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  #141  
Old Posted Jun 4, 2010, 1:51 AM
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Sun Gro Horticulture Income Fund wins court approval to convert structure
By The Canadian Press

VANCOUVER - Sun Gro Horticulture Income Fund (TSX:GRO.UN) said the Supreme Court of B.C. approved Monday a plan to convert the income trust to a corporate structure.

Unitholders of the peat moss producer voted 99.91 per cent in favour last week to convert the trust to a corporation named Sun Gro Horticulture Inc.

The Toronto Stock Exchange has conditionally approved the listing of the Sun Gro Horticulture shares under the symbol GRO.

Sun Gro is a producer and distributor of peat and bark-based growing mixes to plant growers in the U.S. and Canada.

Units in the fund were up seven cents at $3.90 on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Monday.
http://www.canadianbusiness.com/mark...ntent=b3517671
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  #142  
Old Posted Jun 4, 2010, 1:53 AM
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Rusoro profit soars to US$42.6 million on currency gains despite lower gold sales
By The Canadian Press

VANCOUVER - Rusoro Mining Ltd.'s first-quarter profits increased to US$42.6 million as a result of a change in the way foreign currency is translated at some of its subsidiaries but revenue fell due to fewer ounces of gold sold and a lower sale price.

Rusoro's foreign exchange gain increased to US$41.8 million from US$1.5 million a year earlier, the Vancouver-based gold producer (TSXV:RML) said Tuesday.

Revenues fell to US$15.3 million from US$30.2 million, when net income was US$500,000, due to a 44 per cent decrease in ounces of gold sold and a reduction in the average realized gold price.

The number of ounces sold fell to 22,760 in the first quarter of 2010, from 40,632 ounces a year earlier, while the average realized gold price fell to US$718 per ounce from US$742 in the first quarter of 2009.
http://www.canadianbusiness.com/mark...ntent=b3520342
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  #143  
Old Posted Jun 4, 2010, 1:54 AM
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Cantronic trims Q4 loss to $513,000 as revenues soar to $5.3 million
By The Canadian Press

VANCOUVER - Chinese acquisitions helped infrared vision specialist Cantronic Systems Inc. to trim its fourth-quarter loss to $513,000 as revenues soared to $5.3 million

A year earlier, the Vancouver-based company (TSXV:CTS) lost $540,000 for the period ended Jan. 31, 2009 when revenues were $400,000.

Cantronic lost $507,000 for the full financial year, compared to a $2.4 million loss in fiscal 2009. Revenues increased to $15.7 million from $3.7 million.

President James Zahn said Cantronic's rapid growth over the last year was the culmination of changes over 18 months, including its entry into the Chinese market and two strategic acquisitions.
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  #144  
Old Posted Jun 4, 2010, 1:55 AM
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Caerus Resource to buy Buritica gold project in Colombia
By The Canadian Press

VANCOUVER - Caerus Resource Corp. (TSXV:CA) says it intends to buy the Buritica gold project in Colombia with cash and stock and has arranged a private placement of shares and warrants to finance part of the deal.

The Vancouver-based company announced Tuesday it has signed a letter of intent with an unidentified individual in Colombia who is awaiting to receive title to 100 per cent of th mineral rights for the Buritica concession area.

Assuming the transaction goes ahead, Caerus would pay a total of US$1.2 million in cash and 500,000 of its shares in stages over a two-year period.

Caerus also announced that it has arranged to sell up to five million equity units, priced at 35 cents each or $1.75 in total to help pay for the transaction. Each unit will include one common share and a half warrant.

The company currently has about 18.6 million shares outstanding. The land purchase and equity offering would add about 5.5 million common shares, including five million from the equity offering excluding the exercise of warrants.

Caerus shares fell half a cent to 38.5 cents on the TSX Venture Exchange after the announcement.

The concession area is surrounded by ground owned by Continental Gold and also adjoins a small claim owned by AngloGold Ashanti Ltd. (NYSE:AU)

Within the boundaries of the Buritica Gold Project is a block also controlled by Continental Gold.
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  #145  
Old Posted Jun 4, 2010, 1:59 AM
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Westport Innovations reports fourth-quarter loss, revenue up 36 per cent
By The Canadian Press

VANCOUVER - Westport Innovations Inc. (TSX:WPT) reported a loss in its latest quarter as revenue grew 36 per cent compared with a year ago.

