However, there was a major absence in the discussion. We managed to ignore certain energy sources that are considered strategic everywhere else in North America. For example, the possibility of using our natural gas was never discussed.
This seems self-evident. Since the Legault government passed a law to ban all exploration and exploitation of hydrocarbons, it seems normal that we no longer talk about it. But this was voted on at a time when we lived in the illusion of a surplus of electricity.
In Quebec nowadays, we are so limited in energy that we have to say no to certain projects submitted by local companies. Northvolt postponed its construction by a year, and other companies are fighting in the public arena to get their hands on blocks of electricity that were reserved for them.
They state that the responsible exploitation of such resources should be one of the actions taken to ensure Quebec’s energy security. The association filed a written brief, but was not even invited to come and explain it to the parliamentarians. They are practicing mental abstraction.
This stubborn and irrational refusal to open the door to natural gas is, they say, the reflection of a beautiful social consensus established in Quebec. We are greener, we reject all forms of hydrocarbons, even natural gas which, elsewhere, is considered an acceptable compromise in terms of climate change.
Yet Kamala …
It’s funny to see how almost all the defenders of the antiexploitation creed are also enamored of Kamala Harris. At the debate in early September, Harris addressed Americans solemnly to assure them that she would never slow down the exploitation of shale gas.
There are now more than 1 million shale gas wells in the United States. The Democratic presidential candidate is not a climate change denier, but she is integrating shale gas into her energy policy.
She is acting like her Democratic predecessor, former President Barack Obama, who praised the exploitation of shale gas and oil under his leadership. He still congratulates himself on having ensured the energy independence of the United States, thanks to his policy.
If the Quebec premier imitated Obama and Harris, he would be crucified in the public arena ... by admirers of Obama and Harris. Our Quebec is not easy.
America’s Achilles’ heel is internal. If it loses this war, it will likely be because much of the media, politicians, and even some of Trump’s allies do not fully understand his policies.
European autonomy - military, technological, economic, and financial - is beginning to take shape as Europe hedges against current and future fluctuations in [U.S.] policy.
Here was the American president, surrounded by an ultimately submissive team, deciding to go to war on gut feeling and with no visible concern for what it would mean beyond [U.S.] borders.
America’s Achilles’ heel is internal. If it loses this war, it will likely be because much of the media, politicians, and even some of Trump’s allies do not fully understand his policies.
Israel must reduce its military dependence on the United States as much as possible and deepen its technological, military and moral value in American eyes.
European autonomy - military, technological, economic, and financial - is beginning to take shape as Europe hedges against current and future fluctuations in [U.S.] policy.
The shift now underway is unlikely to take the form of a dramatic collapse of American power in the Gulf. It is more likely to be subtler and, for the region, more unsettling.
European autonomy - military, technological, economic, and financial - is beginning to take shape as Europe hedges against current and future fluctuations in [U.S.] policy.