Where some see only a jumble of rusted pipes and black tanks jutting from a weed-infested yard in a prairie grain field, Tyler Visscher sees opportunity.
Robert Liang, 63, knew the German automaker was cheating and worked to cover it up, U.S. District Court Judge Sean Cox said during the sentencing hearing in Detroit.
Exxon challenged the public to read its portfolio of climate change research. Two Harvard University researchers did and concluded that the company deliberately misled the public for years.
He became a poster boy of government muzzling in the Harper era. Two years later, the advice he sent management is still being considered by the Liberal government of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
Despite opposition from the oil and gas industry, the National Energy Board will consider upstream and downstream greenhouse gas emissions in its review of the controversial Energy East pipeline.
"Both the former government and BC Hydro’s Board abdicated their fiduciary responsibility to the rate payers and tax payers of this province," writes Marc Eliesen in his report on the Site C Dam.
British Columbia's newly-minted government is acting in the public's best interests with its stance on Kinder Morgan's Trans Mountain expansion, writes economist Robyn Allan.
Projects to protect land in Quebec are too often blocked because of misleading economic claims, according to Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society’s Quebec chapter.
There is certain information about Husky Energy’s catastrophic oil spill in Saskatchewan last summer that you won’t find on the company’s brand new website.