Selena Ross
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News, Energy
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November 4th 2019
It’s the future in a major Canadian city. Streets hum with electric buses and every burger is made with lab-grown beef. Just after New Year’s Day, people gather around their televisions to watch the annual global carbon count. One by one, an envoy from each country on earth submits their emissions total, then waits nervously as the governing body checks that number against the official list.
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More in today's news
Hundreds of thousands of Canadians could be consuming tap water laced with high levels of lead leaching from aging infrastructure and plumbing, a large collection of newly released data and documents reveals.
Global News, Toronto Star, Institute for Investigative Journalism
Investigations
| November 4th 2019
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The refinery that is the sole local supplier of motor fuel in the B.C. Lower Mainland is being scheduled for an eight-week maintenance shutdown early next year but owner Parkland Fuel Corp. says it is taking measures to keep prices at the pump in check.
Dan Healing
News, Politics
| November 5th 2019
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A year after a tiny village in New Brunswick announced it would sell 16 housing lots for one dollar apiece, the mayor says the novel bid to attract newcomers to McAdam has been an unqualified success.
The Canadian Press
News, Politics
| November 5th 2019
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The fraud and corruption trial of a former SNC-Lavalin executive has heard of an attempt by a lawyer representing the accused to pay off a key Crown witness currently on the stand.
The Canadian Press
News, Politics
| November 6th 2019
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The Saskatchewan government says it has been granted leave to intervene in an appeal over construction of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.
The Canadian Press
News, Politics
| November 5th 2019
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A University of British Columbia scientist says he was delightedly caught off guard when he spotted a southern resident killer whale calf appearing to use a fish as her teething ring and swimming with her mother this summer.
Hina Alam
News, Politics
| November 5th 2019
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National unity was top of mind for Ontario Premier Doug Ford on Monday, November 4, 2019, as he offered to host a meeting of provincial leaders to address what he called Western Canada's alienation in the wake of the federal election.
Shawn Jeffords
News, Politics
| November 5th 2019
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A new study is offering what it calls a rare look at the health and psychological impacts endured by Canadian youth who are not working, training or studying.
Andy Blatchford
News, Politics
| November 5th 2019
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