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Varcoe: As pipeline battles continue, new study underscores vital U S -Canada energy trade

Article content At times, you have to wonder if U.S. policymakers truly understand the importance of the energy relationship with their northern neighbours not just for Canada, but for both countries. U.S. President Joe Biden cancelled the Keystone XL project on his first day in office, citing climate concerns. Michigan’s governor wants to halt Enbridge’s Line 5, even as the state relies on the products that move through the pipeline. We apologize, but this video has failed to load. Try refreshing your browser, or Varcoe: As pipeline battles continue, new study underscores vital U.S.-Canada energy trade Back to video

The Drilldown: Greenland mining project in jeopardy after snap election

iPolitics By iPolitics. Published on Apr 7, 2021 11:56am Greenland (Pexels photo) The Lead Greenland’s left-wing Inuit Ataqatigiit party won a snap parliamentary election on Tuesday following a campaign that largely focused on a disputed mining project in the semi-autonomous Danish territory. Following its win, the Inuit Ataqatigiit party reaffirmed its opposition to the Kvanefjeld mining project, citing environmental concerns. Many saw Tuesday’s vote as a referendum on Kvanefjeld, as Greenland’s Siumut party supported the development, arguing that it would provide hundreds of jobs and generate hundreds of millions of dollars annually over several decades. “It’s not that Greenlanders don’t want mining, but they don’t want dirty mining,” said Mikaa Mered, a lecturer on Arctic affairs at HEC business school in Paris, referring to uranium and rare earth projects. “Greenlanders are sending a strong message that for them it’s not worth sacrificing the

The Drilldown: Jobs could be lost in Canada s green transition: study

iPolitics By iPolitics. Published on Apr 6, 2021 11:17am Syncrude s Mildred Lake oilsands plant, located 100 km northwest of Fort McMurray, Alta. (Codie McLachlan/Star Edmonton) The Lead   New research from TD Economics finds that by 2050, up to 450,000 of Canada’s current 600,000 oil and gas jobs could be lost thanks to a “falling demand for fossil fuel.” The report says governments “must develop worker transition plans now to prevent disastrous consequences,” or else losses could be similar to those experienced in the 1990s and early 2000s when manual jobs were slashed due to automation. “There’s a role for governments to act to ensure that these workers aren’t forgotten and left behind,” said Francis Fong, a managing director and senior economist with TD and a co-author of the report. Although some workers will be able to find jobs in in clean energy, “we don’t exactly know what form the clean-energy transition is going to take,” Fong warn

The Drilldown: Alberta to consult public about coal mining

The Drilldown: Alberta to consult public about coal mining
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