iPolitics By Kady O Malley. Published on Apr 27, 2021 6:01am Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will provide an update on COVID-19 this morning. (Andrew Meade/iPolitics
Hours after confirming, via Twitter, that his government will be providing emergency military and logistical support to Ontario to bolster its fight against the third wave of the pandemic including, as per the Star, “three Canadian army teams of nurses and medics, plus Canadian Red Cross personnel to help ease the pressure on intensive care units”
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau heads to the precinct to deliver one of his regularly-scheduled on-camera COVID-19 updates. (11:30 AM)
Joining him for the mid-morning media availability, according to the advisory, will be a trio of key front benchers
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OTTAWA/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Canada is pushing on several diplomatic fronts against the U.S. state of Michigan s efforts to close a cross-border oil pipeline, the second such dispute since Joe Biden became U.S. president in January, complicating the governments efforts to work together to lower carbon emissions.
The conflict over the aging but key pipeline highlights the disruptions caused by a global shift away from fossil fuels. Both governments are working to accelerate the energy transition, but their oil industries are interdependent, so a policy shift in one country can affect energy supply, and the political balance, in the other.
Frustrated Canada presses White House to keep Great Lakes oil pipeline open
By David Ljunggren, Nia Williams and Laura Sanicola
Reuters
OTTAWA/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Canada is pushing on several diplomatic fronts against the U.S. state of Michigan s efforts to close a cross-border oil pipeline, the second such dispute since Joe Biden became U.S. president in January, complicating the governments efforts to work together to lower carbon emissions.
The conflict over the aging but key pipeline highlights the disruptions caused by a global shift away from fossil fuels. Both governments are working to accelerate the energy transition, but their oil industries are interdependent, so a policy shift in one country can affect energy supply, and the political balance, in the other.
Article content
OTTAWA/NEW YORK Canada is pushing on several diplomatic fronts against the U.S. state of Michigan’s efforts to close a cross-border oil pipeline, the second such dispute since Joe Biden became U.S. president in January, complicating the governments’ efforts to work together to lower carbon emissions.
The conflict over the aging but key pipeline highlights the disruptions caused by a global shift away from fossil fuels. Both governments are working to accelerate the energy transition, but their oil industries are interdependent, so a policy shift in one country can affect energy supply, and the political balance, in the other.
Frustrated Canada presses White House to keep Great Lakes oil pipeline open reuters.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from reuters.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.