A 8e1ninar: rr11e Eco110111ic I1nplicatio11s of E11virontne11taJ l)rotection Imperial Oil Limited Seminar: 3 May 31 June1, 1971 3.11:? 8113711113 Hotel, Toronto at 1.1? I .. 2 Seminar Program Chair111c11.I.A. Coga11 / I..I). F1,ts1;r Jlonday. Jfay :-3[ 9:00 a.m. Pro, ·incial Room \\ .0. 'l\rnits \\ clcomc and lntroduclion H.B. Clare Definition, Effccl$, Organization POLLUTION R.l\1. l\Iaier J.C. nderhill R.A. Hemstock 12:30 p.m. London Room OIL l PER PECTIVI~ 1) Demand/ upply 2) Frontier / Offshore Logistics THE ARCTICAND OILEnvironmental Considerations LU ·c11£0 2:00 p.m. Provincial Room Gordon Haight A.W. Wirth R.S. Grout 5:-1-5.6:45p.m. J\{ewYork Room COMPA Y/ INDUSTRY/ PLANTREQUIREMENTS 1) Producing 2) Refining 3) Transportation RECEPTION-DINNER Tuesday. .Jurn' J 9:00 a.m. Provincial Room George Brydon D.L. McGillivray W.. Sande 12:30 p.m. Starlight Room 2:00 p.m. Provincial Room CONSUMERIMPLICATIONS LU CHEON Dr. D.A.L. Auld TUE BROAD OCIALCO T BENEFITPICTURE Unit'ersity of Guelph Or. Arthur mith Chairman, The Ero11om1f ' Counril of Cfmfuln CLOSINGDISCUSSIO 5 4 DOUGLAS A. L. AULD is assistant professor and acting chairman, Department of Economics, University of Guelph. He has a B.A. from the University of Western Ontario, an M.A. from the University of Toronto, and a Ph.D. from the Australian National University. Dr. Auld is the author of a number of papers and reports and his chief interests are government finance and the economics of pollution. DEN IS P. CAPLICE is director, industrial waste division, Ontano Water Resources Commission. A B.A.Sc. and an M.A.Sc. graduate of the University of Toronto, he joined the OWRC in 1959 as a field engineer. He has held a number of positions with the commission and assumed his present duties in 1967. LEO CE CHENARD is deputy minister, New Brunswick Department of Fisheries and the Environment. He has a B.A. and Honorary D.S.C. from Universite du Sacre-Coeur, and a B.Sc.P. from Universite Laval. He has been deputy minister of Fisheries, ew Brunswick, and secretary and vice-president, New Brunswick Fisherman's Loan Commission. He is a member of the Federal Provincial Committee for Atlantic Fisheries, a member of the executive of the Canadian Agriculture Committee and a member of the Canadian Delegation to NATO. JAMES M. COURTRIGHT is vice-principal, development and information, Queen's University. He has a B.A. from the University of Ottawa and is an honors graduate of Queen's in civil engineering. Prior to his appointment at Queen's in 1970 he was coordinator, environmental control, Shell Canada Limited, and has held a number of other senior positions with that company. He is a director of the Ontario Chamber of Commerce and a member of the environmental quality committee of the Metropolitan Toronto Board of Trade . ARU K. DATTA is associate professor and acting chairman, Department of Economics, University of New Brunswick. He has an M.A. from Calcutta University, and a Ph.D. from the State University of New York, Buffalo. He has taught at Loyola College, Montreal, Bucknell University and Dickinson College, Penn., and State University of New York, Buffalo. Dr. Datta is a consultant to the Atlantic Development Council and to the New Brunswick Department of Regional Expansion. His chief field of interest is economic growth and development. A. T. DAVIDSON is assistant deputy minister (water), Department of Fisheries and Forestry, Ottawa. He has a B.A. from Queen's University and an M.A. from the University of Toronto. From 1953 to 1958 he was assistant deputy minister of the Saskatchewan Department of Natural Resources, and from 1959 to 1961 was chief resources division, Department of Northern Affairs' and Natural Resources, Ottawa. In 1961 Mr. Davidson became a director of Agricultural and Rural Development Act (ARDA), and in 1964 assistant deputy minister (rural development). He a sumed his present position in 1967. 7 6 CHRISTIA DELAET is secretary-general, Canadian Council of Resource Ministers. A native of Belgium, he holds degrees in Arts and in Sciences from the universities of Louvain and Brussels, and an M.A. from the Universite de Montreal. He is currently completing his doctoral studies. Mr. de Laet is a lecturer at the University of Montreal's Graduate School of Planning, a member of the ational Research Council associate committee on scientific criteria for environmental quality, a member of the World Health Organization expert committee on environmental health, and of various other environmental groups. REAL DEMERS is director, industrial division, Quebec Water Board, Department of Municipal Affairs, Quebec. A B.Eng . graduate of McGill University, he worked for a number of years in private industry before taking up his present position in 1965. He is a member of the Canadian Institute on Pollution Control and a member of !'Association quebecoise des techniques de l'eau. NILS DE VOS is professor and head of the Commerce Department, Mount Allison University. He is a chartered accountant and has a B.A. and B.Comm. from Sir George Williams