The low-emission engine developer said Tuesday it lost $12.2 million or 32 cents per share for the quarter ended March 31, compared with a loss of $12.7 million or 43 cents per share a year earlier.

Revenues for what was its fourth-quarter totalled $35.7 million, up from $26.3 million, helped by growth at its Cummins Westport joint venture.

"We've accomplished our goals in revenue for the quarter and beat last year's revenue performance despite tough market conditions," Westport chief executive David Demers said in a statement.

Last month, a U.S. investor increased his stake in Westport to 17.74 per cent. Kevin Douglas acquired roughly 1.3 million shares of Westport to bring his total holdings to just under seven million shares.

Shares in the company, which reported its results after the close of markets, were up 30 cents at $16.60 on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Tuesday.
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  #146  
Old Posted Jun 4, 2010, 2:08 AM
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Capstone says Yukon wildfire could affect operations at its Minto mine
By The Canadian Press

VANCOUVER - Capstone Mining Corp. (TSX:CS) says a Yukon wildfire has the potential to affect operations at its Minto mine if it continues to spread.

Operations are continuing as normal for now, but Capstone warned Wednesday that the fire is "spreading very quickly as a result of hot, dry conditions and strong winds."

It appears to have been started on Sunday by high winds blowing a dead tree into a power line that supplies the mine, sparking a ground fire. The fire was within 9.1 kilometres of the mine site as of Wednesday, Capstone said.

"This wildfire is very intense, aggressive and fast moving and is therefore a matter of serious concern to Capstone," company president Stephen Quin said in a news release.

"Our personnel at the Minto mine have developed an emergency plan with a series of triggers that could result in a staged curtailment or complete shut-down of operations and evacuation of personnel based on proximity to the mine infrastructure."

Capstone has lent contract mining equipment to fire crews to help battle the blaze.

Shares in Capstone added two cents to $2.26 in Wednesday trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange.
http://www.canadianbusiness.com/mark...ntent=b3538030
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  #147  
Old Posted Jun 4, 2010, 2:18 AM
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Sale of Winnipeg parking lot provides $1.9 million of cash to Huntingdon REIT
By The Canadian Press

RICHMOND, B.C. - Huntingdon Real Estate Investment Trust (TSX:HNT.UN) says it has received $1.9 million of net cash, after transaction costs and mortgage repayment, from the sale of a surface parking lot in Winnipeg.

The sale price of the property known as 170 Water St. was $3.5 million and Huntingdon used some of the proceeds to repay $1.6 million of first mortgage debt.

The real-estate investment trust, which has 81 income producing properties, said Thursday it would have an accounting gain of $1.2 million from the transaction.
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  #148  
Old Posted Jun 4, 2010, 2:41 AM
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Proposed Australian mining tax could push coking coal prices higher: Teck CEO
By Kristine Owram, The Canadian Press

TORONTO - A proposed 40 per cent mining tax in Australia could actually benefit Teck Resources Ltd. if coking coal producers in that country scale back production and push prices higher, says Teck president and CEO Don Lindsay.

"There is a positive scenario for us: if the government of Australia really does that, then those companies will invest less in coking coal production, and if the Canadian governments... don't do it to us and we continue with our growth, that's very good for us," Lindsay told a Goldman Sachs materials conference Thursday in New York.

Teck (TSX:TCK.B), which mines coal in British Columbia and Alberta, said it has so far received assurances from both Ottawa and Victoria that they won't follow Australia's lead and impose a big tax on mining companies to help pay down massive government debts incurred during the recession.

Alberta recently announced a new incentive program to encourage energy companies to drill technically challenging oil, gas and methane wells in the province, so it's unlikely that province would raise taxes for its resource companies either.

The proposed Australian tax has resulted in a massive backlash from major international mining companies with operations in that country, many of which have said they will halt investment in new projects or scale back existing operations if the tax comes into effect.

On Thursday, Anglo-Swiss mining giant Xstrata PLC said it will halt US$496 million worth of investments in a thermal coal project and a copper mine, putting the creation of 3,250 jobs at risk.

Teck has already executed a dramatic turnaround after taking a $9.8-billion loan to acquire Fording Coal Trust in mid-2008, just before the recession hit. Since then, the Vancouver-based resources company has repaid the debt and reinstated dividend payments.

