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Les is choked at a Carney cabinet exclusion, Taylor wants an election NOW, Michael's losing it over the politics behind his traffic ticket, and Sunil's taking aim at recent guest Markham Hislop. It's The Flamethrower presented. by the DQs of Northwest Edmonton and Sherwood Park! FIRE UP YOUR FLAMETHROWER: talk@ryanjespersen.com When you visit the DQs in Palisades, Namao, Newcastle, Westmount, and Baseline Road, be sure to tell 'em Real Talk sent you! REGISTER FOR THE REAL TALK GOLF CLASSIC: https://www.ryanjespersen.com/real-talk-golf-classic The views and opinions expressed in this show are those of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Relay Communications Group Inc. or any affiliates.
Canada declared measles completely eliminated thirty years ago. Not anymore. Public health experts say the disease could become endemic once again, with hundreds of cases confirmed in Alberta and Ontario. What happened? 2:15 | Drs. Shazma Mithani and Sheila Wijayasinghe talk vaccine hesitancy, misinformation, menopause (31:00), and mental health (41:30). THE DOC TALK PODCAST: https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/the-doc-talk-podcast/id1775772809 FOLLOW DOC TALK on IG: https://www.instagram.com/thedoctalkpod/ 55:30 | Jespo and Johnny debrief, check out YouTube comments from our recent Alberta separation interviews, and read an email from Jim in Vernon about Canada's new foreign policy. 1:10:15 | Les is choked at a Carney cabinet exclusion, Taylor wants an election NOW, Michael's losing it over the politics behind his traffic ticket, and Sunil's taking aim at recent guest Markham Hislop. It's The Flamethrower presented. by the DQs of Northwest Edmonton and Sherwood Park! FIRE UP YOUR FLAMETHROWER: talk@ryanjespersen.com When you visit the DQs in Palisades, Namao, Newcastle, Westmount, and Baseline Road, be sure to tell 'em Real Talk sent you! REGISTER FOR THE REAL TALK GOLF CLASSIC: https://www.ryanjespersen.com/real-ta... FOLLOW US ON TIKTOK, X, INSTAGRAM, and LINKEDIN: @realtalkrj & @ryanjespersen JOIN US ON FACEBOOK: @ryanjespersen REAL TALK MERCH: https://ryanjespersen.com/merch RECEIVE EXCLUSIVE PERKS - BECOME A REAL TALK PATRON: patreon.com/ryanjespersen THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING OUR SPONSORS! https://ryanjespersen.com/sponsors The views and opinions expressed in this show are those of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Relay Communications Group Inc. or any affiliates.
For decades, the relationship between Alberta and Ottawa has been...adversarial. Can't we all just get along? Could both levels of government cooperate, with shared perspective and priorities, to benefit everybody? What might that look like? 4:00 | Energy and climate journalist Markham Hislop maps out a path to partnership between the Alberta and federal governments. READ MORE: https://energi.media/ 57:00 | It's official: Real Talk has preserved Alberta's place in Canada. Jespo and Johnny review the results of our latest unscientific, unofficial Twitter poll. 1:10:00 | "Insurance Lawyer X" pushes back on our May 9 interview about changes to Alberta's auto insurance system. EMAIL THE SHOW: talk@ryanjespersen.com 1:25:00 | Shout out to all the nurses in a special edition of Positive Reflections presented by Solar by Kuby. GET A FREE SOLAR QUOTE: https://kuby.ca/ SUBMIT YOUR POSITIVE REFLECTION: talk@ryanjespersen.com REGISTER FOR THE REAL TALK GOLF CLASSIC: https://www.ryanjespersen.com/real-ta... FOLLOW US ON TIKTOK, X, INSTAGRAM, and LINKEDIN: @realtalkrj & @ryanjespersen JOIN US ON FACEBOOK: @ryanjespersen REAL TALK MERCH: https://ryanjespersen.com/merch RECEIVE EXCLUSIVE PERKS - BECOME A REAL TALK PATRON: patreon.com/ryanjespersen THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING OUR SPONSORS! https://ryanjespersen.com/sponsors The views and opinions expressed in this show are those of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Relay Communications Group Inc. or any affiliates.
Energy journalist Markham Hislop explains the context for Alberta Premier Danielle Smith's upcoming interview Thursday with US MAGA podcaster Ben Shapiro in Florida. Hint: Alberta thinks the energy future will look just like the energy past and it wants Trump and the Canadian government to get out of its way. The problem is that the future will likely be very different than Alberta expects.
"This is like a long-term marriage where one spouse has betrayed the other. Trust that took 150 years to create has been destroyed in just a few months. Americans don't understand the depth of Canadian anger." That is what Markham Hislop, a Vancouver Island, BC-based journalist and host of "The Energi Show" on YouTube, told Host Llewellyn King and Co-host Adam Clayton Powell is the result of President Donald Trump's sweeping Canada tariffs and threats.
Energy journalist Markham Hislop interviews economist Dave Sawyer of Enviro Economics about the Parliamentary Budget Officer's math mistakes in its economic impact study of the Government of Canada's proposed oil and gas emissions cap. The cap is extremely contentious, especially in Alberta, the epicentre of Canada's oil and gas industry.
Markham Hislop, Energy journalist and Publisher Energi Media Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
More than 60 million people streamed (or tried to stream) Mike Tyson and Jake Paul's fight over the weekend. Widely panned as a pathetic spectacle, a few things are for sure: even Mike Tyson can't stop Father Time, Jake Paul still draws huge crowds, and streaming platforms are disrupting absolutely every traditional model. 2:00 | Jespo and Johnny recap the Tyson-Paul fight (and the entire Netflix event), Jon Jones presenting his UFC Championship belt to Donald Trump (19:30), Alex Ovechkin inching even closer to Gretzky's all-time goals record (20:50), the 111th Grey Cup including the Jonas Brothers' halftime show (23:15), and Taylor Swift touching down in Toronto (32:20). Just wait until you hear how much Ryan's friend made re-selling her tickets... JOIN US WEDNESDAY @ EDIFY'S TOP 40 EVENT: https://tickets.edifyedmonton.com/top-40-under-40-2024/ 38:20 | Energy journalist Markham Hislop explains why Alberta's economy desperately needs a Plan B. READ MARKHAM'S WORK: https://energi.media/ 1:09:15 | A group of full-blown Nazis paraded through Columbus, Ohio over the weekend. What's the best way to combat such a public display of hate? TELL US WHAT YOU THINK: talk@ryanjespersen.com 1:12:40 | Real Talker "Touring Zebra" is considering moving their entire life to downtown Edmonton, but they need to see a few things happen first. Ryan reads Zebra's email in response to our November 15 Real Talk Round Table about the $427M Downtown Investment Plan. WATCH THAT REAL TALK ROUND TABLE: https://rtrj.info/111524YEGDT 1:17:30 | We love reunions! Shout out to Real Talker Amy, who shared this heartwarming story of a cancer survivor reconnecting with their beloved pup. Positive Reflections is presented by Kuby Renewable Energy. SUBMIT YOUR POSITIVE REFLECTION: talk@ryanjespersen.com GET A FREE SOLAR QUOTE TODAY: https://kubyenergy.ca/ PLAY, SPONSOR, or VOLUNTEER at the REAL TALK POND HOCKEY CLASSIC: https://www.ryanjespersen.com/pond-ho... FOLLOW US ON TIKTOK, TWITTER, & INSTAGRAM: @realtalkrj REAL TALK MERCH: https://ryanjespersen.com/merch RECEIVE EXCLUSIVE PERKS - BECOME A REAL TALK PATRON: / ryanjespersen THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING OUR SPONSORS! https://ryanjespersen.com/sponsors The views and opinions expressed in this show are those of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Relay Communications Group Inc. or any affiliates.
Markham Hislop, Energy journalist and Publisher Energi Media Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Markham Hislop, Energy journalist and Publisher Energi Media Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Renfrew County Joint Transportation Consortium, which is responsible for planning school bus routes, has been unable to strike a deal with school bus operators. That has left families searching for ways to get their kids to school. It's causing headaches for families not just logistically, but financially as well. We spoke to Shawna Walker, a mother of two kids in the renfrew catholic board, to get a personal introspective on the issue.You might have heard our previous conversation with an Ontario canola grower. They were reacting to the news that China has announced plans to start an anti-dumping investigation into canola imports from Canada. It comes on the heels of Canada's move to impose 100 per cent tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles. However, standing firm, Ottawa says high tariffs are essential to protecting jobs, and the future of the auto sector in this country. For his thoughts on Canada's position, we spoke to Energy and Climate journalist Markham Hislop about the whole situation. 'Poets of Nogojiwanong' is a new online database featuring information about local poets and spoken word artists. It is meant to create a legacy archive highlighting the literary talent who live in Peterborough, and is the brainchild of the city's poet laureate Ziysah von Bieberstein. We spoke to them today about the database.
Markham Hislop, Energy journalist and Publisher Energi Media Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Fact or fiction? We task two of Alberta's most experienced journalists with scrutinizing our recent interview with Alberta Premier Danielle Smith. 3:30 | Veteran commentators Graham Thomson and Markham Hislop dig into our June 12 interview with Premier Smith, including her eyebrow-raising comment about former premier Alison Redford, her thoughts on the future of carbon capture, her take on MLA Shannon Phillips' resignation, and an upcoming UCP-sponsored anti-vax event. WATCH OUR INTERVIEW WITH PREMIER SMITH: https://rtrj.info/061224Premier 36:30 | Real Talker Sierra delivers a eulogy for the Canadian Energy Centre - aka The War Room - in The Flamethrower presented by the DQs of Northwest Edmonton and Sherwood Park. FIRE UP YOUR FLAMETHROWER: talk@ryanjespersen.com When you visit the DQs in Palisades, Namao, Newcastle, Westmount, and Baseline Road, make sure you tell 'em Real Talk sent you! FOLLOW US ON TIKTOK, TWITTER, & INSTAGRAM: @realtalkrj REAL TALK MERCH: https://ryanjespersen.com/merch RECEIVE EXCLUSIVE PERKS - BECOME A REAL TALK PATRON: / ryanjespersen THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING OUR SPONSORS! https://ryanjespersen.com/sponsors The views and opinions expressed in this show are those of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Relay Communications Group Inc. or any affiliates.
It happens each and every year. We mark “Freedom Tax Day” in the middle of June. This is the point in the calendar year where each working Canadian is now ‘officially' earning money for themselves, and not Government. We learn more about the significance of the day from Jake Fuss, Director of Fiscal Studies at the Fraser Institute. Alberta's controversial “Energy War Room,” has shut down and will be integrated into the Province's ‘Intergovernmental Relations Department'. We discuss the closure of the ‘war room' and the future of the Oil Sands with Markham Hislop, Energy journalist and Publisher at “Energi Media”. Finally, the weather is nice, kids are wrapping up another school year, and it's time to take a little vacation. That is, if you can afford to! We catch up with Bruce Sellery, CEO of Credit Canada, for some tips to help you navigate your summer finances.
