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GROUNDPHOTO ESSAYS
From representing BIPOC and non-binary folks in the outdoors, to addressing race in food sovereignty, to documenting the intimate relationship between Kaska Dene and caribou, our reader-funded fellowship program is changing the lens when it comes to reporting on the natural world. By Josie Kao. May 27, 2021 7 min. read. PACHEEDAHT TELLS B.C. TO DEFER OLD-GROWTH LOGGING IN FAIRY The Pacheedaht, Ditidaht, and Huu-ay-aht First Nations have formally given notice to the province of B.C. to defer old-growth logging for two years in the Fairy Creek and Central Walbran areas on southwest Vancouver Island while the nations prepare resource management plans.. The notice comes as RCMP prepared on Monday morning to arrest protesters who have been camping in the Fairy Creek B.C.'S OLD-GROWTH FOREST PANEL EXPERT GARRY MERKEL WEIGHS Last fall, during the B.C. election campaign, NDP leader John Horgan promised to implement the recommendations of an old-growth strategic review panel led by foresters Garry Merkel and Al Gorley. After hearing from thousands of people all over the province, Merkel and Gorley called for a paradigm shift in the way B.C. manages itsold-growth
CANADA’S OIL AND GAS SECTOR RECEIVED $18B IN PANDEMIC Canada’s oil and gas sector received $18 billion in subsidies, public financing during pandemic: report. Oil and gas infrastructure on a roadside near Calgary, Alta., on December 30, 2020. A new report from Environmental Defence found support for the oil and gas sector grew to $18 billion in 2020. Photo: Todd Korol. B.C.’S SITE C DAM: 10 THINGS WE KNOW ABOUT THE LATEST Then, on Feb. 26, the B.C. government released a barrage of information about the Site C dam’s stability issues and dropped a financial bombshell. The dam, announced in 2010 as a $6.6 billion project, will now cost $16 billion to complete. That makes Site C the most expensive dam in Canadian history — and nowhere near thebiggest.
‘WHO WOULD FEEL SAFE?’ SITE C DAM CONCERNS BUILD ALONG Concerns about the safety of the Site C dam are mounting in some downstream communities along the Peace River, despite the B.C. government’s assurances that the project can be completed safely after two independent experts approved BC Hydro’s proposed fix for the dam’s weak foundation.. The fix involves driving as many as 125 concrete-filled pipes 25 metres into the ground — B.C. FIRST NATIONS, DFO PROTECT DUNGENESS CRAB IN LANDMARK B.C. First Nations, Fisheries and Oceans Canada protect crab for Indigenous food, social and ceremonial purposes. Groups agree to close 17 Dungeness crab harvest sites on the central coast to commercial and recreational fishing in landmark decision. FAIRY CREEK BLOCKADERS SAY B.C. TO BLAME FOR OLD-GROWTH As Fairy Creek blockaders brace for arrests, B.C.’s failure to enact old-growth protections draws fire. The Pacheedaht First Nation is asking protesters to withdraw from its territory, where a battle is brewing to protect some of the province’s last-remaining ancient trees. It’s a battle some say could have been prevented if the B.C. OLD-GROWTH DATA ‘MISLEADING’ PUBLIC ON REMAINING The majority of British Columbia’s productive old-growth forests are gone, and the majority of the old growth remaining is slated to be logged, says an independent study released Thursday by B.C. ecologists who previously worked for the provincial government. B.C.’S OLD-GROWTH FOREST NEARLY ELIMINATED, MAPPING B.C.’s old-growth forest nearly eliminated, new provincewide mapping reveals. As old-growth logging continues unabated in most unprotected areas of B.C., one conservation organization decided to spend a year creating a detailed map that shows the province’s original forests have all but disappeared under pressure from industrialization. HOME - THE NARWHALNEWSIN-DEPTHEXPLAINERSINVESTIGATIONSON THEGROUNDPHOTO ESSAYS
From representing BIPOC and non-binary folks in the outdoors, to addressing race in food sovereignty, to documenting the intimate relationship between Kaska Dene and caribou, our reader-funded fellowship program is changing the lens when it comes to reporting on the natural world. By Josie Kao. May 27, 2021 7 min. read. PACHEEDAHT TELLS B.C. TO DEFER OLD-GROWTH LOGGING IN FAIRY The Pacheedaht, Ditidaht, and Huu-ay-aht First Nations have formally given notice to the province of B.C. to defer old-growth logging for two years in the Fairy Creek and Central Walbran areas on southwest Vancouver Island while the nations prepare resource management plans.. The notice comes as RCMP prepared on Monday morning to arrest protesters who have been camping in the Fairy Creek B.C.'S OLD-GROWTH FOREST PANEL EXPERT GARRY MERKEL WEIGHS Last fall, during the B.C. election campaign, NDP leader John Horgan promised to implement the recommendations of an old-growth strategic review panel led by foresters Garry Merkel and Al Gorley. After hearing from thousands of people all over the province, Merkel and Gorley called for a paradigm shift in the way B.C. manages itsold-growth