Lindsay said the "cash will start to roll in" from some newly acquired assets this month, and although Teck is forecasting near-term growth of 40 per cent in its copper operations and 50 per cent in its coal operations, he doesn't expect to spend any more on acquisitions for the time being.

"I'm not sure why we'd need an acquisition," Lindsay said, adding that he hasn't seen any "transformational" opportunities.

Teck plans to let "that (cash) accumulate for a while and see how the world shakes out," Lindsay said.

"I'm conscious the markets are very volatile... so being a little conservative on the whole acquisition front wouldn't be such a bad thing," he added.

Lindsay's outlook on demand for the commodities that Teck produces — including copper, zinc, coal and eventually oil — is bright, despite ongoing worries about high levels of government debt in Europe.

"I don't think 1.3 billion smart, hard-working people in China really care that much about contagion in Europe and they want a better life and it takes commodities to do that," he said.

He added that he expects the Chinese currency to appreciate whether or not the government allows it to float on currency markets, as other countries have been pressuring it to do. This will give more purchasing power to the Chinese people, but it will also raise costs for Chinese coal producers, making Teck more competitive in global markets.

Shares in Teck lost 94 cents to $35.12 in Thursday trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange.
http://www.canadianbusiness.com/mark...ntent=b3544663
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  #149  
Old Posted Jun 5, 2010, 4:24 AM
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Alloy manufacturer IBC signs sales and distribution agreement with German firm
By The Canadian Press

VANCOUVER - IBC Advanced Alloys Corp. (TSXV:IB) announced Friday it has signed a sales and distribution agreement with "a leading German distributor" to handle its products in Germany.

No financial details of the agreement with Albromet Handelsgesellschaft mbH were disclosed.

The German concern is a distributor of specialized alloys for the plastic injection moulding, automotive, industrial components and other advanced manufacturing sectors.

"They (Albromet) have an extensive blue chip customer base in Germany which includes Bosch, Audi, Valeo, Thyssen Krupp and VW," IBC said in a news release.

"They are also in the process of expanding their market presence in eastern Europe, with a specific focus on the industrial and manufacturing economies of Poland and the Czech Republic.

Under the terms of the agreement both companies have agreed to annual target volumes and to maintain minimum inventory levels at Albromet's German warehouse to take advantage of the expanding European market for advanced non-ferrous and other alloys.

"This initial order and distribution agreement has the potential for significant development and will provide both companies with an excellent opportunity to build European market share and to drive demand for IBC's rare metal and beryllium-related alloys,'' said IBC president and CEO Anthony Dutton.

Vancouver-based IBC is an integrated manufacturer and distributor of beryllium-based alloys and related products serving a variety of industries including nuclear energy, automotive, telecommunications and a range of industrial applications.

IBC stock was up a penny, or more than eight per cent, at 13 cents at mid-morning on the TSX Venture market, with more than 800,000 shares traded.
http://www.canadianbusiness.com/mark...ntent=b3553471
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  #150  
Old Posted Jun 5, 2010, 4:25 AM
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Canadian, Saudi partners take step towards extracting metals from Red Sea mud
By The Canadian Press

VANCOUVER - Saudi Arabia has granted an exclusive 30-year licence for the extraction of zinc, copper and silver from an area of the Red Sea known as Atlantis II Deeps.

The licence is going to the Saudi minority of Diamond Fields International Ltd. (TSXFI), a Canadian-listed company that specializes in marine projects.

Diamond Fields describes the Atlantis II Deeps as a 60-square-kilometre area of the Red Sea that contains metal-enriched mud, the consistency of toothpaste.

The company says the Saudi government spent more than US$70 million in the 1970s on research into the deposits, which are thought to contain nearly two million tonnes of zinc and smaller amounts of copper and silver.

The licence was granted to Manafa International Trade Company of Saudi Arabia, which owns 49 per cent of a joint venture; Diamond Fields owns 51 per cent.

Diamond Fields is a successor to the company that discovered the giant Voissey's Bay nickel deposit in Labrador, one of the largest in the world.

The Canadian company's head office is in Vancouver. Its shares traded in Toronto on Friday at 27 cents, up half a cent.
http://www.canadianbusiness.com/mark...ntent=b3555224
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  #151  
Old Posted Jun 5, 2010, 4:26 AM
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Taiga Building Products earns Q4 profit compared with loss a year ago
By The Canadian Press

BURNABY, B.C. - Taiga Building Products Ltd. (TSX:TBL) said Friday it earned a profit in its latest quarter compared with a loss a year ago as revenue grew nearly 25 per cent.

