Mike De Souza
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News, Energy, Politics
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October 21st 2016
Eight months after an emergency safety order, Kinder Morgan reported 173 fittings on a major oilsands pipeline made by a manufacturer in Thailand that sought bankruptcy protection.
Oil Change International crunched the numbers, and claims that the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers is inflating the need for new pipeline infrastructure.
Changing the culture of Canada’s embattled pipeline regulator is part of a comprehensive review that will unfold in the coming months, said federal Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr.
Prime Minister Trudeau also found himself on the receiving end of some energy−policy indignation in Hamilton, Ont., where an anti−pipeline protester showered him with pumpkin seeds.
Climate policy is not an excuse to build pipelines, writes Amanda Harvey-Sanchez. In fact, effective climate policy should be the number one government tool to stop them from getting built.
Canadian Pacific Railway is responsible for damages caused when a crude oil train derailed in 2013 in Lac−Mégantic, according to new allegations recently filed in court by the Quebec government.
Hrant Basmajian a dû abandonner deux maisons et deux restaurants pour s’échapper de sa ville natale ravagée par la guerre, mais il n’a pas l’air d’un homme avec qui la vie n’a pas été tendre.
Chrystia Freeland walked out Friday on talks aimed at convincing the holdout Belgian region of Wallonia to agree to the European Union's wide-ranging free trade deal with Canada.
The Federation of Canadian Municipalities says wait lists for social housing are growing, and one out of five renters spends more than half their pre−tax salary on shelter.