Markham Hislop, Energy journalist and Publisher Energi Media Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Do you ‘cringe' every month when you open your energy bills? Well, hopefully changes coming to the electricity fee structure will offer some relief for Calgarians. We discuss the potential changes Alberta's energy fee regulations with Markham Hislop, Energy journalist and Publisher Energy Media. If you and your significant other are looking to have children but facing infertility challenges, maybe it's time to move to a different province for treatment. 7 provinces currently offer some form of financial aid for infertility treatment, but Alberta is not one of them. We discuss the financial barriers to treatment in Alberta with Dr. Ariana Daniel, Infertility Specialist at the Alberta Reproductive Centre. As every parent knows, getting the kids off their phones is hard enough at home and Ontario is taking action to limit phone usage in the classroom. Should Alberta take a similar approach? We tackle the topic with Jason Schilling, President of the Alberta Teacher's Association.
Energi Media's Markham Hislop and Sandy Garossino, National Observer columnist, discussing the role of China in the global energy transition. Recorded live at a March 27 event in Parksville, British Columbia, Canada that was organized by Roy Collver of the Energy Circle.
We begin with our monthly conversation with Calgary Police Chief Mark Neufeld. This time out, we get the Chief's thoughts on last week's tragic stand-off in the community of Penbrooke and how it was handled by the men and women of the Calgary Police Service. Next, the long-awaited expansion to the Trans Mountain Pipeline is expected to be completed by the end of May according to the province. How big of an impact will the expansion have on Alberta's energy sector? We get the thoughts of Markham Hislop, Energy journalist and Publisher at Energi Media. Finally, it seems like ‘winter' has decided to hang around a little bit longer, but warmer temperatures will arrive eventually. Is your home ready from spring? We get some tips for homeowners on how to get ahead of the Spring Maintenance required to keep your home in ‘tip-top' shape with Matthew Coad, Vice President of Strategy at Rümi.
Markham Hislop, Energy journalist and Publisher Energi Media Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It's a recurring conversation in Canada, if not around the world: is Canadian oil more "ethical" than oil from elsewhere, is activity in Alberta's oil sands "clean" enough...and does any of this actually matter on the international stage? A couple of episodes ago, David Knight Legg argued the world needs more Alberta for three main reasons. In this episode, our guests fact check those three points. CHECK OUT THAT EPISODE: https://rtrj.info/121823DKL 2:45 | Markham Hislop, publisher of Energi Media, takes issue with DKL's claim that Alberta's producing the cleanest barrels of oil in the world. READ MARKHAM'S WORK: https://energi.media/ 22:55 | Dr. Andrew Leach says he agrees with some of what DKL had to say, but not all. The author of "Between Doom & Denial: Facing Facts About Climate Change" lays it out. ORDER ANDREW'S BOOK: https://sutherlandhousebooks.com/product/between-doom-and-denial/ 48:35 | It's a magical time of year to visit Jasper! We highlight some of the most spectacular holiday culinary options in this week's #MyJasper Memories presented by Tourism Jasper. BOOK YOUR JASPER GETAWAY: https://www.jasper.travel/january/ 51:00 | Would you choose to work 100% from home, 100% at the office, or a mix of both? Ryan reads comments after our December 19 Real Talk Round Table with Heather Thomson, Puneeta McBryan, and Cory Wosnack. 56:35 | An overwhelming majority of Real Talkers think Jaskirat Singh Sidhu should be allowed to stay in Canada. Ryan reviews the results of our unofficial, unscientific Twitter poll. 1:01:10 | Ryan reads one of the most powerful emails we've ever received, from Real Talker Brandon, a family member of killer Robert Svekla. EMAIL THE SHOW: talk@ryanjespersen.com BECOME A REAL TALK PATRON: https://www.patreon.com/ryanjespersen SIGN UP FOR THE REAL TALK POND HOCKEY CLASSIC: https://ryanjespersen.com/pond-hockey FOLLOW US ON TIKTOK, TWITTER, & INSTAGRAM: @realtalkrj THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING OUR SPONSORS! https://ryanjespersen.com/sponsors The views and opinions expressed in this show are those of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Relay Communications Group Inc. or any affiliates
Arguably, Alberta's hydrocarbons are not ethical, at least no more so than what is produced in most other oil and gas producing jurisdictions. The speaker will contend that both UCP and NDP governments have subscribed to some version of “ethical oil,” which holds that Alberta's are some of the most environmentally responsible hydrocarbons in the world, bolstered by democratic institutions and a “world class” regulatory regime. In fact, “ethical oil” is a facade to hide the truth: that oil companies, the provincial government, and Alberta's various energy regulators have long conspired to put profits above the public interest, with the province now potentially on the hook for hundreds of billions of dollars to clean up abandoned wells and leaking tailings ponds. Speaker: Markham Hislop Markham Hislop is an energy journalist and publisher of Energi News (formerly North American Energy News). Hislop uses a technology adoption model of his own design to analyze and report upon all the facets of the energy industry, from oil and gas to EVs and renewables. Over the past seven years, Hislop has probably reported about the Energy Transition more than any other North American journalist. His work has been published in Canadian Business, Alberta Oil Magazine, Hart Energy Publications, World Oil, Vancouver Magazine, and other publications. Hislop's most recent book is The New Alberta Advantage: Technology, Policy, and the Future of the Oil Sands.
Markham Hislop, Energy journalist and Publisher Energi Media Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Join David Arkell, John Pooley, Lysandra Naom, and guest Markham Hislop, fellow podcaster, publisher, and journalist at Energi Media, on an episode all about energy market literacy! This episode features energy education, responsibility for energy literacy, common misconceptions about the market, and more. Find Energi Media and more content from Markham Hislop here: https://energi.media. Check out our 360 Carbon Excellence Program here: www.carbonexcellence.com. Find us at our website www.360energy.net or LinkedIn and Youtube at 360 Energy Inc. Email us at podcast@360energy.net with any comments, questions, or recommendations!
Join David Arkell, John Pooley, Lysandra Naom, and guest Markham Hislop, fellow podcaster, publisher, and journalist at Energi Media, on an episode all about the role of journalism in the energy transition! This episode features what the energy transition is, the importance of the energy transition, keys to a successful energy transition, and more. Find Energi Media and more content from Markham Hislop here: https://energi.media. Check out our 360 Carbon Excellence Program here: www.carbonexcellence.com. Find us at our website www.360energy.net or LinkedIn and Youtube at 360 Energy Inc. Email us at podcast@360energy.net with any comments, questions, or recommendations!
Markham Hislop, energy journalist and publisher, Energi News Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Why are so many Canadian cannabis growers and retailers closing up shop? Five years post-legalization, what's holding the industry back? Speaking of high-profile industries in Canada, new details are showing why Albertans are getting burned by oil and gas. We dig into both stories on this episode of Real Talk. But first... 6:00 | Kevin Spacey has been cleared by a London jury of all charges of sexual assault. Will any studio take a risk with the two-time Academy Award winner? Ryan and Johnny discuss. 15:50 | Matt Lamers covers the business of cannabis for MJBizDaily. He takes us into the (shady?) story of Aleafia's insolvency, and explains why so many businesses are struggling. You'll be surprised to hear how cannabis stacks up to beer revenue-wise, and how Indigenous communities are being frozen out by the Cannabis Act. CHECK OUT MATT'S WORK: https://mjbizdaily.com/ 57:45 | The Jasper Dark Sky Festival is one of the crown jewels when it comes to ways to explore Jasper National Park. We highlight a few new attractions in store for this year's festival, which promises to be out of this world! #MyJasper Memories is presented by our friends at Tourism Jasper. CHECK OUT THE JASPER DARK SKY FESTIVAL: https://www.jasperdarksky.travel/ 1:00:40 | If orphan wells and other environmental liabilities are such bad news for Alberta, why doesn't the general public seem to care? Energi Media's Markham Hislop is back with part two of his investigative series Unethical Oil. CHECK OUT MARKHAM'S WORK: https://energi.media/ 1:27:20 | Real Talker "JC" has a solution for Canada's methane problem, as outlined in our Hidden Harm episode on July 20. Ryan reads his email to talk@ryanjespersen.com. USE PROMO CODE "AVRJ" FOR 50% OFF A ONE-YEAR SUBSCRIPTION TO ALBERTA VIEWS: https://albertaviews.ca/ 1:37:50 | Our hearts are broken for our dear friend Supriya Dwivedi, who lost her beloved husband Anoop earlier this week. Ryan shares a few thoughts. EMAIL THE SHOW: talk@ryanjespersen.com BUY KDAYS 50/50 TICKETS IN SUPPORT OF YWCA EDMONTON: https://www.k-days.com/50-50 BECOME A REAL TALK PATRON: https://www.patreon.com/ryanjespersen WEBSITE: https://ryanjespersen.com/ TWITTER: https://twitter.com/RealTalkRJ INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/RealTalkRJ/ TIKTOK: https://www.tiktok.com/@realtalkrj THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING OUR SPONSORS! https://ryanjespersen.com/sponsors The views and opinions expressed in this show are those of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Relay Communications Group Inc. or any affiliates.
The conclusion to our conversation with Energi Media Founder Markham Hislop! Markham has been reporting on Energy and the future of Energy for years following an entire career and lifetime in the energy industry, and in this conversation we go through Parts 1 & 2 of his “Unethical Oil” series! What's the future of Oil and Gas in Alberta? What's the future of bitumen? What's going on with abandoned and orphan wells? And why didn't the NDP capitalize on Carbon Capture and Storage during the election? All this and a whole lot more! As always, if you appreciate the kind of content that we're trying to produce here at The Breakdown, please consider signing up as a monthly supporter at our Patreon site at www.patreon.com/thebreakdownab. If you're listening to the audio version of our podcast, please consider leaving us a review and a rating, and don't forget to like and follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Threads!
We've got a conversation with Energi Media Founder Markham Hislop that's so big we're breaking it into two episodes over this week! Markham has been reporting on Energy and the future of Energy for years following an entire lifetime and in the energy industry, and in this conversation we go through Parts 1 & 2 of his “Unethical Oil” series! What's the future of Oil and Gas in Alberta? What's the future of bitumen? What's going on with abandoned and orphan wells? And why didn't the NDP capitalize on Carbon Capture and Storage during the election? All this and a whole lot more! Look for Part 2 Friday, July 21st at 8 PM MST! As always, if you appreciate the kind of content that we're trying to produce here at The Breakdown, please consider signing up as a monthly supporter at our Patreon site at www.patreon.com/thebreakdownab. If you're listening to the audio version of our podcast, please consider leaving us a review and a rating, and don't forget to like and follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Threads!
