Hamish Stewart
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Analysis, Energy, Politics
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September 21st 2016
A U.S. bank leads its North American peers with divestment of $4 billion USD in commercial assets, as legal scholars advise mission-driven organizations and pension funds on climate change strategy
I was shaken when I got a letter from a major law firm in March 2016. It was sent by media lawyers representing the fourth wealthiest family in Canada, and they didn’t like what we were doing.
The friendly greeting turned into a hasty retreat after a Montreal student asked the politician whether he would reject a major British Columbia pipeline project proposed by a Texas company.
It's been more than a month since the pipeline company promised to fix a French keyword search issue for the Energy East application, brought to light by National Observer.
Graham Fraser is predicting there will be backlash against the English-only documents submitted by TransCanada Corp regarding the Energy East pipeline.
The total includes just over $220,000 in relocation expenses for five staffers in the Prime Minister's Office, just one of whom racked up almost $127,000 for "moving services."
The prime minister was asked why his Liberal government has yet to comply with compliance orders from the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal on the delivery of child welfare services on reserves.
As a non-Inuk representing the 85 per cent of the population of Nunavut who are Inuit in the Senate of Canada, I am very wary of using the term 'racism' to criticize any actions or belief.
The CEO of Imperial Oil said Wednesday he's confident that two multibillion-dollar oilsands projects facing regulatory review in Alberta will be approved,
The documents, a collection of archived internal corporate reports donated to the Calgary museum, contradict what the company, Imperial Oil, had been telling the public for years about climate change.
Erik Solheim says Nokia lost the cell phone market because it didn't embrace touch screens, while Steve Jobs and Korean manufacturers spearheaded change.
Trost, known for his opposition to same-sex marriage, was one of the guest speakers at a demonstration to protest Ontario's sexual education curriculum.
It has been something of a taboo in Canada−China relations, a subject rarely raised in public but clearly on the minds of successive Canadian governments.