Search Documents

  • CIM
    Canada’s Petroleum Industry

    By Oliver B. Hopkins

    "WE HAVE patterned our lives on the things we take from under the earth's surface. Our civilization is built upon the ore from which we obtain our metals and the fuels which power the world as we know

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    Canada’s Resources and the National Interest

    By R. D. Brown

    "AbstractIn order to raise the enormous amounts of capital which will be essential for the development of Canada's mineral and petroleum resources, this country's resource industry must be permitted t

    Jan 1, 1977

  • CIM
    Canadian 1970’s Energy Strategy - Conserver Society - Sustainability

    By H. J. McQueen

    About 1973 the abrupt decrease in crude oil shipments due to political action by Middle Eastern suppliers, caused a shortage and a steep price rise. In response, Canada had to develop strategies of di

    Jan 1, 2015

  • SME
    Canadian Asbestos In World Competition ? Introduction

    By Karl V. Lindell

    Asbestos is not the name of a distinct mineral species, but rather the commercial term applied to the fibrous form of several minerals differing widely in composition. There are some 30 known varietie

    Jan 1, 1964

  • CIM
    Canadian Clay Products bentonite production in Saskatchewan

    By Colin Jones

    Canadian Clay Products Inc., which mines bentonite in Saskatchewan near Truax and operates a plant at Wilcox, is the sole producer of swelling bentonite, often called western bentonite, in Canada. Sev

    Jan 1, 2001

  • CIM
    Canadian Clean Power Coalition Project: The evaluation of options for CO2 extraction from existing and new coal-fired power plants

    By D. du Plessis, R. Stobbs

    The Canadian Clean Power Coalition (CCPC) was created in 2001 to protect and enhance Canada’s vast coal and other carbon-based resource wealth, and to ensure that environmental public policy decisions

    Jan 1, 2006

  • CIM
    Canadian Clean Power Coalition: Clean Coal Power Plant Technology

    By Paul R. Clark

    Outline ? Coal As An Energy Resource ? Canadian Clean Power Coalition ? Phase I of the CCPC Project ? CO2 capture options ? Gasification ? CO2 use ? Results ? Phase II Plans ? Next Steps Tra

    May 1, 2004

  • SME
    Canadian coal industry : Developments in resource conservation and productivity improvement

    By R. K. Singhal, H. Sahay

    Introduction In terms of the world's recoverable coal reserves, Canada ranks 10th, providing 0.6% of the world's total. The US is first with 27.8% and the Soviet Union follows with 24.1%.

    Jan 9, 1986

  • SME
    Canadian Coal Industry: Developments In Resource Conservation And Productivity Improvement (PrePrint 86-19)

    By H. Sahay

    The current Canadian coal production is approximately 57x106 tonnes per annum of which some 25 million tonnes is exported. Two thirds of the Canadian output is classified as thermal and one third as c

    Jan 1, 1986

  • CIM
    Canadian coal: Now and in the future

    By Donald O. Downing

    "IntroductionThis paper provides an overview of the coal mining industry in Canada with a description of current circumstances. The Canadian industry is placed in a global context and the future prosp

    Jan 1, 1997

  • SME
    Canadian Companies Make Their Pitch At PDAC

    At the Prospectors and Developers Annual Convention (PDAC) in Toronto, Canada mining and exploration companies of all sizes were on hand to discuss the year that was and those that will be. The follow

    Jan 1, 2009

  • CIM
    Canadian Copper and its Production

    By C. P. Browning

    Copper, as far as we know, was the first metal used by man, and due to the fact that it occurs in many places in the 'native' state, and also to the ease with which it may be shaped, it has

    Jan 1, 1927

  • SME
    Canadian Copper In A World Of Plenty

    By C. C. Muir

    At the outset, I believe reference should be made to comparatively recent world developments in copper which have an important bearing upon the Canadian position. COPPER SITUATION No one can do

    Jan 1, 1964

  • CIM
    Canadian Crude 1n North-Central Oil Markets United States

    By Marlin E. Sandlin

    NORTH-CENTRAL United States is now, and will continue to be, a natural market for Canadian crude oil. This area is a natural market for many basic reasons. There are no physical barriers along the bo

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    Canadian Developments in the use of Wastes and by-Products

    By J. J. Emery

    There is an increasing awareness on an international level of the potential for utilizing many wastes and by-products as construction materials. This has resulted in recent major reviews by OECD and R

    Jan 1, 1979

  • AUSIMM
    Canadian Diamond Discoveries - New Game, New Rules

    The Northwest Territories (NWT) of Canada has emerged as a major new province for diamond mineralisation in less than three years. This is primarily the product of a diligent search in the form of a

    Jan 1, 1994

  • CIM
    Canadian Diamond Industry: An Overview

    By Robert Boyd

    The Diamond Markets ? Supply has continuously increased over the past 25 years ? However, global supply is expected to drop by 1 to 2% by 2015 ? Demand Driven Market ?Demand is expected to grow 3%

    May 1, 2006

  • CIM
    Canadian Energy Sources

    "THE CONCEPT of energy as a commodity, while not entirely new, is not as widespread as the importance of the idea to this modern world would lead one to expect. The growth in the supply and use of ene

    Jan 1, 1953

  • SME
    Canadian Experience in Open Pit Mining

    By R. K. Singhal

    Canada is a world class producer and exporter of minerals and mineral products. Today's highly mechanized Canadian open pits use state-of-the-art equipment and support technology. They are taking

    Jan 1, 1995

  • SME
    Canadian Federal-Provincial Mineral Development Agreements And The Role Of Industrial Minerals

    By M. K. McMullen

    Mineral Development Agreements (MDA?s) are a cooperative mechanism in Canada by which the federal and individual provincial governments can coordinate their scientific, techno- logical and market deve

    Jan 1, 1987