The company said it earned $1.1 million or three cents per share for the quarter ended March 31 compared with a loss of $4.5 million or 14 cents per share a year ago.

Revenue for what was the company's fourth quarter totalled $223.1 million, up from $178.8 million.

Taiga is a wholesale distributor of building products.

Shares in the company, which reported its results after the close of markets, were up three cents at $1.30 on the Toronto Stock Exchange.
http://www.canadianbusiness.com/mark...ntent=b3559271
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  #152  
Old Posted Jun 5, 2010, 9:23 AM
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Originally Posted by red-paladin View Post
The problem is, that yes, only a few oil rigs / oil tankers have spectacular failures like this, but these disasters are so large in scope that it means that even 1 out of 30,000 is a big deal.

Just like Chernobyl was only one nuclear reactor to fail out of thousands, the cost of failure is so large that even one is too many. Granted oil spills aren't as bad as a nuclear meltdown disaster, but you get my point.

To say that 'it's nothing to get worked up about, only 0.1% failure rate is great!' means nothing if even one failure can wreak such damage.
my brother works in oil and he had to go Louisianna once years ago and he was surprised at just how bad the workmanship was down there so he wasn't so surprised at this leak
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  #153  
Old Posted Jun 28, 2010, 8:24 AM
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There's good news on the horizon for Vancouver's cruise-ship business


VANCOUVER SUN JUNE 26, 2010


During the Alaska cruise season from May through September, cruise ships pull up alongside Canada Place and at Ballantyne Pier to disgorge passengers returning from their scenic voyage and welcome new guests about to embark on their own. Crews are refreshed, the galleys restocked and the vessel refuelled.

The cruise-ship industry is important to Metro Vancouver, with every sailing contributing about $2 million in benefits to the region. In good years, the business is worth an estimated $1.4 billion to B.C., with 90 per cent of that revenue flowing to Metro Vancouver, and supports more than 7,500 jobs. This, unfortunately, has not been one of the good years.

Cruise traffic through Vancouver is down by 30 per cent from 2009, when 37 cruise ships carrying 898,473 revenue-passengers made 257 calls, an increase of five per cent over 2008 volumes. The decline led commentators to question Vancouver's competitiveness, especially in light of Seattle's new $72-million US cruise-ship terminal, and they cited weaknesses in marketing and infrastructure, as well as high costs and an ineffective public policy response.

But the slump in cruise traffic has little to do with Vancouver and much to do with Alaska. An ill-conceived ballot initiative in 2006 introduced a $50 head tax on every cruise passenger entering Alaskan waters. Cruiseship companies reacted by cutting capacity on their Alaska routes and redeploying their ships to more welcoming destinations. Because schedules are planned a couple of years in advance, the impact is becoming apparent only now.

Alaska has seen a drop in cruise traffic of about 17 per cent, but Vancouver has borne more than its fair share of the loss, partly because it is the only port for the more expensive cruise-and-fly packages, which give travellers more time in Alaska than the typical seven-day round-trip cruise does. Cabotage laws (the Jones Act) bar foreign-registered cruise ships operating out of Seattle from offering the same product. Vacationers booking travel during the recession tended to choose the cheaper round trips originating in Seattle. It goes without saying that it costs far less for Americans to fly from Chicago to Seattle than to Vancouver.

To his credit, Alaska Gov. Sean Parnell recognized the damage the tax had caused in lost revenue and jobs and decided to do something about it. He met with the cruise lines in March in Miami and they were able to make a deal that effectively cut the tax in half. The change passed the Alaska legislature in October -- too late to affect operations this year, but likely to spur growth in 2011 and beyond, assuming, of course, that the U.S. emerges from recession.

With the tax situation settled, Vancouver can highlight its advantages: it is one of the greenest ports on the West Coast, being the third, after Juneau and Seattle, to enable cruise ships to plug into the electrical grid in port rather than running their engines to maintain power.



Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/business...#ixzz0s8Nr2mM7
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  #154  
Old Posted Jun 28, 2010, 6:18 PM
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Thank you for posting those business stories.

