ALLAN'S CANADIAN PERSPECTIVE!

Some people have opinions, and some people have convictions......................! What we offer is PERSPECTIVE!

For example...

ALLAN's CANADIAN PERSPECTIVE!

THE LEFT WING IS CRAZY! THE RIGHT WING SCARES THE SHIT OUT OF ME!

"BioPanentheism"

“Conversations exploring politics... science... metaphysics...... and other unique ideas!”

BioPanentheism holds that "Omnia/Qualia" does not merely pervade the Universe abstractly... but "experiences reality" directly and vicariously through the emergence of any complex "biological consciousnesses" ...making 'life itself' the medium of awareness!

BioPanentheism states that Omnia/Qualia and biological life are distinct but interdependent... (symbiotic) with Omnia experiencing reality vicariously through us... ["conscious living beings"] while we receive... "Qualia... instinct... and meaning!"

(Sentience is about experiencing... while Sapience is about understanding and reflecting on that experience!)


Conversations with... "Anthropic Claude" and "SAL-9000!"

( Remember... Everything an Artificial Intelligence says is only a repeat of what some human said at some time! )
Showing posts with label Uranium. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Uranium. Show all posts

Saturday, 27 June 2026

TRADE WAR!

Hey folks, wanna read something REALLY funny?

One of these days... (very soon) Canadians will reach the breaking point with Donald Drumpf and show him just how much... "He doesn't need anything from Canada!!!

Forget the oil and the gas, and the potash, and the uranium, and the lumber, and the precious metals... let's just take a look at ONE of the weapons we have in our arsenal!

ELECTRICITY!

The US cities that run on Canadian electricity... and don’t know it!

Story by Trisha A. Ilarde:

Most Americans flip a light switch without a single thought about where that power actually began. In dozens of US towns, though, the electricity humming through the walls started its journey hundreds of miles north, behind a Canadian dam or wind farm. Canada and the United States share one of the most connected power grids on the planet, and 86 international power lines along the Canada-US border move electricity between provinces and states.

This quiet setup worked smoothly for over a century, mostly because the two countries got along. Recent trade fights changed that, putting the hidden energy lifeline in the spotlight as tariffs and counter-threats flew. Suddenly, the idea that a Canadian premier could flip a switch and raise American power bills felt very real. 

Here are some US cities and regions that lean on Canadian electricity far more than the people living there might guess!

***

Burlington, Vermont
©Image Credit: Jared and Corin Wikimedia Commons, Licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0.

Vermont stands out as the clearest example of American reliance on Canadian power, and Burlington sits right in the middle of it. Hydro-Québec has agreed to supply roughly 25% of the state’s annual electricity needs through 2038, so Canadian hydropower makes up about a quarter of Vermont’s electricity portfolio, if not more. The connection runs through a transmission line linking a Quebec substation to the Highgate substation in northwest Vermont. Much of the state’s clean energy image is actually Canadian-made.


Buffalo, New York

©Image Credit: Tim Gerland on Flickr, Licensed under CC BY 2.0.

Power flows into Buffalo from across the Niagara River, and the city would feel a sudden cutoff harder than almost anywhere else. Buffalo and upstate New York would take an especially hard hit if Ontario restricted exports, since that tends to happen during a cold, peak-demand stretch of the year.

Experts warned that cutting electricity with little warning could cause severe impacts on both prices and the volume of power available. Sitting close to the border makes the city both lucky and exposed. Cheap, steady Canadian power feels like a gift right up until someone threatens to take it away.


Rochester, New York

©Image Credit: Ken Lund on Flickr, Licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0.

Down the road from Buffalo, Rochester shares the same heavy dependence on Ontario’s grid. One senior energy analyst noted that any Ontario move to restrict exports would fall especially hard on Buffalo and upstate New York, including Rochester. Timing makes it worse because the threat surfaced during winter, when heating demand peaks and the system has little slack. New York as a whole buys more Canadian power than any other state. That fact leaves mid-sized cities like Rochester quietly vulnerable to politics playing out hundreds of miles away.


