Elizabeth McSheffrey
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News, Energy
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September 12th 2016
After the Dakota Access pipeline battle, Indigenous people across North America are sharing "unprecedented unity" when it comes to protecting their culture, livelihood, and sovereignty.
Canada's pipeline regulator made an "illegal" decision to shut down a probe into its private dealings with oil industry advocates, says a Quebec environmental group.
When the project was proposed to potential shippers in 2013, TransCanada anticipated oil would start flowing in 2017. That's looking increasingly unlikely.
"I would ask the prime minister not to let go of it and I think for Canada to have it as a kind of light ... have it as a kind of beacon of hope," Bono said.