Sarah Lawrynuik
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News, Politics
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September 16th 2019
A research team in the province's northwest is touching on some of the most polarized debates going on in the country: climate change and the potential dangers of transporting — and spilling — oil.
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More in today's news
Through cynicism and hope, activists hope voting local will bring climate action to parliament.
Stephanie Wood
News, Energy, Politics
| September 16th 2019
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Kenney's war room is good for oil and himself but bad for the country. Without major reductions in oilsands pollution, Canada will not meet its climate commitments.
Gerald Kutney
Opinion, Energy, Politics
| September 16th 2019
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The federal party leaders have spent the first days of the election campaign talking policy, as they'd like, and dismissing and defending candidates over old social-media posts, which they'd rather not.
Joanna Smith
News, Politics
| September 13th 2019
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Phytoplankton blooms are putting on a unique and colourful show in the waters along Newfoundland's eastern coast.
The Canadian Press
News, Politics
| September 13th 2019
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Newly published research is providing more compelling evidence that a common insecticide is harming migratory birds.
Bob Weber
News, Politics
| September 13th 2019
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A provincial cabinet minister in Newfoundland and Labrador has resigned following comments deemed racist by one of the province's largest Indigenous groups.
Michael MacDonald
News, Politics
| September 13th 2019
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Armed with a court judgment that potentially expands access to medical aid in dying across the country, one of the Quebecers who led the legal fight described it on Thursday, September 12, 2019, as a win for those struggling with incurable, debilitating diseases.
Stéphanie Marin
News, Politics
| September 13th 2019
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Closer inspections of the ripening apple crop in Nova Scotia's fertile Annapolis Valley have revealed the damage caused by post-tropical storm Dorian was worse than first thought.
Michael MacDonald
News, Politics
| September 13th 2019
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Alberta's United Conservative government plans to eliminate its stand-alone offices for climate change policy and environmental monitoring, a move some say will damage the province's standing and its ability to make science-based plans.
Bob Weber
News, Politics
| September 15th 2019
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High log prices and dwindling timber supply are driving the crisis in British Columbia's forestry industry that has devastated communities and kneecapped the provincial economy, observers say.
Laura Kane
News, Politics
| September 15th 2019
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