More fracking.
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More fracking. No consultations. A fast tracked environmental assessment. All good stuff
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The Norwegian company Marinvest Energy AS wants to build Canada’s third largest LNG export facility on the shores of the St. Lawrence River in Quebec
The company has a non-disclosure agreement with Ottawa which prevents discussion of the proposal with “officials outside the federal government”
Quebec is an ideal location for ships headed to Europe, but a similar proposal was rejected in 2021 over concerns about risks posed to Indigenous communities and the environment
The secretive, foreign-owned LNG export project in Quebec, explained | The Narwhal
The Baie-Comeau LNG project proposed for the shores of the St. Lawrence River could be Canada’s third largest liquefied natural gas export facility
The Narwhal (thenarwhal.ca)
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More fracking. No consultations. A fast tracked environmental assessment. All good stuff
--
The Norwegian company Marinvest Energy AS wants to build Canada’s third largest LNG export facility on the shores of the St. Lawrence River in Quebec
The company has a non-disclosure agreement with Ottawa which prevents discussion of the proposal with “officials outside the federal government”
Quebec is an ideal location for ships headed to Europe, but a similar proposal was rejected in 2021 over concerns about risks posed to Indigenous communities and the environment
The secretive, foreign-owned LNG export project in Quebec, explained | The Narwhal
The Baie-Comeau LNG project proposed for the shores of the St. Lawrence River could be Canada’s third largest liquefied natural gas export facility
The Narwhal (thenarwhal.ca)
Cuts, cuts, cuts, cuts
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Cuts to Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada is set to off-load housing asylum costs to municipalities, cut preventive care for asylum seekers and weaken supports for "economic migrants"
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) is set to off-load housing costs of asylum seekers to municipalities, including the possible future operating costs of a reception centre in Ottawa, according a new report.
The Interim Housing Assistance Program (IHAP) is set to be off-loaded from the federal government to municipalities.
With it, it seems the City of Ottawa could be on the hook for the operating costs of a likely new reception centre in a vacant downtown hotel that could amount to $15 million to $25 million a year, the report said.
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