New York City, New York

©Image Credit: Andres Figueroa from Pexes.

America’s largest city ties into the Canadian grid too, mostly through Quebec’s massive hydro network. Quebec exported about 10.39 TWh of hydropower-driven electricity to New York in 2017, with Ontario adding another 8.22 TWh.

New York State leads the country in Canadian imports, bringing in 8.6 million MWh in 2024, worth $491 million, with 77% of that coming from Ontario. Builders have completed a major project to push even more Quebec hydropower straight into the city. A chunk of the round-the-clock power in the city that never sleeps carries a Canadian accent.


Detroit, Michigan

©Image Credit: D. Jonze from Pexels.

Right across the river from Windsor, Detroit is wired directly into Ontario’s system. The electricity link connecting Michigan with Ontario consists mostly of Ontario exports into Detroit. A twist complicates the picture, because much of that power never stays put.

State regulators explain that plenty of electricity flows across the border into Michigan, yet almost none of it stays; instead, it moves eastward into Ohio and back into Canada near Niagara in a pattern called the Lake Erie Loop Flow. The city acts less like a destination and more like a busy hallway for Canadian electrons.


Minneapolis, Minnesota

©Image Credit: Josh Hild from Pexels

Bitter winters push Minnesota to draw heavily on its northern neighbour, especially the province of Manitoba. Every bit of electricity Manitoba sold to the United States in 2024 went to Minnesota, making the state its only customer.

Minnesota also ranked among five border states, alongside New York, Vermont, Michigan, and Maine, that together accounted for 78% of all Canadian exports in 2024. That dependence explains why Minnesota landed on the list of states facing an export surcharge during the trade fight. The Twin Cities stay warm partly thanks to Canadian dams.


Portland, Maine
©Image Credit: davidwilson1949 on Flickr, Licensed under CC BY 2.0.

Maine’s power story belongs almost entirely to New Brunswick. Every bit of New Brunswick’s electricity exports flowed to Maine in 2024. That single-source relationship means the entire state, Portland included, relies on a single Canadian province for its imported power. New Brunswick’s cross-border electricity sales feed directly into Maine. Residents rarely think about this tidy, direct connection. When trade tensions flared, the quiet pipeline suddenly looked like a pressure point.


Seattle, Washington
©Image Credit: dumitru B from Pexels.

The Pacific Northwest runs on a different Canadian partner, British Columbia. British Columbia accounts for roughly 95% of Canadian electricity exports in the western region, and about 15% of those sales end up in Washington. BC also reaches farther than any other province, selling electricity to 13 states, with Washington as its biggest customer. Seattle benefits from BC’s huge hydro output flowing south across the border. The clean, rainy Northwest essentially shares a watershed and a power supply with its Canadian neighbour.


Great Falls, Montana
©Image Credit: Tim Evanson on Flickr, Licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0.

Montana might feel remote, yet Great Falls plugs straight into the cross-border grid. Analysts named it among the cities that still benefit significantly from Canadian electricity. Sitting close to the Alberta and BC borders, the region taps Canadian supply whenever it makes economic sense.

Provinces sell their excess power to the south when American buyers need it, and US distributors import it when it costs less than generating it themselves. Those northern connections quietly add stability to a sparsely populated state. Most folks in Great Falls would be surprised to learn how international their light switch really is.


Ogdensburg, New York
©Image Credit: CharmaineZoe's Marvelous Melange on Flickr, Licensed under CC BY 2.0.

Perched on the St. Lawrence River, this small city sits practically on top of the Canadian border. Energy experts specifically named Ogdensburg among the US cities that still benefit significantly from Canadian electricity. Being right at the water’s edge puts it among the closest American communities to Ontario’s grid.

New York overall pulls most of its Canadian power from Ontario and imports the largest share of any state. Tiny border towns like this one often hold the deepest, oldest ties to the Canadian system. The river marking the boundary also carries the power.


Pembina, North Dakota
©Image Credit: afiler on Flickr, Licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0.