CANADA’S OIL AND GAS SECTOR RECEIVED $18B IN PANDEMIC Canada’s oil and gas sector received $18 billion in subsidies, public financing during pandemic: report. Oil and gas infrastructure on a roadside near Calgary, Alta., on December 30, 2020. A new report from Environmental Defence found support for the oil and gas sector grew to $18 billion in 2020. Photo: Todd Korol. B.C.’S SITE C DAM: 10 THINGS WE KNOW ABOUT THE LATEST Then, on Feb. 26, the B.C. government released a barrage of information about the Site C dam’s stability issues and dropped a financial bombshell. The dam, announced in 2010 as a $6.6 billion project, will now cost $16 billion to complete. That makes Site C the most expensive dam in Canadian history — and nowhere near thebiggest.
‘WHO WOULD FEEL SAFE?’ SITE C DAM CONCERNS BUILD ALONG Concerns about the safety of the Site C dam are mounting in some downstream communities along the Peace River, despite the B.C. government’s assurances that the project can be completed safely after two independent experts approved BC Hydro’s proposed fix for the dam’s weak foundation.. The fix involves driving as many as 125 concrete-filled pipes 25 metres into the ground — B.C. FIRST NATIONS, DFO PROTECT DUNGENESS CRAB IN LANDMARK B.C. First Nations, Fisheries and Oceans Canada protect crab for Indigenous food, social and ceremonial purposes. Groups agree to close 17 Dungeness crab harvest sites on the central coast to commercial and recreational fishing in landmark decision. FAIRY CREEK BLOCKADERS SAY B.C. TO BLAME FOR OLD-GROWTH As Fairy Creek blockaders brace for arrests, B.C.’s failure to enact old-growth protections draws fire. The Pacheedaht First Nation is asking protesters to withdraw from its territory, where a battle is brewing to protect some of the province’s last-remaining ancient trees. It’s a battle some say could have been prevented if the B.C. OLD-GROWTH DATA ‘MISLEADING’ PUBLIC ON REMAINING The majority of British Columbia’s productive old-growth forests are gone, and the majority of the old growth remaining is slated to be logged, says an independent study released Thursday by B.C. ecologists who previously worked for the provincial government. B.C.’S OLD-GROWTH FOREST NEARLY ELIMINATED, MAPPING B.C.’s old-growth forest nearly eliminated, new provincewide mapping reveals. As old-growth logging continues unabated in most unprotected areas of B.C., one conservation organization decided to spend a year creating a detailed map that shows the province’s original forests have all but disappeared under pressure from industrialization. THE NARWHAL WINS FOUR NATIONAL MAGAZINE AWARDS, THREE 15 hours ago · The Narwhal took home three Digital Publishing Awards and four National Magazine Awards during two awards ceremonies Friday. The wins included the prestigious honour of gold in the general excellence category of the Digital Publishing Awards for work that “fills a hole in mainstream media coverage of the environment.” In receiving the general excellence win FOR FIRST NATIONS IN CANADA BEING 'POOR ENOUGH’ IS BARRIER 3 hours ago · Even though Indigenous Rights are recognized under Indigenous law, the Canadian constitution, treaties and precedent-setting court cases, negotiations between the Crown and Indigenous Peoples often fail First Nations, forcing communities to spend millions just to get their day in court THE NARWHAL’S SITE C DAM REPORTING WINS CANADIAN The Narwhal was honoured for its contributions to excellence in journalism at the Canadian Journalism Foundation’s awards gala on Wednesday night. The Narwhal received the award in the small media category for B.C. investigative reporter Sarah Cox’s tenacious reporting on the Site C dam, the FIRST RIVER TO BECOME LEGAL PERSON IN CANADA IS BOON FOR 23 hours ago · The Muteshekau Shipu (Magpie) River in Québec is the first river in Canada to receive legal personhood. While a first in the country, the practice of granting personhood to natural entities is part of a global movement to recognize the rights of nature B.C.’S SITE C DAM: 10 THINGS WE KNOW ABOUT THE LATEST Then, on Feb. 26, the B.C. government released a barrage of information about the Site C dam’s stability issues and dropped a financial bombshell. The dam, announced in 2010 as a $6.6 billion project, will now cost $16 billion to complete. That makes Site C the most expensive dam in Canadian history — and nowhere near thebiggest.
