Royal Dutch Shell, one of the world’s biggest oil companies, recently dropped out of a D.C. lobby group, saying its lack of support for the Paris Agreement to fight climate change is a "material misalignment" with Shell's stance.
Toxic releases are still very common, despite provincial government promises to crack down on the problem. Local residents say the alerts and scares are far too common. “They just tell us ... to just shut your doors and your windows and shut off your air conditioning," said one resident who lives near a refinery.
The average Canadian refinery produced less oil while emitting substantially higher rates of sulphur dioxide, carbon monoxide and nitrogen oxides compared with the U.S. average in 2014, the data shows from a joint investigation by National Observer, Global News and The Toronto Star.
Royal Dutch Shell's Nigeria subsidiary opposed environmental testing and is concealing data showing thousands of Nigerians are exposed to health hazards from a stalled cleanup of the worst oil spills.
Prime Minister Trudeau says no country “would find 173 billion barrels of oil in the ground and just leave them there.” No country, perhaps. But some energy giants are doing just that.
Thanks to reporting from The Correspondent and The Guardian newspaper, this 28-minute Shell educational video, Climate of Concern, has been unearthed from the archives and is available online.
A small green power company says it has closed a deal to buy a half−built oilsands power plant in northern Alberta halted 16 months ago by international oil giant Royal Dutch Shell.
La compagnie qui opère l'oléoduc, Pipeline Trans-Nord Inc. (PTNI), est la propriété commune de trois des plus grandes compagnies pétrolières de la planète : Imperial Oil, Royal Dutch Shell et Suncor.
Premier Christy Clark's dreams of a booming liquefied natural gas industry in BC have been dealt another blow after a Shell-backed venture delayed a final investment decision indefinitely.
On a cool wet morning in Tuktoyaktuk, I rode with the polar bear hunter. It was tied to what was about to happen to the town, and how it would open up the place to visitors.
Environmentalists have asked a court to declare invalid a group of Arctic offshore energy exploration permits that are delaying the creation of Canada's third national marine protected area.