Pembina reaches about as far north as you can get in the lower 48, and its power supply shows it. The city appears among those that still benefit significantly from Canadian electricity. North Dakota receives power largely from Manitoba’s grid, which sends electricity south alongside Minnesota’s supply.

Manitoba exports electricity to both North Dakota and Minnesota through the central cross-border link. For a town wedged against the Manitoba line, Canadian power feels like the neighbour next door rather than anything exotic. The border here works more as a formality than a barrier for electrons.


Boston, Massachusetts
©Image Credit: Phil Evenden from Pexels.

New England’s biggest city has quietly bought Canadian hydropower for decades. Hydro-Québec built a 450-kV DC line in the early 1990s connecting its huge James Bay complex to the Sandy Pond substation near Boston, and it has since delivered more than 100 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity.

That single line has served as a steady clean-energy artery into the region. Hydro-Québec has sold power into New England since the 1980s. Boston’s push toward greener energy rests on a Canadian backbone. The lights of the city carry a little bit of Quebec in them.


Chicago, Illinois
©Image Credit: Wendell Stoyer from Pexels.

Chicago sits inside a larger Midwestern grid that trades power back and forth with Canada. Canada’s main customers include the Midwestern states, fed largely by Ontario and Manitoba. Because the grid stays interconnected, electricity generated in Canada can flow through several states before reaching a given home.

This trade matters for grid balancing, constantly matching electricity use to electricity production across the region. Even an inland giant like Chicago indirectly leans on its northern supply. The grid doesn’t really care where someone drew the border.


Milwaukee, Wisconsin
©Image Credit: Leroy Skalstad from Pexels.

Wisconsin came up by name when Ontario’s premier listed the states he could squeeze. Ontario’s leader said the province stood ready to go as far as cutting off energy flowing to Michigan, New York, and Wisconsin. Milwaukee sits in that same Midwestern grid network that exchanges power with Canada every day.

US utilities import Canadian electricity when they face a shortfall or when it simply costs less than producing their own. Those facts make the city part of the quiet web of cross-border dependence. A trade dispute in Ottawa could ripple all the way to a Milwaukee utility bill.


All the Northern Maine border towns!
©Image Credit: Joe Shlabotnik on Flickr, Licensed under CC BY 2.0.

Beyond Portland, the smaller communities along Maine’s northern edge bind even more tightly to New Brunswick. Because every bit of New Brunswick’s exports went to Maine in 2024, the entire state’s imported power traces back to one province. For these border towns, the Canadian grid often serves as the nearest and most practical source. New Brunswick’s cross-border electricity sales feed directly into Maine. These communities live the US-Canada energy partnership more directly than almost anyone. When relations sour, they feel the chill first. (This is only a temporary situation since Maine will eventually join Canada as one of our provinces!!!)


AND REMEMBER FOLKS... THESE ARE ONLY SOME OF THE PLACES THAT WILL BE AFFECTED! (ALONG WITH ALL THE OTHER PLACES THAT WILL BE PUT IN JEPARDY FROM ALL THE OTHER ECONOMIC WEAPONS WE HAVE AVAILABLE!) 

N.Y.C. after we shut off their electricity!!!



Sunday, 18 January 2026

Canadian resources America can’t function without!

Donald Drumpf keeps saying that the United States doesn't need anything from Canada... eh!

***

Allan:

America and Canada share more than just the world’s longest international border. Every single day, essential resources flow south across that border, powering homes, building cities, and keeping industries running across the United States. 

These aren’t luxury items. They’re the backbone of American infrastructure, energy systems, and manufacturing that millions of people depend on without even realizing it.

When you flip on a light switch, drive to work, or walk into a newly built home, there’s a good chance Canadian resources played a role in making it happen. 

This northern neighbour supplies critical materials that would be extremely difficult and expensive to replace! 

Here’s a closer look at the Canadian resources that keep America running smoothly.

1. Crude oil:

Image Credit: Documerica/Unsplash

Canada is America’s largest foreign oil supplier, sending roughly 4.9 million barrels across the border every single day in 2023. This oil keeps gas stations stocked, planes flying, and delivery trucks moving across the country. The majority comes from Alberta’s oil sands, which contain one of the world’s largest petroleum reserves.