‘WHO WOULD FEEL SAFE?’ SITE C DAM CONCERNS BUILD ALONG Concerns about the safety of the Site C dam are mounting in some downstream communities along the Peace River, despite the B.C. government’s assurances that the project can be completed safely after two independent experts approved BC Hydro’s proposed fix for the dam’s weak foundation.. The fix involves driving as many as 125 concrete-filled pipes 25 metres into the ground — ENBRIDGE LINE 5 PIPELINE DISPUTE, EXPLAINED Scientists, conservationists and Indigenous people have been calling for the 65-year-old pipeline to be retired for years, saying it’s in disrepair and could cause a devastating spill. Now, as the governor of Michigan takes legal action to turn off the tap, politicians on both sides of the border are warning of an energy crisis that could costconsumers
DOES THE FUTURE OF SUSTAINABLE SALMON LIE ON DRY LAND It may sound incompatible with our idea of seafood, but land-based salmon farming is emerging as a sustainable source of protein for the world’s growing population. The practice is increasingly taking hold, but like any technological advancement, it comes with both risks and advantages. As wild fisheries collapse or reach peak harvest, land ‘HYDROGEN FERVOUR’: THE FUEL BREATHING HOPE INTO ALBERTA’S In the Edmonton region, advocates say clean hydrogen could catapult Alberta into a leading role in a net-zero economy. Alanna Hnatiw, mayor of Sturgeon County and chair of Alberta’s Industrial Heartland Association, said a major investment in hydrogen could "insulate the market here away from the winds of the global economy.” THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO BUYING AN ELECTRIC CAR IN CANADA New: 2018 marks a step change for electric vehicles, with the Chevy Bolt, Tesla Model 3, next generation Nissan Leaf and others achieving 50 to 100 per cent more range than previous years at comparable price points. These will run you anywhere from $36,000 for 2018 Nissan Leaf (243 km range) to $43,000 to $45,000 for base models of the Chevy HOME - THE NARWHALNEWSIN-DEPTHEXPLAINERSINVESTIGATIONSON THEGROUNDPHOTO ESSAYS
From representing BIPOC and non-binary folks in the outdoors, to addressing race in food sovereignty, to documenting the intimate relationship between Kaska Dene and caribou, our reader-funded fellowship program is changing the lens when it comes to reporting on the natural world. By Josie Kao. May 27, 2021 7 min. read. PACHEEDAHT TELLS B.C. TO DEFER OLD-GROWTH LOGGING IN FAIRY The Pacheedaht, Ditidaht, and Huu-ay-aht First Nations have formally given notice to the province of B.C. to defer old-growth logging for two years in the Fairy Creek and Central Walbran areas on southwest Vancouver Island while the nations prepare resource management plans.. The notice comes as RCMP prepared on Monday morning to arrest protesters who have been camping in the Fairy Creek SCIENTISTS URGE B.C. TO IMMEDIATELY DEFER LOGGING IN KEY Photo: TJ Watt. B.C.’s rarest forest ecosystems are rapidly disappearing and if the province doesn’t act immediately to defer logging in key areas, as recommended by the 2020 Old Growth Strategic Review, they will be lost forever, according to a report released CANADA’S OIL AND GAS SECTOR RECEIVED $18B IN PANDEMIC Canada’s oil and gas sector received $18 billion in subsidies, public financing during pandemic: report. Oil and gas infrastructure on a roadside near Calgary, Alta., on December 30, 2020. A new report from Environmental Defence found support for the oil and gas sector grew to $18 billion in 2020. Photo: Todd Korol. B.C. FAILING TO MEET INTERNATIONAL BIODIVERSITY TARGETS B.C. is failing to protect nature and has missed international targets for conserving wildlife and biodiversity, according to a report card released on Thursday that gives the provincial government a failing grade in four out of five key categories. “Biodiversity is the backbone of life,” said Charlotte Dawe, conservation and policy campaigner for the Wilderness Committee, which co B.C.'S OLD-GROWTH FOREST PANEL EXPERT GARRY MERKEL WEIGHS Last fall, during the B.C. election campaign, NDP leader John Horgan promised to implement the recommendations of an old-growth strategic review panel led by foresters Garry Merkel and Al Gorley. After hearing from thousands of people all over the province, Merkel and Gorley called for a paradigm shift in the way B.C. manages itsold-growth