University, and is chairman of the long-range educational planning committee of the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants. His chief fields of rnterest are accounting theory and management. ROY E. GEORGE is chairman, Department of Commerce, Dalhousie University. He has a B.Sc. and Ph.D. from London University and an M.A. from Bristol University. He is the author of the books "Technological Redundancy in a Small Isolated Society", and "A Leader and a Laggard", as well as a number of articles for various economic and business journals. He has been a consultant to various government bodies, private businesses and trade unions. His particular field of interest is regional economic development. CHARLES C. HALTON is senior ministry executiv e, policy, planning and major projects, Department <>fTransport, Ottawa. A B.Sc. and an M.Sc. graduate of the University of London he worked for many years with the British Aircraft Corporation. In 1969 he was director of science and technology, Canadian Transport Commission and assumed his present position in 1970. BARRY E. HICKS is associate professor, School of Business Administration, University of Western Ontario. A chartered accountant, he has a B.Comm. from the University of Toronto, an M.B.A. from McMaster University, and a Ph.D. from the University of Illinois. His chief field of interest is program planning and budgeting in the non-business sector. H. L. HOGGE is director, Division of Pollution Control, Alberta Department of the Environment. A chemical engineering graduate of the University of Alberta, he has been an employee of the Alberta Government since 1950. He is the author of a number of environmental articles and papers. 9 8 ROBERT D. HOWLAND is chairman, National Energy Board. A graduate of Brandon University and the London School of Economics, he worked for many years with the Nova Scotia government in a number of positions including that of deputy minister, Department of Trade and Industry. From 1955 to 1957 Dr. Howland was an advisor to the Royal Comm ission on Canada's Economic Prospects and from 1957 to 1959 was a member of the Royal Commission on Energy. In 1959 he was appointed vice-chairman of the NEB and became chairman in 1968. F. H. KNELMAN is professor, Humanities of Science Department, Sir George Williams University, Montreal. He has a B.A. from the University of Manitoba, a B.A.Sc. from the University of Toronto, an M.Eng. from McGill University, and a Ph.D. from the University of London, England. Dr. Knelman has held teaching posts at McGill and York University, Toronto, and South-East Technical School, Northampton Polytechnic and Westham Polytechnic, all in England. He has been a consultant to a number of industry, academic and government bodies. G. W. HOWARD is secretary and director of administration, Saskatchewan Water Resources Commission. He is secretary of the province's inter-departmental Committee on Environmental Pollution, secretary of the Qu'Appelle Basin Study, and secretary of the South Saskatchewan Reservoir Board. He holds a B.Comm. from the University of Alberta. A. B. JACKSON is acting chairman, Ontario Energy Board. A B.A. graduate of the University of British Columbia, he is also a graduate of Osgoode Hall Law School and was called to the B.C. Bar in 1936 and the Ontario Bar in 1965. Prior to joining the Ontario Energy Board he worked for a number of years with the Public Utilities Commission of B.C. A. DIGBY HUNT is assistant deputy minister, northern development, Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, Ottawa. A geology graduate of the University of London he joined the department in 1960 after working for a number of years with petroleum companies in western Canada . He has been chief of the resource managem en t division and director of the northern economic development branch of the department. Mr. Hunt is a director of Panarctic Oils Ltd., the government-industry consortium .currently . exploring for oil and natural gas m the Arctic . 0. WARREN MAIN is professor and director of the School of Business, University of Toronto. He has a B.A. from McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont., and an M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Toronto. He has been assista nt and associate professor, College of Commerce, University of Saskatchewan, and ha s held a number of teaching positions, including that of professor, Institute of Business Administration, University of Toronto. His particular field of interest is econo mics and he is the author of the books "The Canadian Nickel Industry", "Economic Systems of th e West", and "Economic Systems of the Commonwealth". 