Abstract The Uranium Development Partnership, UDP was created by Enterprise Saskatchewan which itself is a conglomorate of business interests tasked with eliminating regulations and barriers to economic growth. The UDP was a special commission of nuclear lobbies and self interested uranium giants and with the help of a public relations firm brought forth policy for a whole sale expansion of their own industry. THe UDP report which made 20 recommendations to government was touted as an expert panel on alternative energy and that nuclear power was the answer to our climate crisis. The UDP report was co-written by 4 of the largest multinational energy companies in the world. At the time of the filming Critical Mass, Bruce Power was owned by Cameco and Transcanada. The Four energy companies are Cameco, Areva, Bruce Power , and Transcanada. UDP caught on tape In the summer of 2009, filmmaker Myek O'Shea and economist Brett Dolter travel across the province of Saskatchewan following a public consultation process regrading the uranium industry's proposal to greatly expand operations in the north, establishing an international nuclear energy grid with a base here in Saskatchewan . This was the UDP report, written by Bruce Power, Cameco, AREVA, and TransCanada. So for $3 million tax dollars an "expert panel" was commissioned to report on energy alternatives in Saskatchewan. However, the phychological framework of the PR campaign (designed by McKenzie and associates) proposed we look at the nuclear option, not against other energy alternatives, but amongst other uranium development recommendations. The public consultations were an attempt at a democratic decision making process. This film is an attempt to represent 1000s of voices that were systematically pigeonh oled into the Perrins Report, which you can download from captainpower.ca Myek O'Shea Film Director