It's a total disaster. For decades, Alberta has allowed oil and gas companies to ignore their legal obligation to clean up old wells, tailings ponds, and other environmental liabilities. It's obvious to anybody paying attention that the Alberta Energy Regulator (AER) can't be trusted to look out for the public nor the planet. 4:00 | Markham Hislop has been covering the oil and gas industry for years, as publisher of Energi Media. He takes us into his investigative series "Unethical Oil: Alberta's Secret Shame," and explains how we got to this point. How bad is this mess? What happens if it's not cleaned up? Who on earth is going to foot the bill? Every Albertan needs to watch this interview. READ MARKHAM'S REPORTING: https://energi.media/ CHECK OUT MARKHAM'S PODCAST: https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/energi-talks/id1534771882 35:45 | Snow is disappearing from Jasper's hiking and biking trails, meaning May Long Weekend is a perfect time to head to the mountains! This week's #MyJasper Memories highlights some of the best early season options to explore Jasper National Park. CHECK OUT THE VENTURE BEYOND VIDEO SERIES: https://www.youtube.com/@JasperAlberta 39:50 | Our coverage of Canada's opioid crisis continues as Dr. Andrea Sereda and Guy Felicella join Ryan to talk harm reduction, safer supply, and political opportunism. Why are we so hesitant to accept evidence-based practices in this space? How do we hit stigma head on? What's the number one thing Guy, a survivor of six overdoses, wants you to remember about this issue? 1:17:10 | We are nothing without you, our amazing audience. Since the very first episodes of Real Talk, Brenda Walmsley was the first to sign into the live stream and wish us a "Good morning" in the comments. Ryan takes a minute to pay tribute to a forever friend. WEBSITE: https://ryanjespersen.com/ TWITTER: https://twitter.com/RealTalkRJ INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/RealTalkRJ/ TIKTOK: https://www.tiktok.com/@realtalkrj PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/ryanjespersen THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING OUR SPONSORS! https://ryanjespersen.com/sponsors The views and opinions expressed in this show are those of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Relay Communications Group Inc. or any affiliates.
Markham Hislop, energy journalist and publisher, Energi News Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Markham Hislop, energy journalist and publisher, Energi News. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Markham Hislop, energy journalist and publisher, Energi News Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Markham Hislop, energy journalist & publisher, Energi News Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Markham Hislop interviews Dr. Denis Gilbert, a climate scientist who has been active on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, but recently retired from Fisheries and Oceans Canada and hung out his own shingle, Denis Gilbert Scientifik.
Markham Hislop, energy journalist & publisher, Energi News Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
As COP 27 kicks off in Egypt, The UN chief says we're not doing enough to prevent a climate catastrophe. On the bright side, France is mandating all parking lots have solar panels over them resulting in the power of 10 nuclear reactors. An analyst says Tesla may never achieve full self-driving. South Dakota produced more energy from wind than any other source. Why a switch in power in the United States Congress won't kill Biden's Inflation Reduction / Climate act. Brian's PTC cabin heater in his Tesla Model 3 had to be replaced and that meant driving in a parka for two and a half hours to the closes service center. Clip from the Energy Vs Climate podcast with guest Katherine Hamilton. Netflix has a documentary on Nissan head and current criminal Carlos Ghosn called 'Fugitive: The Curious Case of Carlos Ghosn." He was accused of stealing millions from Nissan and escaping in a storage chest on a plane. The eight billionth human being is about to be born. We disguss the Energi Media YouTube channel where Markham Hislop talked to an analyst from Guidehouse Insights about what's taking level 4 autonomy so long. Porsche has made 100,000 EVs. Tesla (TSLA) is now earning eight times more per car than Toyota, and they are starting to notice back in Japan. Pakistan's utility knows going green means consumers pay less for their electricity bill. Electrek editor Fred Lambert on Elon Musk's feedback loop of constant praise. The "hydrogen-is-not-all-that" podcast suggested by one of our listeners can be found here. Thanks for listening to our show! Consider rating The Clean Energy Show on iTunes, Spotify or wherever you listen to our show. Follow us on TikTok! @cleanenergypod Check out our YouTube Channel! @CleanEnergyShow Follow us on Twitter! @CleanEnergyPod Your hosts: James Whittingham https://twitter.com/jewhittingham Brian Stockton: https://twitter.com/brianstockton Email us at cleanenergyshow@gmail.com Leave us an online voicemail at http://speakpipe.com/cleanenergyshow Tell your friends about us on social media! What should we do for Patreon perks coming in 2023? Let us know your ideas! Transcript Hello and welcome to Episode 138 of the Clean Energy Show. I'm Brian Stockton. I'm James Whittingham. This week, several companies are throwing to the towel and full selfdriving, but please keep your hands on the wheel and your attention on the road as you listen to this podcast. The state of South Dakota and now produces more electricity from wind than any other source. Must be the hot air coming from Mount Rushmore, am I right? No. UN Chief Antonio Gutierrez says we are on the highway to Climate Hill with our foot still on the accelerator. Again, please keep your hands on the wheel and your attention on the road as you listen to this podcast. In France, the government has ordered that all parking lots must be covered by solar panels, all because President Emmanuel Macron can't get the top back up on his convertible Renault. All that and so much more on this edition of the Clean Energy Show. And also this week, Brian, why a switch in power in the United States Congress, which is voting as we speak, as we record this won't kill Biden's inflation reduction act, but a change in government in Canada actually would be problem for us north of the border because well, I'll get to that later. And we also have a bit of an update live from Cop 27, sort of. And what's new with you? How was your trip to Saskatoon? Because last week you're heading north two and a half hours in the snowy Canadian winter to get your Tesla fixes. That's the closest Tesla service center to you. Yeah, that's right. So the heater has not been working right and didn't seem to be working quite right last winter, but kind of not enough to generate an error message. But now I had an error message, so they seemed to know what to do to fix it. So drove up Saskatoon, where the closest service center is, and yes, they replaced the whole heater. That's what they did. Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. It's under warranty. Everything's fine, isn't it? Everything's fine. When does the warranty end? Let me ask you, because it has, as we pointed out a couple of weeks ago, two and a half years, a quarter decade, getting close to the point where this is going to start killing you in the wallet. I don't recall when it ends, but I think it might say specs of warrant. It says in the app somewhere. Yes, here in the app. The Tesla app, basic vehicle, limited warranty, expires in March 2024 or 80,000, battery 2028 or 160 and the drive unit 2028 or 160,000 km as well. So, yeah, a couple more years to go on the basic warranty. Okay, I see. This could be a different discussion in the future. OK, what was it? Was it the PTC heater, the resistive heater? Yeah. Or you don't have a heat pump, so that's what it was. No heat pump. So the resistive heater. Yeah, for some reason they were sure about that. They were pretty sure by the time I got there. Because they have all the data from the car, like everything, the car is digitized and they can see all the data from my car. So as I dropped it off, they said, yeah, it's probably the whole heater needs to be replaced. And they were prepared to do that. And at the same time, too, there's been a recall for the trunk lid harness or something. I think it's to do with the cables, the wire harness to the camera in the back. So they did that at the same time. And it took about like 4 hours for them to do it. Wasn't too bad. Is that right? You had an appointment at 08:00 a.m. And they went right at it and started working on it. Yes. Call me around 1130. And they had the part, which is good again, I assume because they had all the data, they could order the parts ahead of time that they would need. That's nice. Yeah. And they gave me a loaner car, which I drove around Saskatchewan for a while. And yes, I got back before there was another blizzard. What was that? A couple of days later, our second blizzard of the year. Which is not technically a blizzard environment. Canada doesn't call it a blizzard. Do not call it a blizzard. But boy, was it a blizzard. It was crazy. Another nasty, nasty one. And I think we were the epicenter this time. Last time it was Moose Jaw. Yes, really nasty. Tons of snow. Yes. Crazy out there. How was your trip back? Was it okay? And the heater was all hot. How was it there, though? It was below zero, so I put on my parka. So you didn't have heat? There was a little bit of heat, not enough. And the heated seat was still working, but with the parka on, it was fine. Here's what I'm thinking, and that is the newer cars have a heat pump. Yeah, that's right. Newer cars have a heat pump instead of a resistive heater. So they don't have both then? I don't think so, no. You'd think that they might need one as a backup. But maybe the car generates enough heat that it holds. It's taking heat from the motor, it's taking heat from the from the batteries or something. There's a loop of different things that heat up here. But we do know there has been problems with some of the heat pumps as well in extreme cold. Is it in the heat pump itself or something related to the heat pump? Anyway, that's interesting because you didn't get a price on what that would be. Didn't show the invoice of what that repair would cost. No, they didn't. Just said zero. I'd be interested. I guess you could look it up online. What somebody else did we'll talk more about this sort of thing in future months. So anything else? You went up? You managed, your feet didn't get cold? Yes. No. It was a little bit chilly, but it wasn't too bad. Was it the most unpleasant trip you've had because you work cold? Yeah, I guess so. Yeah. I've got a really warm parka, so it felt almost normal. With that on, the heat can radiate up from the heated seat and fill the market. There you go. And then the other thing that's going on with me is they started shooting a TV show across the street from me here in the neighborhood. Really? You know, that's happened before, hasn't it? What is it about across the street? Because there used to be somebody of relevant who lived there who was connected to the film industry. Yes. They're gone. Not anymore. And it's their house that's being rented for this shoot. That's a weird coincidence, though. Yeah. And our good friend Jay is working on the shoot, so I've run into him out there on the street. Wow. I bet he doesn't know we're talking about him. No, probably not. I assume he doesn't listen to the podcast. No, he wouldn't. He's an old man. I don't think he knows what a podcast oh, he's an angry old man, Brian. Angry, angry old man who is actually six months younger than me. So he's working in winter and there's a TV show shooting across the street from you. I think Jay would prefer to be shooting in a sound stage where there's a lot more room for everybody and it's a lot more comfortable because, of course, it's a blizzard, remember? Why couldn't it be a James Cameron green screen affair? That's what you want to work on. But yeah, no, there's a lot of traffic on the street, lots of cars parked on our streets. But it's fine. Back in the day when I was a kid, I did a couple shows outside. It's horrible. Even in the fall when it's warmer than this, to spend 14 hours outside is just not good. I mean, they're shooting really inside the house, but there's so many crew people that they got to have to spill out into the cars and into the yard and everything. Is there somebody blocking traffic? No, no one closing off the traffic so far. Okay, that'd be annoying. You're coming home, you got to pee. Some little film student has a stop sign and says, no, you can't. So it's really weird. Happened to be on Sunday. I was biting my own business watching TV. We were snowed in. It was a blizzard, as you say, right. I couldn't do anything. So my son's home from college, and he took a shower. And I got to thinking, what is that cable cam on football games called? What is the brand name for that? Because I started thinking about that, and so I googled it, and it's called a Sky Cam. And then that took me to the Wikipedia page of the sky camp. And then I found out that the Sky Cam company was bought by this company, then bought by that company, and then it was bought by the person my son hates most of the world, which is Stan Crockey, the owner of the Arsenal Football Club in the Denver Broncos, and a bunch of other things. He's a bad man, according to people who support the team. And then I was gravitated towards a section that said incidents, because of course, that's sexy. I'm going to go there. There were three incidents, Brian. One in, like, 1981, when they first invented, and by the way, it was invented by the same person who invented the steadicam. Yeah. So that person, I'm assuming, is rich now. Yeah. So this is a camera that's on a giant cable that runs across the stage, two cables. So it's a couple of cables so it can fly over the players during a football game with a camera, I believe it's like a big X of cable, so it can go in three dimensions, back and forth. And just above the helms of it, you see them, you may not notice them. I don't think anybody