Lexpert Special Editions

Lexpert Special Edition on Energy 2019

The Lexpert Special Editions profiles selected Lexpert-ranked lawyers whose focus is in Corporate, Infrastructure, Energy and Litigation law and relevant practices. It also includes feature articles on legal aspects of Canadian business issues.

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WWW.LEXPERT.CA | 2019 | LEXPERT 7 Bremermann, Eric H. Stikeman Elliott LLP (416) 869-6821 ebremermann@stikeman.com Mr. Bremermann is a partner in the Mergers & Acquisitions and Project De- velopment & Finance Groups, as well as Co-chair of the Toronto Energy Group. He leads the firm's initiatives in respect of Germany, Austria and Switzerland. He is also a member of the firm's Diversity Committee. His practice focuses on corporate and commercial law, with an emphasis on Canadian-European cross-border issues. Borden, Richard P. Norton Rose Fulbright Canada LLP (403) 267-8362 rick.borden@nortonrosefulbright.com Practising extensively in the area of complex commercial transactions, Mr. Borden focuses on large-scale projects and financings in the energy sector, including oil sands projects, pipeline projects and LNG projects. His clients include major Canadian banks and project sponsors and he has strong relationships with the key project-lending specialists at the major Canadian banks. Booth, QC, Robert (Bob) T. Bennett Jones LLP (403) 298-3252 boothb@bennettjones.com Mr. Booth has a broad commercial practice in energy and resources. He represents clients in the oil & gas, pipeline, LNG, uranium and electricity sectors. He advises on purchases, sales, new businesses, joint ventures and partnerships. Blundy, Paul D. Bennett Jones LLP (416) 777-4854 blundyp@bennettjones.com Mr. Blundy has more than 35 years' experience in construction and project finance. Acting for public authorities, private–sector proponents, lenders, underwriters, contractors, designers and service providers, he has participated in a wide variety of both privately procured and Public–Private Partnership (P3) transactions in power generation, transmission and facilities operation and maintenance. Bigué, AdE, Ann Dentons Canada LLP (514) 878-8808 ann.bigue@dentons.com A former National Energy Board Counsel, Ms. Bigué focuses on regulatory law and Aboriginal law in the fields of energy, mining, natural resources and environmental assessment. She represents corporate clients in the negotia- tion of agreements between Aboriginal communities and project proponents, and provides strategic advice on complex issues relating to Aboriginal rights. Bergner, Keith B. Lawson Lundell LLP (604) 631-9119 kbergner@lawsonlundell.com Mr. Bergner is a recognized authority on Indigenous law, energy, regulatory and environmental processes. He has appeared before all levels of courts, including the Supreme Court of Canada. He has experience relating to major natural resource projects in various industries, including oil & gas, LNG, pipe- lines, mining, and hydroelectric generation & transmission and infrastructure & transportation projects. Domestically, the industry's degree of commit- ment to innovation crystallized in 2012 with the formation of Canada's Oil Sands Innovation Alliance. Today, COSIA's membership accounts for more than 90 per cent of oil sands production in the country. "Ultimately, COSIA is a clearing house for innovation and technological solutions, with implementation le to individual companies," says Simon Baines in Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP's Calgary office. e organization's vision, as stated on its website, is to "enable responsible and sustainable growth of Canada's oil sands while delivering accelerated improvement in environmental performance through collaborative action and innovation." More particularly, COSIA aims to: • Produce oil from the oil sands with lower greenhouse gas emissions than other sources of oil; • Reduce the footprint intensity of oil sands mining on the land and wildlife; • Improve the management of oil sand tail- ings — the sand, silt, clay and water found in oil sands that remain behind aer extraction; and • Reduce water use and increase water recycling rates. e organization's ongoing initiatives include: • Exploring the use of carbon capture and storage options to divert carbon dioxide under- ground before it reaches the atmosphere, includ- ing a pilot project that engages algae to reduce GHG while producing valuable products; • Collaborating with other stakeholders to release a comprehensive review of technologies that will accelerate tailings treatment; and • Investigating steps to reduce freshwater use intensity by 50 per cent and the net water use intensity from the Athabasca River and its tributaries by 30 per cent, both by 2022. By joining COSIA, members commit to sharing experience and intellectual property with other members with a view to achieving these goals. As of July 2018, according to a report prepared by the Canadian Association of Petroleum Produc- ers, the organization's members had shared 981 distinct technologies and innovation that cost more than $1.4 billion to develop. Finally, with the announcement from Alberta Premier Jason Kenney's new United Conserva- tive Party (UCP) government that it intends to replace the $1.4-billion carbon tax imposed by the previous government with a Technology In- LEXPERT-RANKED LAWYERS

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