B.C. FIRST NATIONS, DFO PROTECT DUNGENESS CRAB IN LANDMARK B.C. First Nations, Fisheries and Oceans Canada protect crab for Indigenous food, social and ceremonial purposes. Groups agree to close 17 Dungeness crab harvest sites on the central coast to commercial and recreational fishing in landmark decision. ‘WHO WOULD FEEL SAFE?’ SITE C DAM CONCERNS BUILD ALONG Concerns about the safety of the Site C dam are mounting in some downstream communities along the Peace River, despite the B.C. government’s assurances that the project can be completed safely after two independent experts approved BC Hydro’s proposed fix for the dam’s weak foundation.. The fix involves driving as many as 125 concrete-filled pipes 25 metres into the ground — DOES THE FUTURE OF SUSTAINABLE SALMON LIE ON DRY LAND It may sound incompatible with our idea of seafood, but land-based salmon farming is emerging as a sustainable source of protein for the world’s growing population. The practice is increasingly taking hold, but like any technological advancement, it comes with both risks and advantages. As wild fisheries collapse or reach peak harvest, land FAIRY CREEK BLOCKADERS SAY B.C. TO BLAME FOR OLD-GROWTH As Fairy Creek blockaders brace for arrests, B.C.’s failure to enact old-growth protections draws fire. The Pacheedaht First Nation is asking protesters to withdraw from its territory, where a battle is brewing to protect some of the province’s last-remaining ancient trees. It’s a battle some say could have been prevented if the HOME - THE NARWHALNEWSIN-DEPTHEXPLAINERSINVESTIGATIONSON THEGROUNDPHOTO ESSAYS
From representing BIPOC and non-binary folks in the outdoors, to addressing race in food sovereignty, to documenting the intimate relationship between Kaska Dene and caribou, our reader-funded fellowship program is changing the lens when it comes to reporting on the natural world. By Josie Kao. May 27, 2021 7 min. read. PACHEEDAHT TELLS B.C. TO DEFER OLD-GROWTH LOGGING IN FAIRY The Pacheedaht, Ditidaht, and Huu-ay-aht First Nations have formally given notice to the province of B.C. to defer old-growth logging for two years in the Fairy Creek and Central Walbran areas on southwest Vancouver Island while the nations prepare resource management plans.. The notice comes as RCMP prepared on Monday morning to arrest protesters who have been camping in the Fairy Creek SCIENTISTS URGE B.C. TO IMMEDIATELY DEFER LOGGING IN KEY Photo: TJ Watt. B.C.’s rarest forest ecosystems are rapidly disappearing and if the province doesn’t act immediately to defer logging in key areas, as recommended by the 2020 Old Growth Strategic Review, they will be lost forever, according to a report released CANADA’S OIL AND GAS SECTOR RECEIVED $18B IN PANDEMIC Canada’s oil and gas sector received $18 billion in subsidies, public financing during pandemic: report. Oil and gas infrastructure on a roadside near Calgary, Alta., on December 30, 2020. A new report from Environmental Defence found support for the oil and gas sector grew to $18 billion in 2020. Photo: Todd Korol. B.C. FAILING TO MEET INTERNATIONAL BIODIVERSITY TARGETS B.C. is failing to protect nature and has missed international targets for conserving wildlife and biodiversity, according to a report card released on Thursday that gives the provincial government a failing grade in four out of five key categories. “Biodiversity is the backbone of life,” said Charlotte Dawe, conservation and policy campaigner for the Wilderness Committee, which co B.C.'S OLD-GROWTH FOREST PANEL EXPERT GARRY MERKEL WEIGHS Last fall, during the B.C. election campaign, NDP leader John Horgan promised to implement the recommendations of an old-growth strategic review panel led by foresters Garry Merkel and Al Gorley. After hearing from thousands of people all over the province, Merkel and Gorley called for a paradigm shift in the way B.C. manages itsold-growth
