Natasha Bulowski
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News, Energy, Ottawa Insider
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October 16th 2023
It’s no secret oilsands companies intend to ramp up production despite the rapidly worsening impacts of the climate crisis, and one longtime industry executive laid out his arguments for doing just that at a federal committee Monday.
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More in today's news
John Vaillant, author of an acclaimed book connecting fire and climate change, reflects on the testimony of top oil execs in the House of Commons.
Matteo Cimellaro
News, Urban Indigenous Communities in Ottawa
| October 16th 2023
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Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston and New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs were in Ottawa on Monday for an announcement, where Wilkinson said the federal government has finalized a joint policy statement with the two provinces.
Cloe Logan
News, Climate Solutions Reporting
| October 17th 2023
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A green energy transition won’t eliminate electricity generation from large utilities, but will transfer a significant amount of revenue and profit from companies reliant on fossil fuels to individuals and growing Canadian businesses.
Rob Miller
Opinion
| October 17th 2023
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Environmental advocates caution that the Greenbelt, a vast protected region containing crucial natural areas and farmland, is still not fully safeguarded from the provincial government's construction plans.
Abdul Matin Sarfraz
News
| October 17th 2023
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Any future changes would have to go through the legislature, and could not just be done by regulation – as the Tories did last year.
Allison Jones
News
| October 16th 2023
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On Sept. 17, 2020, the Sipekne'katik First Nation issued five lobster licences to its members, saying they could trap and sell their catch outside the federally regulated season.
Michael MacDonald
News, Politics
| October 16th 2023
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As then fisheries minister Joyce Murray prepares to announce her plan to transition the remaining fish farms out of B.C. waters, the industry is working hard to ensure they can stay.
Zahra Khozema
News
| October 17th 2023
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Floods and storms accounted for 95 per cent of recorded child displacement between 2016 and 2021, according to the first-of-its-kind analysis by UNICEF and the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre. The rest — more than two million children — were displaced by wildfires and drought.
Nina Lakhani
News
| October 17th 2023
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From the archives
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Isaac Phan Nay
News, Urban Indigenous Communities in Ottawa
| April 3rd 2023
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