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Trading Partners

  • Labour action continues at Federated Co-op

    Pension funding behind unrest at Co-op Refinery Complex On December 3, 2019, 729 unionized workers at Regina’s Co-op Refinery Complex, an 800-acre site in the city’s northeast sector that produces up to 145,000 barrels per day, went on strike to protect what they saw as a challenge from management on their pensions.
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  • Parkland acquires U.S.-based Kellerstrass Oil

    Parkland Fuel Corporation, through its wholly owned U.S.
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  • Fuel prices and Canadian dollar expected to show gains in 2020

    [caption id="attachment_22097" align="alignright" width="300"] Shutterstock[/caption]A spike in current and long-range gasoline pricing will come as no surprise to retailers and most Canadians.
  • Wallace & Carey renews partnership with BG Fuels

    Family-owned, Calgary-based wholesale distributor Wallace & Carey will extend its three-year partnership with BG Fuels.
  • Company seeks injunction: Co op, union in court over pickets at Regina refinery

    A labour dispute between a Saskatchewan petroleum refinery and hundreds of its workers moved from the picket line into the courtroom December 23rd, with the company seeking an injunction against some of the union's activities.
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  • A tribute to Alan Glass, executive chairman, EnsembleIQ

    In Memoriam Alan Glass Executive Chairman, EnsembleIQ  Aug.
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  • Strike enters new phase at FCL Regina refinery

    Workers have been locked out of Federated Co-op’s Regina refinery since December 5, 2019, when negotiations went off the rails.
  • N.B. premier hopeful final sign off on carbon plan coming early in the new year

    The premier of New Brunswick said Monday he hopes to hear back early in the new year about whether the federal government will sign-off on his province's plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from large industrial emitters.Blaine Higgs met with the prime minister Monday morning, the latest - and likely last - of the provincial and territorial leaders to meet face-to-face with Justin Trudeau this year in the wake of the October election.He described the meeting as a cordial get together reflective of a changed tone in federal-provincial relations, a change that's the result of concerted efforts by provinces, territories and Trudeau to renew a national bond strained by the election results.One tangible example of those efforts, said Higgs, was the federal government's decision last week to approve New Brunswick's consumer carbon pricing plan.“Getting that behind us .
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