Sunday, March 23, 2008

Russia moves to control foreign ownership

This is from the CBC.
There seems to be a trend towards more nationalism in Russian politics. At the same time this will protect Russian oligarchs allied with Putin from competition unchecked purchase of Russian assets by international capital. The open season on former Soviet assets that prevailed after the collapse of communism is now over as far as foreigners are concerned.
In Canada we have already privatised oil and gas and much of the resource is being developed by foreign companies. NAFTA ensures that Canada will be a reliable supplier of energy and other natural resources to the U.S. Our pipelines even go from north to south rather than east to west to so that Eastern Canada must rely on imported oil for the most part. We have no national energy plan and we do not stockpile any reserve supplies for emergency as does the U.S.
Our taxpayers have paid for the development of important space technology and we are now about to sell it to a U.S. weapons maker. Earlier we developed a high tech airplane and then dumped the project probably because of pressure from the U.S.


Russia moves to control foreign ownership
Last Updated: Friday, March 21, 2008 | 4:19 PM ET Russian legislators have taken the first step to limiting foreign investment in 42 strategic sectors, including energy, mass media and aerospace.


The Kremlin is already in control of the oil and gas business, and this bill will enable it to dominate other key sectors.

The bill gives a Russian commission of economic and security officials a veto over any deal in which a foreign company wants to buy control — more than 50 per cent — of Russian companies in the named sectors.

The proposed rule is even tougher for companies controlled by foreign governments. They will need permission from the commission to buy more than 25 per cent in a Russian company covered by the legislation.

Russia's lower house of parliament gave preliminary approval to the bill on Friday.

The approval suggests that the bill is likely to become law without substantial changes, because the remaining approvals required are by bodies either controlled by the Kremlin or under its influence.

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