10 JEA -GUY PAQUl'.."I'is vice-dean (research), Faculty of Science, Universite Laval. He has a B.Sc. and Ph.D. from Univer ite Laval and an M.A. from the Universite de Pari , and has been director of the department of electrical engineering, Science Faculty, Universite Laval. He is author of the book "Systeme de controle automatique " . His chief field of interest i research administration. JOH H. PARKER is deputy commissioner, The l\orthwest Territories. A B.Sc. graduate of the University of Alberta, he worked for a number of years as a mining engineer in Saskatchewan and the .W.T. and was president and partner of a consulting engineering firm. He has been a councillor and mayor of Yellowknife, .W.T., and in 1966 was appointed a member of the Advisory Commission on the Development of Government in The orthwest Territories. Mr. Parker was appointed to his present position in 1967. LUCIE PICHE is vice-rector, development, Universite de Montreal. He has a B.Sc., an M.A. and a Ph.D. from the Universite de Montreal. He has been director of the chemistry department and vice-dean and director of studies, Faculty of Science, of that institution. He is a member of the ational Research Council, the Quebec Wa~er Consortium, and his particular area of _interest 1s industrial consultation in the field of alf and water pollution. ll DAVID J. RAPPORT is visiting ass istant professor, Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser Univer sity. Il e has a B.B.A. , M.A. and Ph.D. from the Univer sity of Michigan . He has been a research associate, In stitut e for Int ernati onal Commerce, University of Michigan, and a postdoctoral fellow, Univ ersity of Toront o. His chi ef field of intere st is theoretical biol ogy and he is the author of a numb er of paper s on that subject. GORDON C. C. ROBINSO is assistant professor, Departm ent of Botany, Univ ersity of Manit oba. He has a B.Sc. from St. Andrew s Univ ersity, Scotland, and a Ph.D. from the University of British Columbia. He has taught at Simon Fraser University and was a resear ch fellow at Uni versity College of North Wale s . His chief field of intere st is aquatic ecology and he has writt en a numb er of papers on that subje ct. JEAN A. ROY is director gen eral, environm ental hygiene, Ministere des Affaires Municipale s, Quebec. He has a B.A. from Seminair c de Quebec, a B.Sc. from Universite Laval, and an M.Sc. fr om the Massachusetts In stitut e of Techn ology. Mr. Roy is a member of the Water Pollution Control Federation, the Air Pollution Control Association , !'Association quebecoise des technique s de l'eau, and other environmental bodies. 13 12 WILLIAM J. SCHLATTER is professor of accounting and dean of the Faculty of Business, McMaster University. He has an A.B., A.M. and Ph.D. from the University of Illinois. He has been an instructor at Yale University and a professor at the University of Michigan. His chief field of interest is econom ics as related to accounting and he is the author of a number of articles on that subject and co-author of the text "Introductory Accounting". ARTHUR J. R. SMITH is chairman of the Economic Council of Canada. He is a graduate in mathematics and political economy, McMaster University, and economics, Harvard University. He was secretary-treasurer and director of research of the Private Planning Association of Canada, 1957-1963, and a director of the Economic Council of Canada 1963-1967. In addition to chairing the ECC Dr. Smith is a member of the National Research Committee of the Canadian Institute of International Affairs and of th e Social Science Research Council of Canada. J. GRAHAM SMITH is chairman, Department of Economics, McGill University . He has a B.A. from the University of ottingham, England, and an M.A. and Ph.D. from Ohio State University. He has held teaching posts at the University of Florida, Ohio State University, Wellesley College, Mass., University of East Africa and McGill. His chief fields of interest are applied economic analysis, managerial economics, and international finance and development. J. C. STABLER is associate professor of eco. University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon. noIDICS, . . f He has a B.A. and Ph .D. from the Umvers1ty o Utah. His chief field of interest is regional and urban economics and he has written a number of publications on that subject. RALPH B. TOOMBS is senior oil and gas advi sor, Department of Energy, Mines and Resourc es, Ottawa. He has a B.A., B.A.Sc., and M.Sc. from the University of British Columbia and has worked for the federal government since 1952. From 1958 to 1959 he was research director of the Royal Commission on Energy, and in 1964 was appointed assistant chief, mineral research division of the Energy, Mines and Resources Department. He assumed his present duties in 1968. PETER WARNER, M.D., is chairman of the Manitoba Clean Environment Commission. Prior to his appointment to that post earlier this year he was assistant deputy minister and director of health services, Manitoba Department of Health and Social Development. He holds an M.B., B.S., M.D. (pathology) and Ph.D. (Pathology) from th e University of London. Dr. Warner is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine, a Fellow of the College of Pathologists of Great Britain, and is associated with several societies pertaining to pathology and microbiology in North America and abroad. 15 ROBERT \V. WRIGHT is professor of economics and