Slawinski

Case Solution for Talisman Energy Inc.: The Decision to Enter Iraq

Complete Case details are given below :

Case Name :      Talisman Energy Inc.: The Decision to Enter Iraq
Authors :           Pratima Bansal, Natalie Slawinski
Source :             Ivey Publishing
Case ID :            909M35
Discipline :        Business & Government Relations
Case Length :    17 pages
Solution Sample availability : YES
Plagiarism : NO (100% Original work)
Description for case is given below :
In June 2008, the chief executive officer of Talisman Energy Inc. (Talisman) and his senior executive team met with the company’s board of directors. The purpose of this meeting was to debate Talisman’s proposed entry into the oil-rich Kurdistan region of Iraq. This move was potentially very lucrative for Talisman but was fraught with risks. These risks were exacerbated by Talisman’s previous foray into Sudan; during that expansion Talisman had been accused of complicity in human-rights abuses, stemming from industry-accepted royalties and fees it had paid to the government. This payment of fees was held as an example by public interest groups to allege that Talisman was indirectly funding the Sudanese civil war. Talisman’s reputation had suffered to the point where the ire of investors and U.S. and Canadian governments was sufficient for Talisman to exit Sudan in 2003. There were many questions about the proposed move to Iraq, including the political situation, the views of the U.S. and Canadian government, and especially the US$220 million fee payable to the Kurdistan Regional Government. Should Talisman enter Iraq, and if so, could they avoid experiencing the same outcome as Sudan?
 
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Case Solutions for Don’t Just Dump It!: Saving Sandy Pond

Complete Case details are given below :
Case Name :      Don’t Just Dump It!: Saving Sandy Pond
Authors :           Robert W. Sexty, Natalie Slawinski, Kristen C Baker
Source :             North American Case Research Association (NACRA)
Case ID :            NA0223
Discipline :        Business Ethics
Case Length :    19 pages
Solution sample availability : YES
Plagiarism : NO (100% Original work)
Description for case is given below :
In July 2009, Vale NL began building a $2.17 billion nickel refinery in Long Harbour, Newfoundland and Labrador. The refinery would bring economic prosperity by creating 1,600 to 2,000 jobs during construction and 400 to 500 permanent jobs in an area of high unemployment. The project’s environmental assessment process began 2006 and the company had successfully completed the required environmental impact statements for the government. A major environmental issue was the disposal of tailings from the refinery, and the approved solution was to store them in a natural lake known as Sandy Pond. Members of several environmental NGOs had opposed the use of the lake as a “tailings impoundment area” and formed the Sandy Pond Alliance for the Protection of Canadian Waters (SPA). The use of natural lakes was allowed, but SPA believed that the regulation that permitted the use was inconsistent with environmental legislation. SPA had to decide how to challenge the use of tailings ponds at Long Harbour and elsewhere in Canada, and whom to target in its efforts. Instead of being designed as a management decision-making exercise, this case places students in the position of environmentalists as they decide what course of action to initiate.

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