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Good afternoon, and welcome to Globe Climate, a newsletter about climate change, the environment and resources in Canada.
To start you off with
some good news: A pair of Quebec-born cheetahs, brothers Kumbe and Jabari, are now adapting to life under the African sun.
The siblings will be released in a rare, international “rewilding” project that conservationists hope will help ensure the future of the species, which has declined to fewer than 200 animals from around 1,500 in 1975.
Seamus O’Regan, Canada’s ‘We Can Have It All’ Energy Minister He says oilsands output must rise as we shift to green energy and small nuclear reactors. First of two.
Michael Harris, a Tyee contributing editor, is a highly-awarded journalist and documentary maker. His investigations have sparked four commissions of inquiry. SHARES Minister of Natural Resources Seamus O’Regan in Alberta heralding TMX construction on Dec. 3, 2019. ‘We can put a price on pollution, and buy the Trans-Mountain pipeline,’ he told The Tyee. Photo by Jason Franson, The Canadian Press.
Seamus O’Regan became the minister in charge of Canada’s energy future after the 2019 election and therefore will be recorded by history as a hero or villain in meeting the global climate crisis. He knows it well, given that Canada currently is the fourth largest oil power.
iPolitics By Andrew Fleming. Published on Feb 16, 2021 3:55pm Dr. Bonnie Henry has called the virus s presence at domestic fur farms a matter of “great concern,” and three-quarters of British Columbians said they were opposed to killing animals for their pelts, even before the plague put the world on hold. (Pexel photo)
There’s been no shortage of shocking or surreal news stories from the past year. Along with all the garden-variety pandemic unpleasantness, we’ve learned to accept murder hornets, UFO sightings, the live-action
Cats movie, the election of lunatic U.S. Congresswoman Marjorie Greene Taylor (Q-Georgia), and plenty more as part of the new normal in these unprecedented times. It often felt like the
by Yves Engler / February 14th, 2021
The Liberals’ commitment to a neo-Duvalierist dictatorship in Haiti is being tested. Hopefully Black History Month offers opposition parties an opportunity to finally echo growing grassroots criticism of Canadian policy in the hemisphere’s poorest country.
Since Monday a squatter has been occupying the presidential palace in Port-au-Prince. On Sunday evening Supreme Court Justice Joseph Mecene Jean-Louis was appointed provisional interim President of Haiti by the opposition parties that say Jovenel Moïse’s mandate is over as the constitution states. But, Moïse has refused to leave, claiming another year on his mandate. He responded by arresting one Supreme Court judge and (unconstitutionally) dismissing three judges as well as sending police to occupy the Supreme Court building.
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