who's paying attention notices them. Anyway, there was one incident at a small college football game back in the 80s when it was first came out. There was an incident in like, 25 years ago, and the third incident was an hour before I read it. An hour before I read it. It was a game that we didn't have. Here was the New York Jets game, and apparently the game was delayed by an hour because the Sky Cam fell from the I just thought that was weird. You're reading three incidents in history and going, this was an hour ago. The third one was an hour ago. And somebody had updated the Wikipedia. And of course they did, Brian, because Wikipedia, it's all about updating quickly. When we die, our family won't know before Wikipedia knows. Like, it will be updated instantly. Well, you know, there's no entry about me on Wikipedia, so if anyone out there well, there will be by then to write one. Me, too. I keep begging people to write one for years. I keep writing it myself, and they rejected, even though I have many awards if you're not allowed to accolades. And yeah, last night my partner had a grocery store order far away, and we went to the east end of town to pick up groceries because she ordered it in advance before the blizzard without checking the weather. It was a herring affair. And we decided to use her coupons for Carl's Jr. Which she never go to, but we thought that would be exotic someplace. We have a bit, let's go there and try this coupon out. And we got there and ordered it all went smoothly. And we got to the drive through window and there was this car load of teenagers in front of us who had been stuck there for an hour. And no one at the drivethrough told us anything. But the car in front of us was stuck right at the window for an hour. So we had the card that my partner uses and many, many years ago we went to the grocery store chain Superstore and they had clearance, these pieces of rectangular plastic that are grippy that you put under your wheel. They're like a little tread of plastic that's really pointy. Yeah. So it's something you keep in the trunk and if you get stuck in the snow, you put them under your wheels. Never used them. Cost about $0.50, like they were discounted from like twelve bucks to fifty cents. Never used them. But she had them in the car, put one under the front wheel, cut them out of there in a second. Wow. And they threw $20 at me, which I refused, of course, but they were so thankful to get out, they ever would. And of course it's embarrassing because you're blocking a fat guy from getting his burger behind you and that's no good. So, yeah, we got them out instantly, which was funny as hell. Good deed of the week. Sure. Now let's get on to some discussions with past stories because I wanted to talk about the Energy Vis Climate podcast. Okay? This is my name's. Sake ed. Woodynham calls himself I call myself Whittingham. He calls himself Woodynham. He's from Alberta. It's 90% chance for cousins. Okay, I haven't worked it out yet, but two people, there's like six Whittingham in Canada and apparently two of them fell into clean energy somehow. But whose podcast is more popular, that's what I want to know. Well, he's a big deal. He's been in the news for working for governments as a consultant. So he would have a lot of like this is not the same kind of podcast that people necessarily listen to because it's in the weeds, it's in policy. There's a lot of policy for people who work in the industry. That's a huge news. Well, I do listen to it. And they had Kathryn Hamilton on, who used to host the Clean Energy or the Energy Gang podcast. Now she's gone off to other things and I think she worked for the US government for a while. She's from the States, of course, and she's a clean energy expert and got decades of clean tech and policy in DC. And she was talking about the US midterms. And I was worried, I've said before on the show that I'm worried about what's going to happen because it's probably going to change. Power is going to change in one way or another in Washington, whether it's now or later, it always changes. How safe is the clean? The big biden thing is not going to be reversed because they're evil, they reverse things. They don't believe climate change at all. They're a hoax. So I just thought she had a really interesting answer that I'll play for you now. So I don't think that shift will have a direct impact yet on the climate goals. It will certainly prevent anything additional from happening. And the US. Congress holds the purse strings for the federal government. So just on appropriating funds to keep the government going, that will have an impact. But the pieces that are in IRA are pretty strong. I mean, they are tax credit, unless they were to completely rewrite the tax code. And I'll give you a little secret. When you give somebody something, don't ever try to take it away. So you're going to have all of these people taking advantage of credits. And in fact, manufacturers are already moving into states that are heavily Republican states and the last thing they want is those tax credits to go away. In fact, during the Trump administration, they never put on the table rolling back solar and wind tax credits. They just didn't because they knew that was a losing proposition for them. Yeah, I didn't realize that even during Trump they didn't roll back very much, did they, as far as climate goes, because business people were investing and that's the thing. Now in Canada, it's a different story. What they call it, and they refer to it as a runway. In the states, solar and wind have a ten year runway that it's guaranteed that if you invest, you can keep investing and it will still work out. You're not wasting your investment. You need to give assurances and security to people to make these investments because that's what the clean energy transition is. It's largely investing, but in Canada we don't have that. So our government is a minority parliamentarian. Government that may switch to 2025 will probably I mean, the government don't last forever around here either. And that government hardly wants to get rid of carbon taxes and doesn't seem to legitimately believe in climate change either. They're not that far off in the Republicans. But yeah, apparently the Canadian government is working on making that so that it's a guaranteed thing because investors are already threatening. They might be grandstanding, but they're threatening the one is going to the states because that's where the guarantee is, I don't know. And there's even definitely companies worried about doing business in places like Alberta because of the sort of backwards looking energy policy that they have there. If you're a giant business, giant international business, you're going to think twice setting up a business in a place that is denying climate change. And we were talking about Carlos Gon last week, the former chairman of Nissan who oversaw the implementation of the Nissan Leaf, the first mass produced electric car, which I happen to own a ten year old version of that. And there's actually a Netflix documentary that just came out a week ago as we were talking about that. Oh, fantastic. Well, I don't know that it is fantastic. I'm not reviewing it. I'm not endorsing it. It's called fugitive. The Curious Case of Carloscone. And I watched a bit of a lot of talking heads. It's interesting because it's kind of like a heist movie, right? Because he's accused of stealing millions from the car company he led, he was arrested in Japan and smuggled out of the country by two Americans in a storage chest, who, coincidentally, were also just convicted this week. As soon as I brought it up, things started happening. Brian wow. Okay. Well, I think I'll check that out. It was an interesting story just because of that one detail that he had to escape the country in a storage chest. Yeah. Oh. We have some breaking news. The 8th billionth human being is about to be born in the world. We go now to Antonio Gutiris, the head of the United Nations. The 8th billionth member of our human family is born. How will we answer when baby 8 billion is old enough to ask, what did you do for our world and for our planet when you had the chance? After President Trump announced that America would withdraw from the Paris Climate Change Accord, elon Musk immediately announced he would quit presidential business councils. We are in the fight of our lives and we are losing. Greenhouse gas emissions keep growing, global temperatures keep rising, and our planet is fast approaching tipping points that will make climate chaos irreversible. Twitter owner Elon Musk has told his followers on the platform to vote for a Republican congress. Tuesday, Musk tweeted, quote to independentminded voters, shared power curbs the worst excesses of both parties. Global warming, which a lot of people think is a hoax. The Earth will end only when God declares it's time to be over. We are on a highway to Climate Hill with our foot still on the accelerator. This is a clean energy show with Brian Thompson and James Whittingham. Okay, so a quick start here from South Dakota. Now, we often talk about North Dakota here on the show because we're just above North Dakota here. In many ways. In many ways, I love North Dakota. Home of the Fargo Film Festival. Home of the Fargo Theater. Anyway, South Dakota, which is just below North Dakota, it is now getting most of its electricity from wind they previously had. Hydroelectric was the biggest source, but now 52% is coming from wind turbines in the province there. So congratulations to South Dakota. And what I say to that initially is, why not us? Brian why not us? I wonder what led that to happen. Like, what was it? Private investment? Because we have a utility owned, government owned utility here. Was it the private sector that saw cheap electricity that drove the investment in? That what sparked that? Because South Dakota is not in the day and age of accusing everything green as being on one side of the political spectrum and therefore the enemy the other, then I'm surprised that a state like South Dakota was able to do something like that. Yeah, in South Dakota and North Dakota, both tend to be conservative leaning states. It is slightly surprising, but as we know, it's a great idea. So we have very similar wind profile here in our province and a little bit of wind power, but it really needs to be cranked up. You know, it's interesting politically when I was in Fargo with you, that I was asking, because that was just when Trump was becoming a thing and I was trying to get a Trump sign to bring over, was asking around for one. They were all lefty apologizing for their country. But it just goes to show that even in very right wing states, you have pockets of people who are, you know, not everybody is going to be one way or the other. There's always pockets, even in the most extreme leaning states. Yeah, fargo is a college town. They've got, like, I think, three universities in Fargo or Fargo morehead. And of course, people involved in the film festival, I guess, tend to be people in the arts, more left leaning, but as a whole, pretty conservative places. And my son always points out that Wyoming has Casper, which is also a small college town, because we've been through Wyoming a few times and I've been shaken by some of the images I've seen there. And there's lots of bad things to look at and signs and messages. But, yeah, Casper, which is a town we did go to, it was like a Fargo of Wyoming. It was kind of like a cool little college town with a nice Taco Bell, I may add. Nice. And, you know, I wanted to go there for the eclipse. The total eclipse of the sun that was the closest to us was Casper, Wyoming. Oh, interesting. I think we had just done a six week vacation in the mountains with our camper, and I couldn't convince my partner to do it. I regret that ever since, because it would have been a one day trip to see something remarkable. No. And I thought about driving to Calgary or Winnipeg to see Kate Beaton, author of the Duck's graphic novel, which I was plugging on the show. But these blizzards prevented these blizzards are bad. You never know this time of year whether we live in western Canada, where you're going to get bad weather, and certainly any mountain pass, even the Sierra Nevada mountains, are getting killed with a whole whack of snow. I've got a story I wanted to talk about. I guess a few companies, at least a couple in the last week or so, that have dropped plans, like, Ford has announced that it has dropped plans for a level three driver assistance, which would lead them to robotaxis. And they're going to focus on level two just for the consumer rather than as a business. So that's been a big shift. Mercedes is kind of doing the same. They say robotaxis are no longer a goal. We thought that in 2016 or 17, and that's kind of when the neural net sort of became a thing and they thought, well, everything is going to be solved quickly, but now they're backing off of that and they thought they could solve the robotaxi problem quite quickly. And so did certain CEOs who now social media magnets, but committing to both a ride hailing solution and a passenger driven assistant solution was expensive. So they thought they just concentrated on the one that make people because people are demanding it now. They're demanding basically the different versions of autopilot for different cars just to drive itself on the highway. How was your autopilot, by the way, in wintertime? How is it doing on actual highways? Yeah, generally really good. It can kind of sense generally through the snow. Okay, well, self driving taxis that operate all day, every day and all kinds of weather have been a dream for many for decades, including one of the Google people who started their autonomous program, Waymo. Yes. So now he's programming trucks to operate within the confines of industrial sites. Only one of these guys. And he says the foreseeable future, that's as much as the complexity as any driverless vehicle will be able to handle, in his opinion. He says, forget about the profits, the combined revenue of all the robotax the robotruck companies, it's not a lot right now. It's probably more like zero. So our friend of the show, Mark Hislamp, who is one province over