Erik Solheim says Nokia lost the cell phone market because it didn't embrace touch screens, while Steve Jobs and Korean manufacturers spearheaded change.
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.
Bernard Hancock, a struggling Alberta patch worker, is desperate for work and calling on Canadians to embrace production of the "most ethical oil in the world."
Unlike the panel consultation yesterday, which was attended by more than 300 protesters, the defining element in the room today was silence. Only three Indigenous speakers turned up.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau should send Kinder Morgan packing when it makes its decision on the Trans Mountain expansion project later this year, says the Vancouver mayor.
A major Canadian pipeline company is coming under fire again for failing to provide francophones the same access to information it grants anglophones on a controversial pipeline project.
Residents of Burnaby, B.C. are desperate to avoid a new generation of "oil spill refugees" after Kinder Morgan's existing Trans Mountain pipeline leaked crude all over their land and waters.
At the very least, the Tsleil-Waututh say the challenge will delay project implementation, escalate construction costs, and increase the legal fees for Kinder Morgan shareholders.
The prime minister kept quiet about whether his government would finally permit cross-examination in National Energy Board hearings for pipeline projects.
The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers says its member oil companies can continue to be serious about climate change even after the energy industry builds several new pipelines.