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The Painter of the Right - Dissent Magazine

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sarcozona
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Roundup: Spending vs inflation

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Last week, the CD Howe Institute put out a report on the recent bout of inflation, and tried to pin it either on government spending or the Bank of Canada, and in the process ignored a whole lot of things that happened during the pandemic that were material to those price increases. Or the fact that early in the pandemic, we had deflation, and that the Bank of Canada needed to act fast to ensure that it did not continue lest it turn into a spiral that would lead to a depression, because that’s what deflation does.

Naturally, however, the moment Pierre Poilievre saw that they were pinning blame on government spending, he had to jump on that because it’s his entire central thesis for inflation, in spite of all evidence to the contrary. I report on economic data on a regular basis, and that includes the Consumer Price Index (or inflation) data every month, and the Bank of Canada’s Monetary Policy Report every quarter. I can tell you what prices increased and where, because that’s in the data every month. None of the causes had anything to do with government spending.

I also have to take some exception to the notion that government supports like CERB were driving demand. CERB was not extra spending money. It was survival money for low-income people who were out of work because of the pandemic. It staved off a wave of bankruptcies and even more demand on provincial social services or food banks (and the lack of provincial social services is the main driver behind increased food bank use, per their own reports). The “excess demand” was coming from higher-income households who had plenty of money to spend when they couldn’t go out to restaurants or go on vacations. They were not the recipients of government support, and trying to conflate the two is disingenuous, and frankly smacks of a great deal of ideological bias.

Effin' Birds (@effinbirds.com) 2025-07-19T21:10:16.169Z

Ukraine Dispatch

There has been another barrage of drones and missiles that have killed at least one person in Kyiv overnight. Here is another look at how the people in Kyiv are coping with the increased attacks.

Good reads:

  • The premiers are meeting in Muskoka to talk trade and interprovincial barriers, and Mark Carney will join them tomorrow to update them as to US talks.
  • Evan Solomon continues to be useless about protecting Canadians’ copyrights from digital asbestos.
  • A workplace assessment of the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission for the RCMP shows issues with workloads and possible toxic work environments.
  • A former female Afghan interpreter who came to Canada for an education was allegedly sexually assaulted by the Global Affairs employee watching over her.
  • Here is a look at the problem of threats from the regime facing Iranians in Canada.
  • Here is another profile of Battle River—Crowfoot, replete with former Poilievre staffers extolling his showing his “softer side” of late.
  • Scott Moe continues to demonstrate that he really likes to be a bootlicker.
  • Kevin Carmichael argues that Canadian business’ tolerance for risk has decreased significantly, which is holding us back at a time when we really need to innovate.
  • Jessica Davis discusses the recent use of terrorist designations on criminal cartels, and which of those tools may be effective.
  • My weekend column points out that Mark Carney has yet to give First Nations an actual reason to trust him, other than saying “just trust me.”

Odds and ends:

New episodes released early for C$7+ subscribers. This week I give a primer on the Leader of the Government in the Senate. #cdnpoli

Dale Smith (@journodale.bsky.social) 2025-07-21T01:02:16.060Z

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sarcozona
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Canadian LNG exports could make your heating bill go up | The Narwhal

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Flames as high as a 30-storey building, ships nearly as long as the Eiffel Tower is tall, $40 billion dollars. Everything about LNG Canada is big — including its promises. 

Often referred to as the largest private investment in Canadian history, the megaproject connects B.C. shale gas reserves near the Alberta border to marine shipping routes on the northwest coast. More than a decade after the project was first approved, Canada’s liquefied natural gas (LNG) sector is finally up and running: LNG Canada sent its first shipment to Asia on June 30.

As exports start flowing overseas from the Kitimat, B.C., facility, two more liquefaction plants are under construction — Woodfibre LNG and Cedar LNG. Another, Ksi Lisims LNG, could be approved any day. The promise around all this industrial buildout has always been prosperity, but whether the industry can deliver, and for how long, is up for debate.

“An oversupply of LNG is widely expected, potentially starting as early as next year, with a massive wave of new projects coming online around the world, especially in the U.S. and Qatar,” Steven Haig, a policy advisor with the International Institute for Sustainable Development, told The Narwhal. “When it comes to the economic benefits of LNG, Canada is really late to the party — and that party is almost over.”

Haig and his colleagues recently penned a deep dive into the risks of locking in more LNG infrastructure, reporting that Canadian exports are unlikely to achieve “energy security for importers or economic resilience for exporters.”

“What we explain in our analysis is that we are very likely moving into a period of oversupply with lower prices — and those lower prices may well be below what projects need to break even,” Haig told The Narwhal. “If they run at a loss for too long, then they can become stranded assets, with economic implications for the people who work for these facilities or for communities that might become economically associated with them.”

As Canadian LNG — the liquid form of natural gas, which is mostly composed of methane and in B.C. is extracted primarily through fracking — starts making its way into international markets, British Columbians and Albertans could also see a spike in their heating bills, according to Deloitte Canada. As the Financial Post recently reported, domestic natural gas prices could jump up by 60 per cent this year, and climb even higher next year. 

Haig said if the price a company can get from exporting LNG is higher than it can get selling natural gas domestically, prices in places like B.C. and Alberta will go up. This happened in Australia, where domestic prices tripled as Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine sent shockwaves through the supply chain.

“LNG links regional gas markets together in the global LNG market,” Haig explained. “So a local supply disruption in one place can lead to skyrocketing LNG prices elsewhere.” 

