Imagine a cheetah hunting. Given the cheetah’s ability to run extremely fast, the cat exerts a tremendous amount of energy for a short time in order to catch its prey.
A little while ago my brother found an old diary up in the attic of the house in England where we grew up written by my grandfather.
What went through your mind when you heard that Hydro may have to propose price hikes into the “double digits”?
Were our nation to move to a New Energy Economy, how would that impact Manitoba’s southeast? If this shift is well managed, it will affect our lifestyle, but not our prosperity.
Where will energy come from in the new energy economy? Since the transportation sector is the most dependent on crude oil, reductions in crude oil use will need to come primarily from the transportation sector.
In this article in the series on “A Proposed Path to a New Energy Economy” we focus on the Energy East pipeline going through Manitoba not to Manitoba.
Our economy, any economy involves work and work requires energy. The human body is a very efficient machine in terms of work.
We are beginning a series of articles focusing on “A Path to a New Energy Economy” where we want to introduce the issues around the proposed Energy East pipeline.
Bryce Hoye of the CBC wrote an excellent article this week, calling for the Province to move forward with its long awaited, surface water management strategy.
I moved into my small house at the end of September so I am experiencing each season for the first time.