from us or two provinces over, but from where we live, he's got a YouTube show called Energy Media, and he also has a podcast from time to time, and he has a guest on from Guidehouse Insights. He's an automotive engineer and EV analyst. His name is Dulce Meade and he's somebody that I go to for EV information and sort of market knowledge like that. And boy, he's got some cold water to throw on the robotaxi thing. I got some clips from him. This is him talking about that it's going to be a while before someone solves this to be at the point where you can really start to scale it up dramatically and get to a level of number of vehicles on the road where you can start to build a really viable business out of it. It's probably closer to eight to ten years, closer towards the end of this decade than where we are today. And again, this is Marks YouTube show energy Media. I'll have a link to it in the show notes, so we can borrow from him without guilt. And also he's talking about how AI sort of plateaued. What I was just talking about, the Neuron net development in early 2010s was something that people thought would move fast but apparently he sees a big plateau happening and slowing down. We had that big advancement in the middle part of the last decade, and that suddenly moved things forward very quickly. But then it plateaued and it's been climbing very slowly ever since it hit that plateau. And so that's why it's hard to predict when we'll get to that stage where these systems are at least consistently as good as or better than humans. Now, there's been a Department of justice investigation into Musk over full selfdriving claims. According to Reuters, prosecutors in Washington, San Francisco are examining whether Tesla misled customers. I hear when you look at sort of on stage discussions from people in this space, they're really bad mouthed Tesla. Now, you could take that with a grain of salt and say it's envy, or I don't believe in their approach, but Tesla is always proving people wrong. Anyway, this is his opinion, his contrary opinion on the Tesla approach, and he doesn't think much of it. There are some fundamental flaws in the Tesla approach relying on cameras only, and particularly because of the way they've configured the cameras, where you don't have any stereoscopic imaging, so you can do parallax imaging to get some accurate distance measurement. Tesla is relying entirely on AI inference to try to measure distance to objects, which is an inherently flawed approach. The system that they have devised is not really capable of robust automated driving, and probably never will be. Between the name and what Elon Musk has consistently said for the last six years, since October of 2016, when they launched autopilot version two. And he started his presentation with starting today, all vehicles rolling out of the Tesla factory have all the hardware they need to get to level five. Autonomy. Which was a lie then and it's a lie today. He's a pinch angry, I think, which is up to the sort of a toad that I hear of these things. But yeah, well, we'll see. But Tesla's future is highly reliant on that's one big aspect of it. It's not just selling cars. Yeah, well, I suspect that they probably wouldn't do the same thing now. So that's back in 2016, and Tesla was not in a profitable position back then, so they started selling full selfdriving, I think partly just as a way to get revenue into the company, a future promise of a future feature. Since then, they've become very profitable and very stable. So if they were starting this program now, I don't think they would be selling this feature for the future at ten, $20,000. But, yeah, I suspect back then they just wanted the cash flow. And another problem that I've seen come up is people like you who have the full self driving beta but aren't using it. So apparently that's a bit of an issue because it's kind of annoying. Right? It turns off and you think, Well, I'll just drive normally for now. Yeah, I've. Got better things to do. Sure. Even as you're retirement. But this has become an issue because they're getting less data and they need more data, which is maybe one of the reasons why they're trying to roll it out to even people with bad driving scores. Yeah, but could they possibly even crunch all the data that they're getting? Almost on the inside observer, I have a friend who owns a Tesla, but you I'm amazed at how the promises keep coming that it's later this year, end of the year, next year, and year after year it's always there. But watching the progress of Auto full self driving beta, it does seem to be a slow crawl. Something could happen where everything comes together. I don't know, everything about it to ComEd and maybe they'll solve something that puts everything together and suddenly it makes a giant leap forward. But right now and we'll see. We'll see. Because we're six months away from testing your car again on the same route, and we'll see how it does. And we had a rainy day last year, so it wasn't perfect, but yeah. Anyway, France is doing something quite unusual, even for France. Yeah. So there is new legislation that was approved this week that requires all parking lots in France with spaces for at least 80 vehicles. This is both existing and new parking lots be covered by solar panels. So this is great. You think that has an 80 vehicle parking lot? What would that be? A strip mall? A strip mall would have that. Yeah, I guess so. We have quite a few kind of small parking lots in our city. I think that wouldn't qualify. Or even a big hotel. Brian would have 80 spots, wouldn't it? I mean, if you have 80 rooms, you'd have 80 spots. Yeah, it just makes sense. Like, this is schools, maybe. Yeah, schools. This is space that it's just there. And if we put solar panels on it, it will keep the rain off the cars and produce electricity. It's a nice incentive. So you have to do this. Yeah, this is the law. So according to the government, the potential of the measure could reach up to eleven gigawatts, or the equivalent of the power of ten nuclear reactors at midday on a Sunday in the summer. So that's interesting. That's a lot of power just from parking lots. No, and we've had stories in the past about covering canals. Like in California, I might as well cover the canals. It's just all this space that we have that could have a double use. And parking lots is one of them. You know, though, I wonder what the business model is for this, what the payback is, because I don't know what France's tariff system is, or if they have any money for just putting out the panels or the feed in of the electricity to the grid, how they pay and what the payback period is. But let's say that it's reasonable. You would have customers that would be pretty happy to be parking under a structure, an outdoor structure that shaded you, perhaps shield you from precipitation. And you could sit and wait for your spousal unit to shop. And you wouldn't cook in the sun. He would be shaded and comfortable. No, we have a real problem here. We have very hot sun in the summertime, so always better to get a parking spot with shade. I thought this was interesting. So it's the bigger parking lots that are going to have to do this first. Car parks with 400 spaces or more have about three years to comply, and then the smaller parking lots get about five years to complete. So this isn't just new construction. This is existing construction. Existing parking lots. That is a big deal. My goodness. Yeah. No, and if you think of some of the like, think of I don't know if they have Walmart in France, but you think of Walmart, the Walmart, the giant parking lots that we have for places like Walmart or shopping malls. Man, that would be a lot of solar panels. Yeah. I've been thinking about what we'll use, because the grocery store that we went to last night of the blizzard actually has a bunch of stuff built on the outside of what used to be a parking lot. There's actually an office building there with yeah, they've been restaurants used to be a gigantic parking lot, but they keep adding businesses to it. And that confused me because it's hard to find now it's easy to find a store at the end of a giant parking lot that's 10 miles away. There are walmarts in China. Do they? Yeah, they do. Wow. There's no French walmart in France, so I just Google that. Of course, there's a French Disneyland, but there's no French Walmart. It's basically the same, right? Yeah. Disney. When we do go to a robot taxi future, we're going to need less parking spaces. Right. So the way I envision it is, say I've got a shopping mall close to me that's got lots of parking spaces. And I think that what they could say is, well, you know, part of this shopping mall can be designated for Robotaxis because, you know, robotaxis will go mostly at the peak of when people get on and off work and on and off school. It's just like rush hour. But for the rest of the day, they'll have to sit somewhere. They'll need somewhere to have they'll need to go somewhere where they can charge and where they can somewhere nearby, different areas of town. I don't know where that's going to be. Yeah. Plus, I imagine it will be like the movie Cars, and they'll want to hang around together at a party, have social issues and things like that. Of course it will be like that. But at the same time, I'm wondering if we'll need less. Well, I mean, that's what Tony Seba says. We'll need less parking lots. And there's a significant amount of Los Angeles that has nothing but parking lots. And that's also a heat gainer for it increases the urban island, t island of cities as parking lots. Yeah. Well, hopefully we can densify all of our cities and just start building more building and housing on all these parking lots we're not going to. Right? And that'll be an exciting future. Plus like a driven right to the door. And hopefully some sort of device will lift me up and put me on an automated cart that will drive me around. Because walking is just too much for sure in the future, I think. So Porsche has made 100,000 cars. What does it mean? 100,000 of Brian? This is the Porsche Taycan electric car. They've now produced 1000 of this car. So it's been a pretty big success for Porsche. These are in demand. They are selling more of these than the 911, which is kind of the marquee car for Porsche. What I didn't know is it's not a huge company. This is really a niche player. So they delivered just over 300,000 vehicles last year. So they're a small car company niche and of course, very expensive. Tesla deliver like, one and a half million. Yeah, and they're just getting going. This is with two new factories that just went up. This is just with one. Yeah. So they delivered just over 300,000 vehicles total, and 41,000 of them were the all electric Ticans. So they have plans to electrify more of their lineup. But like a lot of things, it's been a little bit delayed. The Macan was the next one that they were going to electrify, and so far they haven't managed to do that. They've been surprised by that, haven't they? I mean, I think they've been overwhelmed by demand, but they've also stepped up to meet that demand, which is great, too. Yeah, but it really does make sense if you're someone who's interested in a Porsche, you're interested in performance driving. And as we know, Electric makes for fantastic performance driving. And if you're wealthy, then you want to impress your wealthy green friends. Well, there's nothing more luxurious, though, than driving quiet, so I love that. I don't know. Would that impress your green friends to a Porsche can? Some of them seems a little excessive. I've impressed myself. Maybe that's really what counts in the car world. Yeah. I don't know. It's a lot of money and you could probably solve the world hunger in a small nation somewhere for the purchase of that car. But Electric says that Tesla is now earning eight times more per car than Toyota. And Toyota is basically one of the world's largest automakers, and they're starting to apparently notice. Back in Japan, according to Electric, for example, tesla reported $3.3 billion in net profit last quarter, compared to Toyota earning just roughly 3 billion. So. Yeah, Tesla. This is despite Toyota delivering eight times more cars than Tesla in the same time period, and Tesla beat them on profits. That's kind of wild. It is. So they made the same money, same profits. But wow, I mean, the demand for Tesla is high. There's this whole inflation thing going on. There's the supply problem, the chip shortages. So they have eat up their prices a little bit. Thousand here, thousand there, as a lot of people are. What do you think it is? It's like a third of profit per car or something like that. It's really high. It's higher than most people. Yeah, I don't know. But the traditional automakers make more money on things like service and part of stuff. So this milestone of Tesla beating Toyota and earnings during a quarter is especially impressive when you consider that just a decade ago, toyota owned 3% of Tesla with just a $50 million investment. Think of how they get rid of that. So now Tesla generates $50 million in free cash flow almost every day, which is why the CEO can do cookie things and do whatever they want. So it's now time for the Tweet of the Week. This is where I highlight a tweet that I like. There's a couple of good ones. Maybe I'll do two. This week from Jenny Chase, solar analyst with Bloomberg NEF New Energy Finance. It's a casual line from those hippies at Pakistan's National Electric Power Regulatory Authority. And this is basically what they said in their report. They said the existing average cost of supply electricity to consumers is high, way too high. And one way to reduce this high cost is to procure cheap electricity from indigenous resources like wind and solar. Now, if we heard that from our utility in Canada, that would be remarkable. But this is coming from Pakistan, a very conservative place, who is not known, especially in governmental terms, to talk like this. But they see the value of this. No utility talks this way, actually. But Pakistan is and because she lives in the solar space, she knows nobody else is saying that but Pakistan Solar, or pardon me, the electricity utility is saying that one way that we're