LOCATION/TYPE

NEWS HOME

[ exact phrase in "" • results by date ]

[ Google-powered • results by relevance ]


Archive
RSS

Add NWW headlines to your site (click here)

Get weekly updates

WHAT TO DO
when your community is targeted

RSS

RSS feeds and more

Keep Wind Watch online and independent!

Donate via Stripe

Donate via Paypal

Selected Documents

All Documents

Research Links

Alerts

Press Releases

FAQs

Campaign Material

Photos & Graphics

Videos

Allied Groups

Wind Watch is a registered educational charity, founded in 2005.

News Watch Home

Tribunal rules against Texas oil tycoon T. Boone Pickens in lawsuit over Ontario wind farms 

Credit:  Tycoon's Big Wind lawsuit rejected | By John Miner, The London Free Press | Friday, April 1, 2016 | www.lfpress.com ~~

A lawsuit by a Texas oil tycoon that alleged there was political interference at the highest levels in the awarding of wind farm contracts in Ontario has been rejected by an international tribunal.

In what sources say was a split decision, the tribunal confirmed Canada complied with its obligations under the North American Free Trade Agreement.

T. Boone Pickens sued under Chapter 11 of NAFTA, claiming damages of $653 million plus interest after his company, Mesa Power Group LLC, lost out in its bid to build four massive wind farms north of London.

Mesa said it would have spent $1.2 billion in Ontario.

The tribunal, in the decision released Friday, decided Pickens’s company should pay for all of the arbitration costs. It also awarded the Canadian government $2.9 million for legal costs.

In a statement welcoming the decision, the federal government noted it had worked closely with Ontario throughout the proceedings.

“The Government of Canada welcomed this open and collaborative approach,” the government statement said.

In their submission to the tribunal, lawyers for T. Boone Pickens alleged his company had been treated unfairly.

“The Mesa story is a story of a secret process, secret deals, arbitrary rules and selective enforcement of those rules in the service of political expediency, rather than public integrity and transparency that the ratepayers of Ontario deserve and that those proponents who would come here should expect,” Mesa lawyer Barry Appleton said in his closing submission to the panel’s three arbitrators at a hearing in Toronto in October 2014.

The lawsuit was launched in 2011 under NAFTA. It alleged that other wind farm companies, Florida-based NextEra Energy and Korean-based Samsung, were given illegal, preferential treatment and inside information that doomed Mesa’s projects.

“It was a cesspool. It was shameful. I feel very badly after seeing what went on here for my fellow Ontarians and the ratepayers of Ontario. They are having to bear the burden of the shameful behaviour,” Appleton said in a transcript from the hearing.

In its response, the Canadian government dismissed the claims, telling the tribunal Mesa failed to win contracts because of sloppy work.

“The claimant’s questions and its allegations this morning have been loaded with innuendo about corruption, about political cronyism, about, in their slide (show), bags of money being paid for favours. “Those are serious allegations against government in Canada. They should not be made lightly, and there is no evidence to support them,” Canada’s lead lawyer, Shane Spelliscy, said at the Toronto hearings.

Spelliscy said Mesa’s failures were self-inflicted.

“This is a case which is, as the expression goes, about sour grapes. It is a case about an investor who took a business risk and is unwilling to accept that that risk did not pay off,” he said.

Source:  Tycoon's Big Wind lawsuit rejected | By John Miner, The London Free Press | Friday, April 1, 2016 | www.lfpress.com

This article is the work of the source indicated. Any opinions expressed in it are not necessarily those of National Wind Watch.

The copyright of this article resides with the author or publisher indicated. As part of its noncommercial educational effort to present the environmental, social, scientific, and economic issues of large-scale wind power development to a global audience seeking such information, National Wind Watch endeavors to observe “fair use” as provided for in section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law and similar “fair dealing” provisions of the copyright laws of other nations. Send requests to excerpt, general inquiries, and comments via e-mail.

Wind Watch relies entirely
on User Funding
   Donate via Stripe
(via Stripe)
Donate via Paypal
(via Paypal)

Share:

e-mail X FB LI M TG TS G Share


News Watch Home

Get the Facts
CONTACT DONATE PRIVACY ABOUT SEARCH
© National Wind Watch, Inc.
Use of copyrighted material adheres to Fair Use.
"Wind Watch" is a registered trademark.

 Follow:

Wind Watch on X Wind Watch on Facebook Wind Watch on Linked In

Wind Watch on Mastodon Wind Watch on Truth Social

Wind Watch on Gab Wind Watch on Bluesky