97/16 - Jan 17, 2019

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Snow fun Otway hosted the Nordic Winter Festival on Sunday.

Thursday, January 17, 2019

Natural resources forum coming Frank PEEBLES 97/16 staff

The B.C. Natural Resources Forum drills deep into industries derived from the land like forestry, mining, petroleum, natural gas, agriculture, fisheries and tourism. Those who gather at the annual event are some of the primary figures in government, major corporations, First Nations, goods and services delivery, environmental protection, academia, trades and other stakeholder groups. This year’s forum runs Jan. 22-24 and as always it is held in Prince George at the Civic and Convention Centre. Chief organizer Dan Jepson of C3 Alliance Corp. has attended all 15 of the past forums and for the past five has been the lead coordinator. He doesn’t live in Prince George but insists this is the only place he would consider holding the event created by then-MLA Pat Bell. “This has to stay in Prince George. That’s one of the secrets of its success,” Jepson said. “I was just telling (Prince George mayor) Lyn Hall about this not long ago. I was showing him the speakers’ list and said if you got this same program with the same 48 speakers (at the Vancouver Trade & Convention Centre), what happens is, people arrive, their ties are very tight and their skirts are perfect, they are on their panel for their one hour, they stay and get scrummed for 10 minutes, and they leave. “The delightful thing and the sweet spot with Prince George is people are more relaxed, the majority of our keynote speakers stay for their one if not both days and there are incredible opportunities for the delegates to interact in a positive way with First Nations, business and government leaders. That’s really the most important part of it.” Another consideration in Prince George’s favour is the isolation, used as

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Premier John Horgan was one of the keynote speakers at the 2018 B.C. Natural Resources Forum. The event runs again this year from Jan. 22 to Jan. 24, at the Prince George Conference and Civic Centre. a positive trait. In major urban centres, even the delegates leave the main event when their key topics aren’t in the spotlight. They go home or back to the office after their items of interest. But in Prince George, interest and active attention are sequestered and it is in a city where their topics are the everyday reality of the population.

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“Another very unique sweet spot, it’s a fascinating fact that shocks me, is we will see mining people tell us that the best talks were the forestry panel, and the forestry people will come to us and say the best talks were energy, because what traditionally happens is, if you’re in forestry you only really go to forestry conferences. You never hear anything about mining or

natural gas or those types of other things. So that ability to cross-pollinate between sectors, academia, government, First Nations, is just... you can’t underestimate the value of that.” There is a monetary value as well to the Prince George region. Continued on page 4

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97/16 - Jan 17, 2019 by Prince George Citizen - Issuu