going to lower prices is by buying wind and solar. So good for them. Yeah. As we've said before, the fuel costs for wind and solar are zero. And now a secondary Tweet of the week. Just because I wanted to do too, and I hate deciding, brian, it's a lot of work to decide. Why should I have to decide? Fred lambert lambert. Lambert. Lambert. Fred Lambert, editor in chief at Electric. He says his personal account he says when I talk about Elon's feedback loop being hijacked by superfans, this is what I mean. And he has a story from the Mercury News in San Jose, California. And before I go on, I just want to say that Fred owns like, five teslas has been the biggest fan of Tesla and he's a journalist, but he's been reporting on Tesla forever. He is an enthusiast. He's cheering them on in every way. But Elon Musk blocked him once a long time ago because he had something mildly critical to say and Elon couldn't just take that. So what Fred thinks is that Elon like Michael Jackson and other people, they have this feedback loop of everybody who's constantly praising them. And this is a story from the San Jose newspaper that says that this one guy who's like a dad was tweeting him like 19 times a day or something. And Elon was often responding to him because it's such praise. And the softspoken superfan dad praised him for being fit, ripped and healthy and asked, hey Elon Musk, what's your secret? It sounds like almost a joke, like a comedian might do that because it's the opposite of true. He's not fit, he's not ripped, he's not healthy. You look at him and you see a guy who doesn't he's like an It guy who never gets an hour of sleep. It looks like he hasn't had sleep in years. And certainly not the healthy lifestyle and certainly no son. And the world's richest man's response was how do I keep fit and healthy? Fasting and diabetic drug that promotes weight loss. So good for you. When you're rich, you get to have the diagnosis. Drugs that promote weight loss and fasting is not good. Sumo wrestlers fast. They don't eat until 01:00 p.m. In the afternoon. Yeah. Wow. Not to 01:00 p.m. In the afternoon. That is a CES fast fact for you. That's because they store more weight if they don't eat all day. They train their body to fast. See, in human history, back when we were in caves and such, ten years ago, if you didn't eat, your body would think it was a famine and it would store extra weight. It would just change. So like fat people like me would survive in a zombie apocalypse. So my nutritionist tells me because we would need 20% less calories because we're that more efficient. Anyway, so we get a little bit of feedback here from the Twitter says clean energy fraud. You guys are talking about the future of hydrogen. So check out this podcast and what was it? It says this guy's super anti hydrogen and has some great points. And this is from Nelson. The podcast was our friend Mark Mslop at Energy Talk Show. He has a podcast as well. Occasionally puts out a guest, Paul Martin, a chemical engineer with a 30 year history of working with hydrogen and a member of the Hydrogen Science Coalition. And I'll put a link to that in the show notes if you want to hear some smack talk on hydrogen. And coming up in the show is the lightning round zoom through the rest of the week's headlines in a fast fashion. We like to hear from you. It's really what we live on. Brian doesn't get up in the morning without the hope of somebody contacting us. Clean energy show@gmail.com. We're on TikTok and Instagram and everywhere else. Clean energy, pond. We're on mastodon. At Mastodon Energy. We're on YouTube. Clean energy show. Speak Pipe. You can leave us an online voicemail message. Speak pipe.com. Cleanenergyshow. That sound means it is time for the lightning round, where we'll end the show this way. A fast paced look of the week in clean energy and climate news. Canada is putting the break on China's $4 billion lithium acquisition free. China is here buying up all the lithium they can, and Canada has finally said no. So Chinese companies have been the biggest financers of overseas lithium projects globally in recent years, including purchases of Canadian listed assets. And that's a new development, Brian. Yeah. So this is new legislation that limits the foreign ownership of some of these critical minerals that we're going to need for the electric revolution. Call it the biden approach, saying no more China. The Charging Interface Initiative, a global industry association focused on the electrification of transportation, has launched its new megawatt charging system. MCs is going to be called. We have CCS, the non Tesla standard for charging connectors. This is going to be MCs. So memorize that term. Brian. MCs is the new megawatt charging system standard for North America. So this will be some specific kind of plug and protocol for how to charge at even higher speeds. Megawatt speeds for trucks, basically for trucks, big trucks. Not necessarily all semitransport trucks, but medium trucks as well. This is interesting. The 2023 Kia EV six base trim has been dropped. And the starting price that means has dropped to an unfortunate $50,000 US. That means brian, I can't afford it. Yes, that's too bad. I mean, we sometimes do get different trim levels here in Canada, so we'll see. But 50,000 is a lot. Another CS fast fact, the golden toad is the first species to go extinct to climate change. Put that in your toaster and smoke it. It's too warm for them. And I guess the towed has had enough. Panasonic has broken ground on their EV battery factory in Kansas. This is what we refer to early red states getting a lot of this EV manufacturing, green tech manufacturing and jobs. And they'll be making 2070 cylindrical cells. A Viking bus orders 31 Mercedes Benz E Cetera buses as long distance runners in the country known as Denmark. Hello, Denmark. The reason I bring that up is because we've mentioned this before. When will long distance city to city buses electrify? Well, the answer is, I guess it's starting. That's great. The market share of zero mission light duty vehicle registrations in Canada hit 9.4% in the third quarter of this year. And that's a new record. It's up from any previous record which shows that the EV adoption is accelerating in Canada. Yeah, we're definitely past some sort of a tipping point, which is often said to be around 5% of the market. So, yeah. Canada at 9.4% EVs. That's fantastic. How many Ford Mustang electrics do you see around? I see them almost every day now. Maybe it's the same neighborhood, I don't know, but I see them everywhere. The North End, one of 600 EV sold in Europe will be made by Chinese makers of EVs by 2025. Fitch solution says, according to the China EV Post, So that's interesting. Something we've been following since the early days of this podcast is when will Chinese EV makers start to make gains in Western markets? Yeah, and I guess you're at first, because it's always Europe first, isn't it? Because they need their EVs over there. It's physically closer and they have tougher regulations to kind of phase out combustion. A slight majority of California voters favor the recently announced ban on new sales of gasoline powered vehicles by 2035. Only 52% and 43% disapprove, but hopefully they'll come around when prices do. I don't think anyone's going to complain about the range and prices there and charging infrastructure. Another fast fact air conditioners and heating elements consume 50% of electricity in America. Did you know that? That's a lot. No, that's a lot. Analysis as seen by the BBC shows that the production and transport of LNG causes up to ten times the carbon emissions compared to pipeline gas. So build more pipeline. I'm kidding. This around here, liquid natural gas as opposed to actual gas that goes through pipes. The greater than 8% electricity from a solar club in Europe for 2021. Here's the countries that have 8% or more just from solar germany, Spain, Greece, Italy, Netherlands not bad. And there's a whole bunch of 5%. A whole whack at 5%. Good for you. Greece, by the way. I always think of Greece as a leader in clean energy, but these things, they sneak up on you. Amazon is meeting holiday demand this year with a fleet of over 1000 Livian electric vehicle delivery vans. So we are talking about those for a long time now. And I guess there's a thousand on the roads for Christmas this year. Yeah, that's not bad. But 10,000 next year and 50,000 a year after that or something. Yeah, they've definitely ordered more than that. Amazon is a big investor in Rivian and they're desperately trying to scale up their production of these vans and their pickup trucks. So hopefully things speed up nicely. And finally this week, Tony Sieve says in a post that speaking of Amazon, amazon created a vast information technology infrastructure, but the use of just five weeks of the year, the holiday shopping season, which is Christmas in November and December where we live, they overbuilt capacity for the rest of the year. And he says, well, let's call that super data center. And thus the Amazon AWS cloud was born, which you see advertised on TV. It's now a trillion dollar business because they overbuilt something. So the reason he mentions that, Brian, is why? Because this is what's going to happen to solar, wind and batteries. Because solar is intermittent. Wind is intermittent. We need to overbuild it. But because these technologies are so cheap and getting cheaper, we can easily overbuild it. So Amazon, of course, a large amount of shopping happens in November and December, the Christmas shopping season here in Canada and the US. So they had to really beef up their online system to handle all these transactions in December. And what did they end up with? Amazon Web Services, which is now a trillion dollar business, apparently. Yes, it's a lot of money just for overbuilding something, because that's what's going to happen with the energy markets, because we're going to have extra solar, extra wind around. That is our show for this week. You know what? Next year we're going to have a Patreon. If you have any ideas for the patreon, let us know what kind of perks you might be interested in. And by God, write us right now. Cleanenergytow@gmail.com or clean energy pond everywhere on social media. If you're new to the show, remember to subscribe to our show on your podcast app to get new shows, new episodes delivered every week. We'll see you next time. See you next week!
On today's show, the Inflation Reduction Act has passed in the U.S. and a large part of the legislation has to do with energy. We chat with Markham Hislop an energy journalist and publisher of Energi News on how this could affect Alberta. Plus, street lights can spy on you and new technology is already being used in some parts of the U.S. We find out more from John Lorinc, an author whose latest book is Dream States: Smart Cities, Technology, and the Pursuit of Urban Utopias. And Canada will play a big role in the next mission to the moon. We chat with Ken Podwalski, the executive director of space exploration and the Lunar Gateway program manager at the Canadian Space Agency (CSA).
Markham Hislop, energy journalist & publisher, Energi News
Host Llewellyn King discusses Canada's energy system and its vital role in U.S. energy security with Vancouver Island-based Markham Hislop of Energi Media.
On today's show, Markham Hislop joins us to break down Premier Jason Kenney's address to the U.S. Senate Committee on energy and natural resources, pitching Alberta's energy to that part of the world. Plus what's going on in the CFL? We get the latest on the negotiations for a new collective bargaining agreement from the voice of the Edmonton Elks, Morley Scott. And ads for sports betting have seemingly ramped up during the NHL playoffs. We chat with Dr. Michael Naraine, a professor in the department of sports and management at Brock University.
Markham Hislop, energy journalist & publisher, Energi News
Information Morning Saint John from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)
This week, the average price of a litre of gas topped two bucks ($2) for the first time. Markham Hislop is an energy and climate journalist and host of the podcast Energi Talks. He speaks with host Julia Wright about what's behind Canada's soaring gas prices and what consumers are facing this summer.
Three myths holding back the green revolution debunked. PHEVs and wooden sky scrapers. James and Brian attend Drive Electric Week events and talk to a local organizer. James test drives the Chevy Bolt EV he wants to buy. Filling your tires in winter and having them blow up in summer. Electric Corvette. EV pricing confustion due to rebates. PBS Frontline series on Big Oil disinformation. Changing the podcast to AAC from MP3. Email us if you have problems! Giant undersea cables carry sunshine to cloudy United Kingdom Follow up to last week's story about Quebec banning new hydrocarbon projects. Markham Hislop interviewed Hugo Seguin, Montreal Centre for International Studies on Energi Media. Tallest Timber Framed Building. All the plug-in hybrids available for sale in North America and how they compare on EV range, price and even towing! Elon and Twitter. Thanks for listening to our show! Consider rating The Clean Energy Show on iTunes, Spotify or wherever you listen to our show. Follow us on TikTok! Check out our YouTube Channel! Follow us on Twitter! Your hosts: James Whittingham https://twitter.com/jewhittingham Brian Stockton: https://twitter.com/brianstockton Email us at cleanenergyshow@gmail.com Leave us an online voicemail at http://speakpipe.com/cleanenergyshow Tell your friends about us on social media!
On today's show, the Canada Revenue Agency touts itself as world class. But we chat with Yves Giroux, the parliamentary budget officer who says that isn't the case. Plus Rachel Notley has no energy game, that's according to energy journalist, Markham Hislop. Also Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy's media savvy has been on display during the conflict with Russia. Why has his communication style been so effective? We ask George Melnyk, a professor emeritus of communication, media and film at the University of Calgary. And we hear from a listener whose mother-in-law was scammed out of $8,000.
