Analysts at CIBC Capital Markets say they don’t expect the private sector to take the lead on a new West Coast oil sands pipeline so long as the British Columbia government and First Nations are opposed.
“The requirement to consult with BC and Indigenous groups is necessary and logical,” they wrote in a report Friday, a day after the Alberta and federal governments signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) that made a lot of big infrastructure promises while gutting a decade of federal climate policy.
“The MOU does not contain anything resembling judicial reform and therefore seems to rely on the Building Canada Act and the pre-existing duty to consult Indigenous Peoples to avoid endless legal challenges" ...
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“The requirement to consult with BC and Indigenous groups is necessary and logical,” they wrote in a report Friday, a day after the Alberta and federal governments signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) that made a lot of big infrastructure promises while gutting a decade of federal climate policy.
“The MOU does not contain anything resembling judicial reform and therefore seems to rely on the Building Canada Act and the pre-existing duty to consult Indigenous Peoples to avoid endless legal challenges" ...
CLICK HERE for the full story

Natives and the BC government are out of control, we need these to happen or us, our kids, their kids and so on will be paying for these inept politicians spending for years and years to come, if natives want free everything then get out of the way… ITS FREE MONEY FOR YOU!
ReplyDeleteAnd don’t be using the stuarts of the land garbage cause you know you’re not, just walk on any reserve and see the dumps that they are and all the dumping that you do and the pillaging of the forest creatures so don’t tell us your stuarts of the land, you are not!