The National Energy Board has issued a stern warning to the company building a major west coast pipeline expansion about apparent violations of federal law.
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.
"The times of oil companies asking the public to trust them are over," said one Washington State oil spill response official in documents obtained by National Observer.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau lost the harshest critic of his plan to impose a carbon tax with Brad Wall's surprise announcement Thursday that he's retiring as Saskatchewan's premier.
British Columbia is a key cork in the climate change bottle, keeping a giant share of the planet’s carbon underground, writes U.S. environmentalist, journalist, and book author Bill McKibben.
The Trans Mountain pipeline expansion remains on track to begin construction in September, Kinder Morgan Canada president Ian Anderson said on Wednesday, July 19, 2017.
Even if the pipeline went ahead, at least they'd make good on an election promise to use "every tool available" to stop Kinder Morgan's Trans Mountain expansion.
A coalition of interest groups is calling on Canada's six biggest banks and others to back away from providing funding for Kinder Morgan Canada's controversial Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.
Ian Anderson has defended the Trans Mountain project as having gone through rigorous assessments in his first comments since the B.C. NDP-Green party alliance resolved to stop the pipeline expansion.
It’s not often that the beleaguered moderate left has much to cheer about. But over the last few days, progressives have received a cornucopia of blessings in three provinces.
Shares in Kinder Morgan Canada fell in their debut on May 30, 2017, on the Toronto Stock Exchange amid political uncertainty around the company's flagship Trans Mountain expansion project.