CANADA COVERTLY CONTINUES WATER EXPORT PROJECT The following news release jointly issued by the Governments of Canada and British Columbia is further evidence that the covert grand plan to export fresh water from Canada, first revealed on this web site, to the United States and Mexico continues to be implemented under the smokescreen description of a clean energy project. The scheme was first hatched in the 1960`s and successive Canadian governments have secretly tried to implement it due to widespread public opposition. Click here to learn more about the Grand Plan to Loot Canada`s Water Ressource Wealth. NEWS RELEASE COMMUNIQUÉ For Immediate Release 2012ENV0001-000144 Feb. 29, 2012 Ministry of Environment Government of Canada Site C Clean Energy Project - Joint Agreement Issued OTTAWA - The Honourable Peter Kent, federal Minister of the Environment and the Honourable Terry Lake, British Columbia Minister of the Environment, announced today that a Joint Agreement has been signed for the co-operative environmental assessment, including a review by a joint panel, of the Site C Clean Energy Project in British Columbia. The final agreement specifies the process for conducting the review, outlines the joint review panel terms of reference and identifies the timelines associated with key steps of the co-operative process. Following a 30-day public consultation period held in October 2011, comments received by the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency and the B.C. Environmental Assessment Office were considered, and the agreement was finalized. To view the final agreement or to obtain more information on this project, consult the Canadian Environmental Assessment Registry at www.ceaa-acee.gc.ca, reference number 11-05-63919 or the B.C. Environmental Assessment Office website at: www.eao.gov.bc.ca Next Steps: The next steps in the review process include public consultation on the draft guidelines for the environmental impact statement (EIS) to be held in the spring of 2012. The guidelines provide direction to the proponent and identify the information that will be required in the EIS. Background: BC Hydro and Power Authority proposes to construct and operate a dam and 1,100-megawatt hydroelectric generating station on the Peace River in northeastern B.C. The proposed project would be the third in a series of dams on the B.C. portion of the Peace River. The project components are an earthfill dam 1,050 metres long and 60 metres high, an 1,100-megawatt generating station and associated structures, an 83-km long reservoir, realignment of four sections of Highway 29 and two 77-km transmission lines along an existing transmission line right-of-way connecting Site C to the existing provincial power grid. The Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency administers the federal environmental assessment process, which identifies the environmental effects of proposed projects and measures to address those effects in support of sustainable development. The British Columbia Environmental Assessment Office manages the provincial environmental assessment process, which examines major projects for potential environmental, economic, social, heritage and health effects that may occur during the lifecycle of a project and identifies strategies to prevent or reduce potential adverse effects. Contacts: Lucille Jamault Communications Manager Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency 613 957-0434 Suntanu Dalal Communications Officer British Columbia Environmental Assessment Office 250 387-9745 250 387 9745 Connect with the Province of B.C. at: www.gov.bc.ca/connect The public announcement by Peter Kent, above left, and Terry Lake, his name is not a joke - above right, is seen by insiders as a continuation of the policy adopted at the Western Canadian Premiers at their annual conference in June, 2010, when they agreed that henceforth they would become stewards of water for all of North American . The statement by the Premiers in June 2010 was a recognition of the fact that, in Febraury and March of 2010, the Governments of Canada and British Columbia signed major agreements with the Governments of the United States and five western States that insiders advise included governing principles for the future management of the water supply of western North America. Click here to read more about the Western Canadian Premiers Click here to read June 2010 Press Release by Western Canadian Premiers A key agreement was the Flathead Lake Conservancy agreement that limiits furure indistrial development in the Flathead Lake corridor where according to the NAWAPA plan massive amounts of fresh water will be shunted down the Colorado River. Click here to read more about NAWAPA and Flathead Lake Comments Your comment will be posted after it is approved. Leave a Reply |