B.C. FIRST NATIONS, DFO PROTECT DUNGENESS CRAB IN LANDMARK B.C. First Nations, Fisheries and Oceans Canada protect crab for Indigenous food, social and ceremonial purposes. Groups agree to close 17 Dungeness crab harvest sites on the central coast to commercial and recreational fishing in landmark decision. ‘WHO WOULD FEEL SAFE?’ SITE C DAM CONCERNS BUILD ALONG Concerns about the safety of the Site C dam are mounting in some downstream communities along the Peace River, despite the B.C. government’s assurances that the project can be completed safely after two independent experts approved BC Hydro’s proposed fix for the dam’s weak foundation.. The fix involves driving as many as 125 concrete-filled pipes 25 metres into the ground — DOES THE FUTURE OF SUSTAINABLE SALMON LIE ON DRY LAND It may sound incompatible with our idea of seafood, but land-based salmon farming is emerging as a sustainable source of protein for the world’s growing population. The practice is increasingly taking hold, but like any technological advancement, it comes with both risks and advantages. As wild fisheries collapse or reach peak harvest, land FAIRY CREEK BLOCKADERS SAY B.C. TO BLAME FOR OLD-GROWTH As Fairy Creek blockaders brace for arrests, B.C.’s failure to enact old-growth protections draws fire. The Pacheedaht First Nation is asking protesters to withdraw from its territory, where a battle is brewing to protect some of the province’s last-remaining ancient trees. It’s a battle some say could have been prevented if theHOME - THE NARWHAL
From representing BIPOC and non-binary folks in the outdoors, to addressing race in food sovereignty, to documenting the intimate relationship between Kaska Dene and caribou, our reader-funded fellowship program is changing the lens when it comes to reporting on the natural world. By Josie Kao. May 27, 2021 7 min. read. TECK GIVES B.C. $1.5 MILLION TOWARDS TULSEQUAH CHIEF MINE 19 hours ago · Mining giant Teck Resources is contributing more than $1.5 million to support reclamation efforts at the infamous Tulsequah Chief mine in northwest B.C., which has been polluting a salmon-rich transboundary watershed that feeds into Alaska with acid rock drainage for more than six decades.. The question of who will pay the estimated $48.7 million cleanup and closure costs for the remote THE NARWHAL’S SITE C DAM REPORTING WINS CANADIAN 1 day ago · The Narwhal was honoured for its contributions to excellence in journalism at the Canadian Journalism Foundation’s awards gala on Wednesday night. The Narwhal received the award in the small media category for B.C. investigative reporter Sarah Cox’s tenacious reporting on the Site C dam, the 5 WAYS B.C.’S FORESTRY PLAN SETS STAGE FOR MORE OLD-GROWTH 5. B.C. forestry plan does not address the biodiversity crisis. The 2020 old-growth strategic review urged the province to prioritize biodiversity and at-risk species over the economic benefits of the forest industry. The intentions paper does not mention biodiversityand
FATE OF YUKON’S DAWSON REGION HANGS IN COMING LAND-USE 16 hours ago · A draft of the much-anticipated land-use plan for the Yukon’s 40,000 square-kilometre Dawson regional planning area — a sensitive and vibrant northern landscape of cultural importance to the Trʼondëk Hwëchʼin First Nation — is due to be released June 15 by the Dawson Regional Planning Commission.. Comprised of salmon-rich rivers, vital caribou habitat and wetlands, which support aHUNTING ARCHIVES
As B.C. faces a biodiversity crisis, a new coalition of unlikely allies is calling on Get The Narwhal in your inbox! People always tell us they love our newsletter. Find out yourself with a weekly dose of our ad‑free, independent journalism B.C.’S SITE C DAM: 10 THINGS WE KNOW ABOUT THE LATEST Then, on Feb. 26, the B.C. government released a barrage of information about the Site C dam’s stability issues and dropped a financial bombshell. The dam, announced in 2010 as a $6.6 billion project, will now cost $16 billion to complete. That makes Site C the most expensive dam in Canadian history — and nowhere near thebiggest.
