[female narrator] this is how i remember it beginning. It was the middle of a hot, dry summer. Theres a light breeze. The sky is a dramatic orange. And its snowing. Except it isnt snow at all. Its ash, from a distant forest fire fuelled by climate change. Im not sure what surprised me more the ash falling with careless grace or the feeling that rose up within me as it fell. It was grief. I knew it well. [ ] and this time, it was for the changing world all around me. [sarah baike] everyone can relate to grief of losing a loved one, because, i mean, thats universal. But grief of losing your homeland . I never, ever thought of this as being something that. Itll be lost, forever. But. [voice shakes]. It is. [tearfully] i dont know how to explain it, really. Its. It was just part of you, growing up. I never, ever thought about there might be a time when the ice wasnt going to be solid to travel on. I dont think, um. I dont know how to be able to explain it to you. Or anyone. You dont really
This is what were getting after they destroy our land for Muskrat Falls 100 dependency on these dirty, dieselgenerated plants. [wind gusting] [birds chirping] [river trickling] [ushigua speaking spanish] [ ] [patricia gualinga speaking spanish] [paez] i have been persecuted and i have been monitored by the government. Several times, i had to go to the International Courts to tell the story about what happens when you are a human rights defender, or you have been working so hard to protect the rights of nature. Years by years, you protect yourself, protect your family, you protect the forest, the resistance. Sometimes, ii get tired. I get tired and i. Get, uh, lost, and i start feeling that its not enough, but, day by day, i have to do the best to change it. [ ] [dodds] hmm. When i get to that point with Climate Change, the notion of whats happening, and i go i cant take anymore, im just exhausted. Thats a big struggle in my head, where im grasping for somewhere that isnt this new reali
[female narrator] this is how i remember it beginning. It was the middle of a hot, dry summer. Theres a light breeze. The sky is a dramatic orange. And its snowing. Except it isnt snow at all. Its ash, from a distant forest fire fuelled by climate change. Im not sure what surprised me more the ash falling with careless grace or the feeling that rose up within me as it fell. It was grief. I knew it well. [ ] and this time, it was for the changing world all around me. [sarah baike] everyone can relate to grief of losing a loved one, because, i mean, thats universal. But grief of losing your homeland . I never, ever thought of this as being something that. Itll be lost, forever. But. [voice shakes]. It is. [tearfully] i dont know how to explain it, really. Its. It was just part of you, growing up. I never, ever thought about there might be a time when the ice wasnt going to be solid to travel on. I dont think, um. I dont know how to be able to explain it to you. Or anyone. You dont really
Newfoundland and Labrador's auditor general raised red flags Wednesday in her first audit of the Oil and Gas Corp., the Crown corporation spun out of the now-defunct Nalcor Energy.
Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro has major plans to build the provincial power grid through a new unit at the Bay d'Espoir hydroelectric dam, a new turbine and purchasing wind energy, which CEO Jennifer Williams says is necessary to keep up with demand.