American refineries are specifically designed to process the heavy crude that Canada produces. Switching to other suppliers would require massive infrastructure changes costing billions of dollars. 

Without this steady flow, gas prices would spike and energy security would take a serious hit.

2. Natural gas:

Image Credit: Alex Gagareen/Unsplash

Millions of American homes stay warm thanks to Canadian natural gas that also powers electrical plants across the country. Nearly 9% of America’s natural gas consumption comes directly from Canadian wells and processing facilities. During harsh winter months, this percentage jumps even higher as demand for heating fuel skyrockets.

The pipeline infrastructure connecting Canadian gas fields to American cities is massive and irreplaceable in the short term. Many American utility companies have built their entire business models around a reliable Canadian supply. This energy partnership helps keep heating bills manageable while reducing reliance on more distant suppliers.

3. Electricity:

Image Credit: Matthew Henry/Unsplash

Canada exports enough electricity to power about 3.3 million American homes each year. Hydroelectric dams in Quebec, Manitoba, and British Columbia generate massive amounts of clean, renewable power that flows across the border. 

This electricity helps states meet their renewable energy goals without building their own expensive infrastructure.

The grid connection between the two countries is so integrated that power flows back and forth based on real-time demand. States like New York, Vermont, Maine, and Washington rely heavily on Canadian imports to meet peak demand periods. 

Building equivalent domestic capacity would take decades and cost hundreds of billions of dollars.

4. Uranium:

Image Credit: IAEA Imagebank/Flickr/Licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0.

Canada produces about 24% of the world’s uranium supply, and much of it powers American nuclear reactors. This element is essential for generating clean, carbon-free electricity at the 93 nuclear power plants operating across the United States. 

Saskatchewan’s Athabasca Basin contains some of the richest uranium deposits on the planet.

Nuclear power provides about 20% of America’s total electricity, running continuously as baseload power. Having a reliable, politically stable supplier right next door is crucial for energy security. 

Without Canadian uranium, America would need to turn to less reliable suppliers or dramatically reduce its nuclear power capacity.

5. Potash:

Image Credit: Nelson Minar/FlickrLicensed under CC BY-SA 2.0.

Farmers across America depend on Canadian potash fertilizer to grow the food that feeds hundreds of millions of people. Saskatchewan alone contains about 40% of the world’s potash reserves

American farmers spread Canadian potash on millions of acres of cropland every single year to maximize yields.

Modern agriculture cannot sustain current production levels without synthetic fertilizers like potash. This mineral provides essential potassium that plants need to develop strong roots and produce abundant harvests. 

Alternative sources exist but would be more expensive to extract and transport, potentially raising food prices.

6. Softwood lumber:

Image Credit: lepterm/Unsplash

About 30% of the lumber used in the United States comes from Canadian forests for residential construction projects. These supplies provide the wooden frames, floors, and roofs that builders need for new American homes. 

British Columbia and Quebec produce high-quality softwood species that are perfect for construction.

The American housing market would struggle without steady Canadian lumber supplies flowing south. Building enough domestic lumber production to replace Canadian imports would require decades of forest growth and substantial new sawmill capacity. 

The lumber trade between these countries has persisted for over a century because it makes economic sense for both sides.

7. Aluminum

Image Credit: Julia Maior/Unsplash

Everything from soda cans to aircraft parts contains Canadian aluminum that smelters produce using abundant hydroelectric power. Quebec’s cheap electricity makes it an ideal location for energy-intensive aluminum production. 

The lightweight metal is essential for modern transportation, construction, and packaging industries.

Aluminum smelting requires enormous amounts of electricity, making Canada’s cheap hydro power a massive competitive advantage. American manufacturers have grown dependent on this steady supply for products ranging from car bodies to smartphone cases. 

Without Canadian aluminum, American manufacturers would face higher costs and potential supply disruptions.

