John Woodside
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News, Energy, Politics
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May 31st 2022
Canada's biggest banks are behind a controversial loan to the massively over-budget oilsands pipeline, new data reveals.
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More in today's news
Canada should play a leading role in the global push to make mass environmental destruction an international crime, the young people behind an open letter to the federal government say.
Morgan Sharp
News, Next Gen Insider
| May 31st 2022
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In her book Still Hopeful, Maude Barlow asks what can be done to “inspire young people to see that the life of an activist is a good life?"
Peter G. Prontzos
Reviews
| May 31st 2022
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Independent Sen. Rosa Galvez was struck by the influence lobbyists have on environmental regulation and the imbalanced nature of government consultations when she joined the Senate in December 2016.
Natasha Bulowski
Analysis, Politics, Ottawa Insider
| May 31st 2022
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The Ring of Fire, about 500 kilometres northeast of Thunder Bay, is home to a 5,000-square-kilometre mineral deposit. The province’s plans include a $1-billion investment to build roads to access those deposits, but the project has been up in the air for years.
Cloe Logan
News
| May 31st 2022
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As Ontario's electoral candidates float plans to reduce cost at the tills, food banks and food security experts say their food-focused approach is distracting from the main problem: Poverty and incomes.
Marc Fawcett-Atkinson
News, Food Insider
| May 31st 2022
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Electric vehicles lose their impact if they're powered by fossil fuels, say critics, but only three political leaders in Ontario have committed to phasing out gas-fired electricity generation.
Kaarina Stiff
News, Energy, Politics
| May 31st 2022
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According to a new study, chemicals dumped in the 1970s are still seeping into the food chain. But the Yurok Tribe is confident the birds will be OK.
Brian Oaster
News
| May 31st 2022
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A process is underway in British Columbia to temporarily defer logging in priority old-growth forests, allowing time for the government to work with First Nations to decide how they should be managed in the long term.
Brenna Owen
News, Politics
| May 30th 2022
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The officially disclosed carbon footprints of Canada’s largest oil companies could balloon in size if tough new climate rules proposed earlier this year by a U.S. regulator come into effect.
Amanda Stephenson
News, Politics
| May 30th 2022
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A Cape Cod science center and one of the world’s largest shipping businesses are collaborating on a project to use robotic buoys to protect a vanishing whale from lethal collisions with ships.
Patrick Whittle
News, US News
| May 30th 2022
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From the archives
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Rochelle Baker
News, Island Insider
| December 9th 2021
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