Climate Change

21/11/25
Author: 
Mitchell Beerwith files from The Canadian Press
laying pipeline - Jason Woodhead/Flickr

Nov. 20, 2025

 

With the federal and Alberta governments touting an imminent deal on a new oil pipeline to British Columbia’s northwest coast, analysis released Thursday morning concludes that investors in Canadian oil and gas will face serious financial risk—and provincial revenues from the industry could fall 82%—as the global energy transition unfolds through the 2030s.

21/11/25
Author: 
Stefan Labbé
The independent review found B.C.'s logging models for the Mackenzie timber supply region used wildly unrealistic assumptions, and ignored real-world risks like increased wildfire, drought and disease in a pattern likely playing out across the province.Rob Kruyt/BIV

Nov. 19, 2025

An undisclosed report obtained by BIV estimates the province is likely approving twice as much logging as can be sustainably harvested

A leaked technical review prepared for a group of First Nations claims British Columbia is greatly overestimating how much timber it can sustainably harvest in a push for short-term economic gains. 

19/11/25
Author: 
atasha Bulowski John Woodside
Prime Minister Mark Carney speaks to reporters before chairing a cabinet meeting on Nov. 18, 2025. Photo by: Natasha Bulowski / Canada's National Observer

Nov. 19, 2026

The federal budget survived another critical confidence vote, but the timing is preventing Canadian officials from participating in key international climate negotiations now going down to the wire in Brazil.

MPs must be in Canada to vote electronically, so Environment and Climate Change Minister Julie Dabrusin and Minister of Canadian Identity and Culture Steven Guilbeault, effectively the country’s nature minister, flew back from COP30 last Friday to cast their votes in favour of the federal budget.

 

17/11/25
Author: 
John Woodside
A rendering of Eagle's Nest via Wyloo.

Nov. 17, 2025

A battle is brewing between a mining company owned by Australian billionaires and the Neskantaga First Nation — and federal officials are sitting on the fence. 

16/11/25
Author: 
George Monbiot
Illustration: Thomas Pullin/The Guardian

Nov. 14, 2025

Why don’t we get to grips with the climate crisis? Partly because most of the means of communication are owned or influenced by the very rich.

If this were just a climate crisis, we would fix it. The technology, money and strategies have all been at hand for years. What stifles effective action is a deadly conjunction: the climate crisis running headlong into the epistemic crisis.

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