter into the light. Like the sale of B.C. Rail, Gordon Campbell would have kept it secret in a flagrant breach of the trust placed in him by B.C. voters.
(6) Opponents of the Alcan deal point to what is probably a key to the whole scam. Gordon Campbell travelled to Kitimat, did not see the Mayor or Council, but instead inked a quiet offer to Alcan of $2 billion for power and decided to cloak it as expansion money intended for the aluminum smelter there. He didn’t mention the planned (secret) change to the status of the Nechako water resource. Many believe the whole smelter expansion announcement was a fraud, set up to divert attention from the real plan. That was to end aluminum production (already cut down), close the town of Kitimat, and unloose Alcan to be a major, highest price seller of water energy power into the U.S. – into the so-called power grid.
Alcan (as the headlines I’ve quoted suggest) claims the water energy power sale deal is part of the aluminum smelter expansion program.
That is simply false. The people of Kitimat know that. They’ve experienced such dealing before.
The proposed deal for power handover to Alcan – is to sell to B.C. users energy at $71.00 a megawatt hour that costs Alcan a little less than $5.00 to produce. That means British Columbians’ energy prices would soar perpetually so that Gordon Campbell’s corporate buddies could glut themselves on obscene profit “forever” – as far as B.C. users are concerned. Moreover, the proposed sale is NOT tied to the building of the theoretical 2 billion dollar aluminum smelter expansion (as is ballyhoo’d in the Private Corporate Press). The theoretical expansion, it appears, is simply part of what we have come to know as Gordon Campbell’s deceitful style.
Alcan could have said (had it not been stopped by the B.C. Utilities Commission): “We’re not tied to smelter expansion at Kitimat. We’re quitting that. Close down the town. We can make billions more WITHOUT a smelter operation. So get lost.” Incredibly, at the BCUC hearings the Sierra Club supported the private power producers (the private operators being given the B.C. rivers the people of B.C. own). Perhaps Sierra Club and other environmentally concerned people don’t know that the river power deals create “carbon credits” – which means those private companies can set up fossil fuel burners in your back yard and wave “carbon credits” in your face.
Yakabuski – retreating into the corporate fold – tells readers that the “New Democrats gave Alcan its Kemano water rights in perpetuity, so B.C.’s bargaining power, unlike Quebec’s, is limited”. That’s just plain balderdash. B.C. government could support rather than oppose the Kitimat argument, and it could fix for Alcan the price of extra energy Alcan has for sale to B.C. Hydro. It could rule, moreover, that all other power generation on the Nechako will be undertaken in staged operations by B.C. Hydro. It could protect the public interest by allowing power sales and taxing them at 95%. It could do any number of things to protect the assets of the B.C. people. All the chatter in the private corporate press about Alcan’s “private property” is an attempt to make British Columbians think their government is powerless to act on their behalf.
Gordon Campbell is destroying B.C. Hydro to make actions on behalf of the B.C. people impossible. And as Yakabuski says the sweetheart deal between B.C. Hydro and Alcan “was thrust upon the utility by its political masters in Victoria….”
That’s the long and the short of it. It’s the key to understanding what seems an irrational, insane set of conflicts. Many are convinced that Gordon Campbell (with his corporate clones) has engineered the whole attempted breach of trust. British Columbians must, therefore, concentrate all their efforts on getting rid of Gordon Campbell – by criminal or civil court actions against him, by largescale public protests, by whatever constitutional means are open to them – and as soon as possible.
(But …British Columbians shouldn’t expect any support from Gordon Campbell’s big corporate friends who now own B.C. Rail and who own The Globe and Mail, The Vancouver Sun and Province, the National Post, CTV, BCTV, and many B.C.neighbourhood papers owned by the big corporations, papers B.C.’ers often think are small and therefore“independent” of the big, ugly, corporate press.)
For more information on the B.C. rivers sell-out go to http://www.hydrofactsbc.ca/index.html
[Editor's note: Link edited Jan 08, 2007 - DrC]
[Proofreader's note: this article was edited for spelling and typos on January 8, 2007]
Note: http://www.hydrofactsbc...
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"Unthinking respect for authority is the greatest enemy of truth."
(Albert Einstein)
BC voters WILL vote Campbell in again. When the economy grows in Canada, the voters feel assured it is because of their leaders. Less BC residents are unemployed then the time the NDP ran the province. Few residents reflect as to how much it is costing them. As long as Campbell remains in power, the least likely the lucrative deal with Alcan will not go through. One may wonder if governments enable the opposition to take power, when the shit is about to hit the fan. To remain in power Campbell will continue to make such deals in secrecy. There is no differance between Harper and Campbell regardless of their party membership. The mayor of Kitimat and those apposing the deal have to fight both governments. I'm sure the promise of "increased employment" will also be a factor to contend with as well.
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Expect little from life and get more from it.
Alcan was kicked out of Norway, because the poeple voted against EU membership, but under WTO and NAFTA rules can not be kicked out of BC and Canada.
And this is what the great wealth creating ideology of "free trade" is about.
Ed Deak.
I lived in Kitimat back around 88-92 and had a lot of friends who worked there ever since ground was broken for the plant back in the 50's.
They told me that "Uncle Al" has never been a friend to their employees in any way, shape, or form.
Anyone who believes they were has obvious bought into Alcan's public relations fairy tale. An old Portuguese friend of mine (who worked there from 1960 through 1996) put it this way: "If you want to know what Alcan is really doing, listen to what they announce and say in the news; then reverse so that it is the exact opposite, then you'll know."
The really sad part is that a lot of people here in Prince George who think that the battle to preserve the Nechako is over.
It's only just beginning.
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"and the knowledge they fear is a weapon to be used against them"
"The Weapon" - Rush