The change in Alaska's head tax on cruise ship passengers bodes well for Vancouver. Until I read the Sun's article I did not know that the Seattle-Alaska route took passengers on the Pacific side of Vancouver Island and that the Inside Passege is the sole domain of the Vancouver market. That's a pretty healthy competetive advantage for us if it can be further levereaged.
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  #155  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2010, 10:24 PM
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IBI recommends Gazit-Globe after Canadian acquisitions

The "Buy" recommendation follows Gazit-Globe's acquisition of properties in Vancouver and Calgary.

Erez Wollberg1 Jul 10 09:57

IBI Investment House Ltd. real estate analyst Shai Lipman has given a "Buy" recommendation for Gazit-Globe (TASE:GLOB) following the real estate company's expansion of activities in Canada.

In its survey IBI said, "In our belief it will be cheaper to buy Gazit-Globe's shares today."

...

Gazit-Globe purchased a 27,000 square meter office block in Vancouver, British Colombia for C$84.5 million. The building has 98% occupancy. The second 4,000 square meter building in Calgary was acquired for C$15.1 million.

...

Gazit-Globe is a real estate company controlled by Chaim Katzman and Dori Segal, which focuses on income-producing real estate, mainly shopping malls anchored by large supermarket retail chains. Gazit-Globe was Israel's largest real estate company until the recent IPO of Azrieli Group.

http://www.globes.co.il/serveen/glob...70997&fid=1725
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  #156  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2010, 5:35 AM
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Originally Posted by SFUVancouver View Post
Thank you for posting those business stories.

The change in Alaska's head tax on cruise ship passengers bodes well for Vancouver. Until I read the Sun's article I did not know that the Seattle-Alaska route took passengers on the Pacific side of Vancouver Island and that the Inside Passege is the sole domain of the Vancouver market. That's a pretty healthy competetive advantage for us if it can be further levereaged.
Which makes sense, because when travelling from an American port (Seattle) to an other American port (Anchorage), why would you want to go though another country's territory (the Inside Passage is between the Canadian Mainland and Vancouver Island).

It just means they need to stay in international waters to travel between Alaska and Washington (but they can turn on the slot machines). It also makes for a longer boring trip until they get to 54-40 and can get close to the Alaska coastline again.
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  #157  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2010, 6:09 AM
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Originally Posted by jsbertram View Post
Which makes sense, because when travelling from an American port (Seattle) to an other American port (Anchorage), why would you want to go though another country's territory (the Inside Passage is between the Canadian Mainland and Vancouver Island).

It just means they need to stay in international waters to travel between Alaska and Washington (but they can turn on the slot machines). It also makes for a longer boring trip until they get to 54-40 and can get close to the Alaska coastline again.
Well, it's also a faster way to get to Alaska than the Inside Passage if you've only got 7 days. One of the reasons Seattle became viable as a home port for Alaska cruises is that older cruise ships that were too slow to be able to do the round-trip in a week have been replaced with newer, faster ones.

What's not mentioned in the article is that BC overall still benefits from the cruise industry even if Vancouver itself is losing ships. Under the Jones Act, ships carrying passengers between US ports need to make an international stop, which means that cities like Victoria and Prince Rupert benefit at Vancouver's expense.
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  #158  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2010, 6:16 AM
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..What's not mentioned in the article is that BC overall still benefits from the cruise industry even if Vancouver itself is losing ships. Under the Jones Act, ships carrying passengers between US ports need to make an international stop, which means that cities like Victoria and Prince Rupert benefit at Vancouver's expense.
But the benefit to BC is far less if a ship is not home-ported here. Provisioning just one ship in Vancouver injects millions into the economy, vs a short stop in Victoria for a sightseeing tour.
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  #159  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2010, 6:27 AM
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But the benefit to BC is far less if a ship is not home-ported here. Provisioning just one ship in Vancouver injects millions into the economy, vs a short stop in Victoria for a sightseeing tour.
yep, agreed. But still better than having those ships go past us and not stop at all, right...?

Unfortunately, the vast majority of cruise-goers to Alaska are still American, so better connections and cheaper flights give Seattle a bit of an edge. Still, hopefully better days ahead with Disney cruises making Vancouver their home port next year.
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  #160  
Old Posted Jul 6, 2010, 8:26 PM
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Some more good news for Vancouver's cruise sector for 2011

Oceania Cruises to Offer First-Ever Alaska Cruises for Summer 2011
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