Emilee Gilpin
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News, Energy, Politics
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September 26th 2018
Canada's National Energy Board is giving members of the public and other affected stakeholders less than a week to register to participate in a new review of the controversial Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project.
Canada’s Centre for Offshore Oil, Gas and Energy Research, or COOGER, studies how the toxic mix of oil sands crude and diluent that courses through pipelines could damage the environment in the event of a spill — and how microbes could help clean it up.
U.S. President Donald Trump let Canada know how he really feels on Wednesday, September 27, 2018, — sharpening his tariff threat, calling out Chrystia Freeland and claiming he denied Justin Trudeau a bilateral meeting, all because of the federal government's hard bargaining on North American trade.
Teara Fraser dreamed of becoming a pilot and had her license in hand one year later. Fifteen years later, she bought a plane and launched an Indigenous woman-owned airline that will commence service next year.
Emilee Gilpin
News, Entertainment, Culture
| September 26th 2018
She's been called Obama's "secret (Vancouver) weapon" for her work on viral videos that garnered millions of views during the 2012 U.S. election. She's working with the B.C. government on stakeholder relations.
A new government report on the state of Canadian forests shows that the area burned last year by fires jumped nearly three-fold compared to the year before.
By mid century, parts of Canada’s 270-million hectares of boreal forest that purifies water and air, regulates the climate and stores carbon will be at heightened risk of devastating fires like the one seen in Fort McMurray.
Criticism of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau by the wife of Coalition Avenir Quebec Leader Francois Legault raised questions on Wednesday, September 26, 2018, about how a possible Coalition government would get along with the federal Liberals.
The high-stakes political manoeuvring continues in New Brunswick, with Liberal Premier Brian Gallant seeking a formal alliance with the Greens — and another potential king-maker saying he'll work with any party.
Alberta Premier Rachel Notley is rejecting accusations she dropped the ball by waiting too long to publicly take on the feds over two bills her government believes could seriously harm its oil and gas industry.