Markham Hislop, energy journalist & publisher, Energi News
1:55 | Ryan unpacks Brian Jean's landslide win in the Fort McMurray-Lac La Biche byelection, with 63% of the vote. 15:39 | Associate Professor of Law at the University of Alberta, Dr. Ubaka Ogbogu on facing ongoing harassment and threats after Alberta's Premier singled him out calling him "deranged" and a "NDP law professor" on social media. He details if he's going to take legal action against Jason Kenney. 40:32 | #MyJasper Memories | Ryan offers a round-up of activities and places in Jasper National Park, including: the new wilderness-inspired accommodation, the Forest Park Hotel, a ski for free deal, and the only gay ski week in the Canadian Rockies, Jasper Pride. Presented by Tourism Jasper. 43:34 | Energy journalist Markham Hislop on the rapid adoption of renewable energy around the world and global automakers shifting to electric, without Alberta's government keeping pace with the trends. 1:01:53 | Newly elected Brian Jean shares about easily winning the Fort McMurray-Lac La Biche byelection on Tuesday night and his focus to have Kenney removed as leader of the United Conservative Party.
On today's show, the Alberta Party is speaking out against Premier Jason Kenney saying he will bring in legislation restricting what municipalities can do, especially around public health. Plus, is Alberta's oil ethical or not? We hear from analyst Markham Hislop. And, an unprecedented case between Ukraine and Russia is in front of the International Court of Justice. We get a breakdown from Valerie Oosterveld, associate director of Western University's Centre for Transitional Justice and Post-Conflict Reconstruction.
Markham Hislop, energy journalist & publisher, Energi News
Markham Hislop returns to the show this week to talk about everything going on in the world.Follow Mr. Hislop on Twitter here.Check out the Harbinger Media Network.Markham's other episodes: here and here. ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Markham Hislop, energy journalist & publisher, Energi News
On today's show, William Robson, the chief executive officer at the C.D. Howe Institute, says we need to do something about inflation before it gets worse. Plus, we chat with Dr. Stephanie Carvin about Canada's struggles surrounding national security. And, the International Energy Agency has released its report on Canada's energy policies. We break it down with Markham Hislop.
With Markham Hislop of Energi Media How can we remain hopeful amid accelerating climate change and biodiversity loss? In short, it's hard. But it's also possible — and necessary. Though we still need immediate action on these twin crises, we have all the tools we need. In fact, many of them have been around for years. In this wide-ranging discussion with Energi Media's Markham Hislop, hear about the seemingly utopic near future envisioned by Tony Seba of RethinkX — a future where remarkable disruptions in five foundational sectors could drastically improve our fortunes. Guest: Markham Hislop (in his own words): I'm a Canadian energy/climate journalist and host of the Energi Talks podcast. I also conduct video interviews with energy experts, write the Markham On Energy energy politics analysis columns, and write about the energy future. I'm frequently interviewed on Canadian radio and TV about energy transition issues.
In the 2021 federal election campaign, the Liberals, Conservatives, and NDP are all promising to fix Canada's electricity system as part of their climate policy. The aim is to speed the switch from oil and gas and coal to clean electricity. To do that, experts say Canada will need two or three times as much electricity in the next generation, so all the Parties say we need a national power grid. Markham Hislop is a climate and energy journalist and he spoke with Russell about what this plan means for Alberta.
14:23 | Scientific Director at Res'Eau Centre for Mobilizing Innovation Dr. Madjid Mohseni shares how scientists worked alongside Lhoosk'uz Dené Nation to realize an innovative water treatment plant. The partnership resolved a remote BC village's decades-long reliance on bottled water. 46:21 | City of St. Albert Mayor Cathy Heron, City of Fort Saskatchewan Councillor Ajibola Abitoye and City of Wetaskiwin Mayor Tyler Gandam discuss how they're working to create inclusive communities. The AUMA has a Welcoming and Inclusive Community (WIC) Initiative to help Albertan villages, towns and cities realize the economic, social and environmental benefits of inclusion. 1:28:51 | Energi journalist Markham Hislop unpacks his recent National Observer article Revisiting the New Alberta Advantage: Oilsands' net-zero initiative not nearly enough. He points out three significant risks facing the energy industry and how the oilsands can remain viable. 2:06:42 | #TraskTalk presented by Local Waste
On today's show, energy journalist & publisher with Energi News, Markham Hislop talks revisiting the new Alberta advantage. Justin Vesser, the manager of ambulatory pharmacy services at the University of Virginia discusses how new COVID-19 vaccine warnings show the system for reporting side effects is working. Plus, why conservatorships can lead to abuse with Naomi Cahn, a law professor at the University of Virginia. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Markham Hislop, energy journalist & publisher, Energi News See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On today's show, Canada moves to end the sale of new gas-powered cars by 2035, we get the details from Markham Hislop an energy journalist & publisher with Energi News. The province has put municipalities in a tough spot by clawing back the amount of money they get in fine collection, Barry Morishita, the mayor of Brooks and the president of the Association of Urban Municipalities of Alberta has the details. Plus, we get an update on the fire situation in B.C., with Global News anchor Paul Haysom. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Markham Hislop, energy journalist & publisher, Energi News See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Listen to our chat with Markham from last year right here.We welcome the one and only Markham Hislop back to the Forgotten Corner this week to once again chat Canadian energy.Check out Markham's work here.Listen to Markham's podcast here.Follow Markham on Twitter and like their Facebook page.Check out the Harbinger Media Network. ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
On today's show, we talk about residential schools and why the Catholic church is seemingly reluctant to issue an apology, Jeremy M. Bergen, an associate professor of religious studies and theological studies at Conrad Grebel University College at the University of Waterloo, gives his insight. Plus, why have residential schools been so absent in school curriculums? We chat with Charlene Bearhead, director of reconciliation at the Royal Canadian Geographical Society. And, the big Keystone decision has sent a ripple through the province and the pipeline sector, we hear from Darren Christie, chief economist with the Canada Energy Regulator and Markham Hislop, energy journalist & publisher at Energi News.
Markham Hislop, energy journalist & publisher, Energi News
During the week of May 24th, three major events happened for 3 of the major international oil companies. Firstly, a court in the Netherlands ordered Royal Dutch Shell that it has to reduce it's carbon footprint to 45% of their 2019 emissions. Meanwhile, the corporate board of Exxon saw two new directors appointed who were from an activist hedge fund intent on making Exxon fight climate change. And then Chevron shareholders voted in favor of a proposal to cut emissions generated by the use of the company's products. Closer to home in Alberta, Suncor announced that they would likely be walking away from their offshore oil projects on the East Coast. That's a lot of news for one week, and to help digest all of it, Russell spoke with climate journalist and energy industry podcaster, Markham Hislop.
We speak to Energi Media journalist Markham Hislop.
According to The International Energy Agency, Canadians drive some of the most polluting cars in the world with carbon pollution from transportation increasing by nearly 30% over the two decades, thanks to a growing appetite for SUVs and trucks. Like many players in the Renewal Energy sector, transportation is under going a change, according to Markham Hislop, a journalist and founder of Energi Media, and the host of the podcast Energi Talks.
A major international oil company says it has started to decrease oil production and won't be turning back. Does this signal a major change in the world's dependence on oil? And what does it mean for Canadian oil producers. The first of a two part Smoke Mirrors and The Truth look at the energy world -- this week oil, and next week electric vehicles.
We know that wind turbines work in the arctic so are they the problem? The truth is all sources, especially natural gas, had plants down. Turns out natural gas and other thermal sources don't work either. The reason is because they didn't prepare the grid for cold weather. But should they or is it a waste of money for rare events like this. Wind turbines work down to -30C in Canada because they have cold weather packages installed. Our natural gas system always works for similar reasons. The power outages in Texas are terrible but it will cost money to prevent it from happening again. More on electric vehicles in extremely cold weather. Brian explains his factory studded snow tires and problems with his Tesla in winter. We update Jon's Nissan Leaf not working in extreme cold because of its 12v battery. Warren Buffet invests in something stupid: Fossil fuels. General Motors reveals the new Chevy Bolt and Chevy Bolt EUV crossover. It's a big deal for the advent of EVs. There is a huge price reduction and they are even paying for your home charging install. On top of that you get a level 2 charge with your vehicle! Available summer 2021. In our latest edition of Is Elon Musk Crazy? we ask Brian if making his new sports car hover with rocket boosters is silly. Elon told Joe Rogan it's going to happen. The countries that will be most punished financially by the fall of oil in the coming decades. Shell Oil says oil production peaked in 2019. Hello Jason Kenney in Alberta? Tesla flirts with business in India and the government there is welcoming it. Toby Seba's RethinkX has a video out reminding us that power grids can be powered by wind plus solar plus batteries 100% by 2030. We explain how that's going to be disruptive but we'll get into it more in the coming months. Link to Markam Hislop YouTube channel. Markham Hislop on Twitter.
Markham Hislop is the publisher at the Energi dot Media website, author, “The New Alberta Advantage - Technology, policy, and the future of the oilsands.” See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Bloomberg energy and climate journalist Dr. Akshat Rathi joins Markham Hislop to discuss China's Sept. 23 announcement it will reach peak carbon emissions by 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality by 2060. Not quite the same as net-zero emissions, says Rathi, but progress nonetheless.
For all its promises of the good ol' days, the United Conservatives' handling of Alberta's oil industry has been one of its most prominent failures to date… and there have been plenty.Longtime journalist Markham Hislop has been exclusively covering the energy industry long enough that, although hesitant to admit it, he's become an expert in the field. Most notably, Markham has focused his efforts on the coming (and already here) transition away from fossil fuels, clean energy, technology and just a little bit of politics.As the publisher and No. 1 contributor to Energi Media, Markham has dedicated his career to properly educating the public — and politicians — on the energy industry and the challenges it faces. Markham joins The Forgotten Corner this week to discuss how he came to run an Alberta energy-centric media outlet from Vancouver Island, his recently drafted Energy Declaration and why he thinks you need to sign it, and, of course, some of the ways in which the Alberta government is blowing a crucial opportunity at a crucial time.Follow Markham on Twitter at @politicalhamRead Markham's work at Energi Media here:https://energi.media/Read the Energy Declaration here:https://energi.media/the-energi-declaration/ ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
J'lyn speaks with Markham Hislop, Energi News publisher.
#TheLOCKERROOM with Markham Hislop ( @politicalham ) on Vivian Krause’s Tar Sands Campaign and the chance of pipeline expansion.
Markham Hislop in conversation with J'Lyn.
Has Canada been a casualty of a nefarious campaign by foreign-funded radicals to landlock our country’s energy resources? Is Big Oil the victim of a vast international conspiracy? Naaaah. But there is, as always, another conspiracy afoot. Featured in this episode: Markham Hislop (Energi Media) Here's what Vivian Krause has said in response to Markham Hislop's piece. To learn more: “Debunked: Vivian Krause’s Tar Sands Campaign conspiracy narrative” by Markham Hislop in Energi Media. “Alberta Premier Singled Out Environmentalist. Death Threats Followed” by Samantha Beattie in HuffPost “Conservative politicians, oil executives map out strategy for ousting federal Liberals in growing collaboration” by Jeff Lewis & Shawn McCarthy in The Globe and Mail This show was brought to you by our patrons. Please consider becoming a monthly supporter.