8. Wood pulp and paper products:

Image Credit: Christa Dodoo/Unsplash

Paper products that Americans use every single day come from raw materials supplied by Canadian forests. The country’s massive pulp and paper industry processes millions of tons of wood fiber annually, much of which gets exported to American customers. 

Quebec, Ontario, and British Columbia operate large-scale mills that produce everything from newsprint to packaging materials.

The e-commerce boom has dramatically increased demand for cardboard shipping boxes, making Canadian pulp even more critical. Paper mills require specific tree species and enormous capital investments that are difficult to replicate quickly. 

This wood pulp also makes hygiene products like tissues and toilet paper that fill store shelves.

9. Nickel:

Image Credit: Kumpan Electric/Unsplash.

Stainless steel production and electric vehicle batteries both require nickel that Canadian mines produce in substantial quantities. Ontario and Manitoba contain deposits that supply both American manufacturing and the global market. 

This silvery metal resists corrosion and adds strength to steel alloys used in everything from kitchen sinks to jet engines.

The electric vehicle revolution has made nickel even more valuable because lithium-ion batteries require it. Canadian nickel helps American automakers meet ambitious EV production targets while reducing dependence on less reliable foreign suppliers. 

As battery demand explodes, Canadian nickel will become increasingly important for American energy independence.

10. Copper:

Image Credit: Ra Dragon/Unsplash

Modern electrical systems wouldn’t be possible without the highly conductive copper that Canadian mines produce. British Columbia, Ontario, and Quebec all have significant copper production that feeds American manufacturing demand. 

This metal conducts electricity better than almost any other affordable material.

Every home, car, and electronic device in America contains copper components that conduct electricity safely and efficiently. The renewable energy transition requires even more copper for wind turbines, solar panels, and EV charging infrastructure. 

As electrification accelerates across the economy, copper demand will keep climbing, and Canadian supplies will remain crucial.

11. Zinc:

Image Credit: Ries Bosch/Unsplash

Steel structures across America stay protected from rust thanks to Canadian zinc production that supplies galvanizing operations. This bluish-gray metal gets applied as a coating to everything from highway guardrails to roofing materials. 

New Brunswick, Manitoba, and Ontario all produce significant quantities of zinc.

Galvanized steel infrastructure lasts decades longer than unprotected steel, saving massive amounts of money over time. American construction and infrastructure projects rely heavily on zinc-coated products to withstand harsh weather. 

Canadian zinc mines operate under strict environmental standards while maintaining competitive production costs that benefit American buyers.

12. Canola oil:

Image Credit: adpowers/Flickr/Licensed under CC BY 2.0.

Grocery store shelves across America are stocked with Canadian canola oil that provides a healthy cooking option. The country grows vast fields of canola across the prairies, producing oil that’s low in saturated fat. 

Food manufacturers also use canola oil in countless processed foods, from salad dressings to baked goods.

This versatile oil has become a kitchen staple because it has a neutral flavor and a high smoke point. Canadian farmers have perfected canola cultivation, making it one of their most important crops. 

American consumers benefit from reliable supplies of affordable, healthy cooking oil that Canadian agriculture provides year after year.

13. Fresh water!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Image Credit: Haydn/Unsplash

The Great Lakes and various cross-border waterways provide shared freshwater resources that both countries depend on. While water doesn’t flow south like other resources, the shared management of these water bodies is critical for American cities. Millions of Americans living near the border rely on water systems that Canada helps maintain through international agreements.

These freshwater resources support agriculture, manufacturing, power generation, and municipal water supplies across multiple states. The Great Lakes alone contain about 20% of the world’s surface freshwater and border eight American states. 

Canadian cooperation in managing water quality and quantity ensures that American communities have access to clean, abundant water.

By Diana Tablan:

***

Diana Tablan is a seasoned writer who loves to explore fun lifestyle topics and various human interest stories. During her free time, she enjoys reading, painting, and cooking. Diana’s writings can be found in several popular online magazines in Canada and the US.

THESE ARE JUST THE MINERALS AND ENERGY WE SEND TO THE STATES... AND IF THEY STOPPED... THE U.S. ECONOMY WOULD TANK! (Unfortunately... so would ours!)