“When those high prices are in effect, then it can become more profitable for a gas producer in Canada, for example, to export that gas to the international LNG market than to use that gas in Canada’s domestic gas market.” That, he said, can lead to higher domestic prices for Canadian consumers.

LNG Canada is now operating its first phase, which will produce up to 14 million tonnes of supercooled gas per year. It’s already approved and permitted to double production.

Teresa Waddington, LNG Canada’s vice-president of corporate relations, told The Narwhal earlier this month that talks are underway about whether or not to go ahead with the expansion. She said a final decision depends on a number of factors including “overall competitiveness [and] affordability.” LNG Canada did not respond to new questions from The Narwhal by publication time.

When the international consortium of oil and gas companies behind LNG Canada (Shell, Petronas, Korea Gas, PetroChina and Mitsubishi) first started courting Canada to develop an LNG export industry in B.C. in the early 2010s, they said it would boost the economy locally, provincially and federally. With recent trade threats from the U.S. government, that narrative is gaining traction again and politicians like B.C. Premier David Eby and Prime Minister Mark Carney are celebrating the sector as an economic saviour. 

Haig cautioned the narrative should be taken with a grain of salt.

“We’re seeing this big push towards LNG expansion to diversify Canada’s exports beyond the United States, but these are multi-billion dollar and multi-decade projects,” he explained. “Their long-term viability is a serious concern as global markets shift towards cleaner and more reliable energy sources, like renewables. Investing in LNG as a supposed transition fuel in the meantime would be a long, costly detour.”

Alongside promises of prosperity, LNG Canada and other proponents of the sector maintain the gas is a so-called “bridge” or transition fuel — a climate solution. The argument goes like this: burning gas to generate power is less harmful than burning coal, and B.C. exports will help countries like China substantially reduce their reliance on the “dirtier” fossil fuel. The first part is the subject of much debate, especially when the entire lifecycle of LNG is taken into consideration. The second — that Canadian LNG will displace coal — Haig said simply isn’t true. 

“Coal is cheap, renewables are cheap and LNG is not,” he said. “If we look at China’s power sector, for example, it’s renewables — not LNG imports — that are eating into coal’s market share. This is mostly because renewables are cheaper than LNG and because LNG requires expensive new infrastructure, such as re-gasification plants and pipelines, to connect consumers with supply.” 

China, while still responsible for about one third of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions, is outpacing the rest of the world by leaps and bounds in building renewables. In May this year, the country added the equivalent of 100 solar panels per second. As the Guardian reported in June, “China’s installed solar photovoltaic capacity has now surpassed 1,000 gigawatts for the first time, equivalent to half of the world’s total installed solar capacity.” 

Haig said Canada is at a crossroads as it decides whether or not to approve more LNG projects, but added, “it’s not too late.” 

“LNG exports can delay investments in renewables and generally increase global fossil fuel use, increasing global greenhouse gas emissions,” he said. “Doubling down on LNG projects would likely expose Canadians to more risk and volatility, not less.”

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sarcozona
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Southwestern Drought Likely to Continue Through 2100, Research Finds - Inside Climate News

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sarcozona
21 hours ago
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This was well known by 2010 - not just to climatologists, but ecologists and other scientists working in the region. Anybody acting surprised is trying to milk subsidies.
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Radio geeks say you can still get 'lost' DoD hurricane data • The Register

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With the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) set to shut down a key satellite data stream used in US hurricane forecasting, a group of amateur radio enthusiasts has stepped in with a decoder they say could fill the gap.

In June, the US Department of Defense (DoD) decided to remove access to data collected by the Special Sensor Microwave Imager Sounder (SSMIS) instrument for the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP).

Although the end of the service was put back until August, the data loss is set to hinder hurricane forecasting by scientists in the US. One told The Register: "The SSMIS satellite [data] is extremely important; as a forecaster, I use them constantly. The microwave satellite imagery allows us to peer under the overcast of a storm, probing the inner structure of a tropical cyclone. It's especially important at night."

However, a group of amateur satellite and radio ham enthusiasts have pointed out that the data is still available, for those who know where to look. The community SatDump provides tools and data allowing users to access publicly available satellite streams. Lead developer and ham radio operator Alan Antoine said the US authorities were turning off the online distribution of real time data while the satellite passes over the US stations at Wallops Island, Virginia, and Fairbanks, Alaska.

However, with the correct receiver – a guide to the hardware is available online – anyone in the US can pull the data directly off the satellite. Although it is encrypted over the rest of the world, the data is not encrypted over the US and the poles, according to Antoine.

The only problem is using the data. Antoine said that with previously online, publicly available documents, and a bit of trial and error, it is possible to decode the data.

"Since we saw – like everyone else – the NOAA said that the SSMIS data would get cut off, and I knew you could still get it directly from the satellite, I decided to write the decoder so that if somebody wanted to still use it, they could," he said.

The decoder is now publicly available via SatDump's GitHub repository in the "verywip" branch, although users wanting to take advantage of the download might want to contact SatDump directly for more information.

However, not all the data NOAA once distributed can be accessed using the decoder, Antoine said. Thermal data is missing due to a lack of reference material needed to decode the signal.

"I don't have an actual documentation for SSMIS, so it's mostly reverse-engineered, which I can do. It's not perfect, but it's better than nothing. I don't know if anyone is actually using it yet, because I just published it, but it's pretty likely that at least some of them are going to be doing so, considering how much of an issue the lack of data is," he said.

The Register asked NOAA to comment. ®

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sarcozona
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Tech shocks to industry have only just begun

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sarcozona
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The jobs aren’t coming back
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