Markham Hislop, publisher, Energi News
The global energy system is being transformed by new technologies that will revolutionize oil and gas markets — whether Alberta is ready for it or not. In his new book, energy journalist Markham Hislop examines how visionary oil sands executives like Suncor CEO Steve Williams are preparing their companies – which produce two-thirds of Alberta's oil – for the onrushing low-carbon future. An integral part of the oil sands' savvy business strategy is the energy and climate policies of Premier Rachel Notley's government. In fact, the oil sands CEOs met privately with environmental groups for months before the 2015 election, hammering out a “carbon for no production cap” deal that the NDP government enshrined in the Climate Leadership Plan, legislation and regulations they strongly support to this day. If the oil sands companies are successful, Hislop describes a new strategy for building pipelines from Alberta to the West Coast. Doubling bitumen exports and building out Alberta's petrochemical and partial upgrading sectors could usher in the next great Alberta energy boom. Speaker: Markham Hislop Markham Hislop is an energy journalist and publisher of Energi News (formerly North American Energy News). Hislop uses a technology adoption model of his own design to analyze and report upon all the facets of the energy industry, from oil and gas to EVs and renewables. Over the past 5 years, Hislop has probably reported about the Energy Transition more than any other North American journalist. His work has been published in Canadian Business, Alberta Oil Magazine, Hart Energy Publications, World Oil, Vancouver Magazine, and other publications. Hislop's most recent book, The New Alberta Advantage: Technology, Policy, and the Future of the Oil Sands will be available for sale. Moderator: Cameron Howey Date: Thursday, April 4, 2019 Time: Doors open 11:30 am, Presentation 12 noon, buffet lunch 12:30 pm, Q&A 1 – 1:30 pm Location: Royal Canadian Legion (north door) 324 Mayor Magrath Dr. S. Lethbridge Cost: $14 buffet lunch with dessert/coffee/tea/juice or $2 coffee/tea/juice. RSVP not required
The global energy system is being transformed by new technologies that will revolutionize oil and gas markets — whether Alberta is ready for it or not. In his new book, energy journalist Markham Hislop examines how visionary oil sands executives like Suncor CEO Steve Williams are preparing their companies – which produce two-thirds of Alberta's oil – for the onrushing low-carbon future. An integral part of the oil sands' savvy business strategy is the energy and climate policies of Premier Rachel Notley's government. In fact, the oil sands CEOs met privately with environmental groups for months before the 2015 election, hammering out a “carbon for no production cap” deal that the NDP government enshrined in the Climate Leadership Plan, legislation and regulations they strongly support to this day. If the oil sands companies are successful, Hislop describes a new strategy for building pipelines from Alberta to the West Coast. Doubling bitumen exports and building out Alberta's petrochemical and partial upgrading sectors could usher in the next great Alberta energy boom. Speaker: Markham Hislop Markham Hislop is an energy journalist and publisher of Energi News (formerly North American Energy News). Hislop uses a technology adoption model of his own design to analyze and report upon all the facets of the energy industry, from oil and gas to EVs and renewables. Over the past 5 years, Hislop has probably reported about the Energy Transition more than any other North American journalist. His work has been published in Canadian Business, Alberta Oil Magazine, Hart Energy Publications, World Oil, Vancouver Magazine, and other publications. Hislop's most recent book, The New Alberta Advantage: Technology, Policy, and the Future of the Oil Sands will be available for sale. Moderator: Cameron Howey Date: Thursday, April 4, 2019 Time: Doors open 11:30 am, Presentation 12 noon, buffet lunch 12:30 pm, Q&A 1 – 1:30 pm Location: Royal Canadian Legion (north door) 324 Mayor Magrath Dr. S. Lethbridge Cost: $14 buffet lunch with dessert/coffee/tea/juice or $2 coffee/tea/juice. RSVP not required
The global energy system is being transformed by new technologies that will revolutionize oil and gas markets — whether Alberta is ready for it or not. In his new book, energy journalist Markham Hislop examines how visionary oil sands executives like Suncor CEO Steve Williams are preparing their companies – which produce two-thirds of Alberta's oil – for the onrushing low-carbon future. An integral part of the oil sands' savvy business strategy is the energy and climate policies of Premier Rachel Notley's government. In fact, the oil sands CEOs met privately with environmental groups for months before the 2015 election, hammering out a “carbon for no production cap” deal that the NDP government enshrined in the Climate Leadership Plan, legislation and regulations they strongly support to this day. If the oil sands companies are successful, Hislop describes a new strategy for building pipelines from Alberta to the West Coast. Doubling bitumen exports and building out Alberta's petrochemical and partial upgrading sectors could usher in the next great Alberta energy boom. Speaker: Markham Hislop Markham Hislop is an energy journalist and publisher of Energi News (formerly North American Energy News). Hislop uses a technology adoption model of his own design to analyze and report upon all the facets of the energy industry, from oil and gas to EVs and renewables. Over the past 5 years, Hislop has probably reported about the Energy Transition more than any other North American journalist. His work has been published in Canadian Business, Alberta Oil Magazine, Hart Energy Publications, World Oil, Vancouver Magazine, and other publications. Hislop's most recent book, The New Alberta Advantage: Technology, Policy, and the Future of the Oil Sands will be available for sale. Moderator: Cameron Howey Date: Thursday, April 4, 2019 Time: Doors open 11:30 am, Presentation 12 noon, buffet lunch 12:30 pm, Q&A 1 – 1:30 pm Location: Royal Canadian Legion (north door) 324 Mayor Magrath Dr. S. Lethbridge Cost: $14 buffet lunch with dessert/coffee/tea/juice or $2 coffee/tea/juice. RSVP not required
Markham Hislop, Author, The New Alberta Advantage & Publisher, Energi News
Markham Hislop, Publisher, Energi News
Markham Hislop, Publisher of Energi News
Check out DrillingInfo, our sponsor at: globalenergymedia.com/courthouseChina and Iran Strengthen TiesArticle from PlattsWill China be able to keep importing oil from Iran? Iran is the 6th largest supplier of oil to China, which is not an insignificant amount of oil.Potential for Trump to use Iran in negotiations with China over trade and North Korea. ExxonMobil and Plains to partner on Permian pipelinehttps://www.chron.com/business/energy/article/Exxon-Mobil-Plains-partner-on-Permian-pipeline-12987234.phpExxon plans to triple its production of oil and gas by 2025. More pipeline capacity expected to come online in Permian such that there may even be excess capacity by 2020. How will this impact the WTI/Brent spread? Will it ever come back within the $3-$4 range?Canadian oil Production to Risehttps://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/canadian-oil-production-to-rise-despite-competitiveness-gap-industry-group-says-1.1091585#Industry group predicts an increase in Canadian oil production, particularly from Canadian oil sands regions. Expects to see increase of 1.4 million bpd by 2035.Interview with Markham Hislop, Energy Journalist and publisher of Energi.newsTrans-Mountain Pipeline project update5900 barrel capacity.Canadian system currently at capacity. Expansion was proposed in 2013, green lighted in 2016.Opposition originated in Vancouver area. Concern over spills in the city and in the inlet.Last summer, NPD government elected - ran against the Trans-Mountain pipeline specificallyBritish Columbia government delayed and delayed permitting until Kinder Morgan finally gave an ultimatum.Canadian government bought Kinder Morgan Canada's existing assets.Ellen's Articles:Sanctions or Self-Sabotage? The Story of Iran’s Oil Industry - http://bit.ly/2sV45uP8 Major Companies Still In Iran As U.S. Sanctions Inch Closer - http://bit.ly/2MqOhYO10 Companies Leaving Iran As Trump's Sanctions Close In - http://bit.ly/2Mp6HJi
Check out DrillingInfo, our sponsor at: globalenergymedia.com/courthouseChina and Iran Strengthen TiesArticle from PlattsWill China be able to keep importing oil from Iran? Iran is the 6th largest supplier of oil to China, which is not an insignificant amount of oil.Potential for Trump to use Iran in negotiations with China over trade and North Korea. ExxonMobil and Plains to partner on Permian pipelinehttps://www.chron.com/business/energy/article/Exxon-Mobil-Plains-partner-on-Permian-pipeline-12987234.phpExxon plans to triple its production of oil and gas by 2025. More pipeline capacity expected to come online in Permian such that there may even be excess capacity by 2020. How will this impact the WTI/Brent spread? Will it ever come back within the $3-$4 range?Canadian oil Production to Risehttps://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/canadian-oil-production-to-rise-despite-competitiveness-gap-industry-group-says-1.1091585#Industry group predicts an increase in Canadian oil production, particularly from Canadian oil sands regions. Expects to see increase of 1.4 million bpd by 2035.Interview with Markham Hislop, Energy Journalist and publisher of Energi.newsTrans-Mountain Pipeline project update5900 barrel capacity.Canadian system currently at capacity. Expansion was proposed in 2013, green lighted in 2016.Opposition originated in Vancouver area. Concern over spills in the city and in the inlet.Last summer, NPD government elected - ran against the Trans-Mountain pipeline specificallyBritish Columbia government delayed and delayed permitting until Kinder Morgan finally gave an ultimatum.Canadian government bought Kinder Morgan Canada's existing assets.Ellen's Articles:Sanctions or Self-Sabotage? The Story of Iran’s Oil Industry - http://bit.ly/2sV45uP8 Major Companies Still In Iran As U.S. Sanctions Inch Closer - http://bit.ly/2MqOhYO10 Companies Leaving Iran As Trump's Sanctions Close In - http://bit.ly/2Mp6HJi
Kinder Morgan.It’s the pipeline of division.On one hand you have the perspective of some, depending on who you talk too, B.C. is very angry there is an angry province that the Federal Government approved the expansion of the Kinder Morgan Pipeline. It’s about land, protection, and environment.On the other hand, you have another province, Alberta, who insists that this project get off the ground. From their perspective, they need this to go through. They need jobs, money, and their economy.It’s a situation that has caused comments from both Premier’s. A wine ban, and large number of protesters, and a heavy debate on social media.Where do we go next? Hopefully our guest today can help us out.Markham Hislop from EnergiNews joins us.Topics we cover include;B.C. perpsective;-John Horgan-The protestors-The pro and anti-pipeline rallies.The Alberta perspective.-Rachel Notley-Jason Kenney-Alberta planning a budget assuming Trans Mountain goes through.What should Justin Trudeau do?Follow MarkhamTwitter: @politicalhamFacebook:Markham Hislopwww.energi.newsFollow MeFacebook:Kevin OlenickLike:Agree or Disagree:The Podcast on Facebook.Twitter:@kevoleSoundcloud: @kevoleSpreaker:@kevoleInstagram:@kevolePodbean:https://aordthepodcast.podbean.com/You Tube:Kevin Olenick
Jacki is joined by Markham Hislop, of the American Energy News, to discuss Eco-terrorism.
Jacki is joined by Markham Hislop, of American Energy News, on how the Democrats endorse the prosecution of fossil fuel companies.
On today's Jacki Daily Show, Jacki speaks with Ted Hadzi-Antich, Senior Attorney at the Center for the America Future on the EPA's Clean Power Plan. Jacki is also joined by Markham Hislop, of American Energy News, on how the Democrats endorse the prosecution of fossil fuel companies.
Jacki is joined by Markham Hislop to talk about the Canadian subsidies to citizens who purchase electric vehicles. Jacki is also joined by Jim Amos, Chairman of Eagle Alliance Investments LLC on Jacki is joined by Kathleen Hartnett White, Distinguished Senior Fellow-in-Residence and Director of the Armstrong Center for Energy & the Environment at the Texas Public Policy Foundation.