Monday, July 05, 2010

Toronto the Good: After the G20 riots, Toronto blacksout from transformer fire

A strange summer, with the financial crisis to crawl-out from under, only to be followed by a threatening  re-recession.  With the reversal of the pendulum in Europe -- Germany under the helm of Angelika Merkel, and the nu coalition govt in Britain (Tories and LibDems), and the Dutch dumping the centrist Christian Democrats while giving the lead to free-enterise and anti-immigrant upswing parties (yet, no majority there either), and the pressure of both countries, Britain and Germany, at the G8 Summit to assure passage of a document committing to austerity.  UK is the first to adopt some key concepts of the document "across the board," as is said.  The tide has turned in Europe, and many of these countries are trying to wrestle down their deficits and sovereign debts.  After the payout to Greece.  And Spains looks as tho it's held together by cellophane and bandages.  Who can see Greece as anything but a basket case, bailed out by a hub of German banks in concert with the German govt.  So Greece has bilked and milked the German cow dry.

Greece squandered its stewardship harmoniously bringing Turkey into Europe.  Now, Greece is the hinterland on the European continent.  And Turkey is turning east, to take leadership of the Muslim Mideast, breaking its alliance with Israel, yet claiming a role of Muslim Mideast international good neiborliness for Arabic-speaking / -writing populations.

-- Owlbie Scowlbie



Toronto hit by blackout after transformer fire

TORONTO (Reuters) – A fire at a Toronto transformer station knocked out power to much of the city on Monday, snarling traffic in the midst of a blistering heatwave, but appearing to have little impact on financial markets.
Hydro One, the provincial power company, said the blackout was due to a fire at a transformer station in west Toronto. The company said firefighters were still battling the fire and said it was working to restore power.
Just after 6:00 p.m. (2200 GMT), power was beginning to be restored on parts of the system.
The outage, which brought back memories of the 2003 blackout that hit Toronto and much of the U.S. eastern seaboard, also affected power at the Fairmont Royal York hotel in downtown Toronto, where Queen Elizabethis due to have dinner later on Monday.
The outage hit around 4:45 p.m. on the hottest day of the year so far in Toronto. By late afternoon, temperatures were still well above 30 degrees Celsius in high humidity, prompting heavy use of air conditioners.
power outage map on the website of Toronto Hydro showed much of the western half of Toronto affected by the power outage.
The blackout darkened screens on some trading floors of downtown banks and knocked out traffic lights, prompting some people to exit their cars and direct traffic.
Transit service was disrupted on both subway and surface bus and streetcar lines, the Toronto Transit Commission said.
Shaun Osborne, chief currency strategist at TD Securities, a unit of Toronto-Dominion Bank, said the outage had little impact on markets, due to the late hour. It was also a light trading day in Canada because of the U.S. Independence Day holiday.
"It's not the entire floor. Some people have lost power and other people haven't. We're probably pretty lucky in that it's a quiet afternoon," he said.
The Toronto Stock Exchange did not return calls seeking comment on the potential impact on settlements of late trades.
The power outage follows widespread disruption in the downtown core last week when rioting broke out during the G20 meeting of leaders of wealthy and developing countries.
(Reporting by Cameron French, additional reporting by Pav Jordan, Solarina Ho and Ka Yan Ng; Editing by Frank McGurty)
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