While environmental activists across North America mourn the election of a climate-denying president in the U.S., one lobbyist says the oil and gas industry should be positively "jumping for joy."
After the Dakota Access pipeline battle, Indigenous people across North America are sharing "unprecedented unity" when it comes to protecting their culture, livelihood, and sovereignty.
The ill-fated oil pipeline is the only detailed reference to Canada in the 66-page document adopted by delegates to the convention in Cleveland which meets through Thursday.
The affected areas include some habitat of some endangered amphibians and rare plant species disrupted during 2012 drilling work beneath the Red Deer and South Saskatchewan Rivers.
TransCanada engineers and the U.S. pipeline regulator are working out the best way to fix a segment of the Keystone system that spilled oil in South Dakota.
Three-month investigation by National Observer through FOIs, examination of public records and interviews with corporate whistleblowers reveals pattern of casual pipeline oversight by NEB.
If Paris was finally the moment when world leaders overwhelmingly accept human-made climate change as real, why all this continued brouhaha over pipelines?