Will Canada be the last fossil funder standing?

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Julia Levin and Bronwen Tucker: Will Canada be the last fossil funder standing? cdnpoli (subs)

It is critical that Canada follow through on its pledge and reorient public finance from all fossil fuels to clean-energy solutions. Let’s not be the last to turn our words into action.

COP27 is the perfect opportunity for Canada, represented by Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault, to release its fossil-fuel financing policy. It’s not too late for Canada to take advantage of a key moment to demonstrate that they are taking the climate crisis seriously, write Julia Levin and Bronwen Tucker.

 

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How much suffering would we bring on the globe's citizens if we cut off fossil fuels now? You think we can transition to renewables with cheap reliable energy? Nobody is helped by more expensive energy

Better hope we are. Witness the deadly energy mess facing the EU right now due to extreme 'renewables' policies. That's what you want for Canadians too? Natural gas is a transition fuel. We need time to find the right solution, not dive head first into total 'renewable mythology

Enviro fright peddlers who persecute us for wanting to stay warm totally ignore the mind blowing huge use of energy by technology sector. whose servers & other equipment generate enormous heat. Now devouring water in Calif. to cool equip., but blame droughts on climate.

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‘We tried to stop it’: chair of Indigenous coalition bidding for Trans Mountain went to court to block the projectSquiala First Nation Chief David Jimmie is often asked how he went from opposing one of the largest infrastructure projects in Canada to now leading one of the groups that is trying to buy it from the government. Jimmie, the chair and vice-president of finance for the Western Indigenous Pipeline Group (WIPG), told The Hill Times that he had a lot of soul-searching to do after he and his B.C. community exhausted all their legal options in their efforts to draw attention to environmental and cultural concerns about the Trans Mountain expansion project. “We tried to stop it. We really did. And I’m really proud of the work that we did,” he said, but eventually looked toward an ownership model as a way to be “heard around the table.” The Western Indigenous Pipeline Group, headquartered in Kamloops, B.C., is a coalition of at least 30 Indigenous communities that have signed on to seek an ownership stake in the government-owned Trans Mountain pipeline and its expansion. WIPG has partnered with Pembina Pipeline Corporation to form Chinook Pathways, which is the entity that will bid for Trans Mountain. Jimmie is also the president of the Ts’elxweyéqw tribe, the chief and CEO of Squiala First Nation, and the president of the Stó:lō Nation Chiefs Council. In his capacity with the Ts’elxweyéqw tribe, Jimmie and other community members engaged with Kinder Morgan Canada, the previous owner of the Trans Mountain pipeline, when they first heard about its proposal to twin the nearly 70-year-old existing pipeline. They conducted an independent study to assess the possible environmental and cultural impacts, and came up with 89 recommendations for how the federal government could address or mitigate their concerns. “Once we had all of that information,” said Jimmie, he and other members of what was then the Stó:lō Collective went in front of the National Energy Board, the predecessor to the Canada Energy Regulator. “And essentially we were not heard at the table,” said Jimmie. The aff
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