B.C. DEFERS OLD-GROWTH FOREST LOGGING IN FAIRY CREEK 1 day ago · B.C. has accepted a request by the Pacheedaht, Ditidaht and Huu-ay-aht First Nations to defer old-growth logging for two years in the Fairy Creek watershed and Central Walbran areas on southwest Vancouver Island, Premier John Horgan announced on Wednesday. “Today, cabinet has approved a request by the Pacheedaht to defer old-growth forestry in Fairy Creek as well as the Central Walbran ENBRIDGE LINE 5 PIPELINE DISPUTE, EXPLAINED March 27, 2021 17 min. read. Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer is seeking to shut down the Enbridge Line 5 pipeline, which runs underneath the Straits of Mackinac in the Great Lakes. But the company is vowing to fight back and Canadian politicians are entering the fray, saying the pipeline is needed to deliver fuel and maintain jobs. B.C. HUNTING, CONSERVATION ADVOCATES CALL ON NDP TO As B.C.’s landscapes are fragmented by industrial activities and the province faces biodiversity collapse, with more than 2,000 species at risk of extinction, guide outfitters, hunters, fishers and trappers are standing shoulder-to-shoulder with naturalists, ecotourism operators and conservation organizations in a new coalition calling on the province to protect B.C.’s ecosystems before it HOME - THE NARWHALNEWSIN-DEPTHEXPLAINERSINVESTIGATIONSON THEGROUNDPHOTO ESSAYS
From representing BIPOC and non-binary folks in the outdoors, to addressing race in food sovereignty, to documenting the intimate relationship between Kaska Dene and caribou, our reader-funded fellowship program is changing the lens when it comes to reporting on the natural world. By Josie Kao. May 27, 2021 7 min. read. TECK GIVES B.C. $1.5 MILLION TOWARDS TULSEQUAH CHIEF MINE 7 hours ago · Mining giant Teck Resources is contributing more than $1.5 million to support reclamation efforts at the infamous Tulsequah Chief mine in northwest B.C., which has been polluting a salmon-rich transboundary watershed that feeds into Alaska with acid rock drainage for more than six decades.. The question of who will pay the estimated $48.7 million cleanup and closure costs for the remote B.C.'S OLD-GROWTH FOREST PANEL EXPERT GARRY MERKEL WEIGHS Last fall, during the B.C. election campaign, NDP leader John Horgan promised to implement the recommendations of an old-growth strategic review panel led by foresters Garry Merkel and Al Gorley. After hearing from thousands of people all over the province, Merkel and Gorley called for a paradigm shift in the way B.C. manages itsold-growth
SCIENTISTS URGE B.C. TO IMMEDIATELY DEFER LOGGING IN KEY Photo: TJ Watt. B.C.’s rarest forest ecosystems are rapidly disappearing and if the province doesn’t act immediately to defer logging in key areas, as recommended by the 2020 Old Growth Strategic Review, they will be lost forever, according to a report released HOW THE SALMONBERRY CONNECTS SALMON, NATURE AND THE Photo: Louise Whitehouse / The Narwhal. For most Haíɫzaqv (Heiltsuk) children, the relationship between salmon and salmonberries is the first indicator — a sign from the natural world — we are taught. A good crop of salmonberries, we are told, corresponds to a good salmon run and luck in the harvest, and a poor crop is an early signal CANADA’S OIL AND GAS SECTOR RECEIVED $18B IN PANDEMIC Canada’s oil and gas sector received $18 billion in subsidies, public financing during pandemic: report. Oil and gas infrastructure on a roadside near Calgary, Alta., on December 30, 2020. A new report from Environmental Defence found support for the oil and gas sector grew to $18 billion in 2020. Photo: Todd Korol. ‘WHO WOULD FEEL SAFE?’ SITE C DAM CONCERNS BUILD ALONG Concerns about the safety of the Site C dam are mounting in some downstream communities along the Peace River, despite the B.C. government’s assurances that the project can be completed safely after two independent experts approved BC Hydro’s proposed fix for the dam’s weak foundation.. The fix involves driving as many as 125 concrete-filled pipes 25 metres into the ground — INDIGENOUS LEADERS LAUNCH $2.1 BILLION CLASS-ACTION Indigenous leaders launch $2.1 billion class-action lawsuits against Canada over lack of drinking water. The claimants argue the federal government failed to provide clean water and forced First Nations communities to live in a manner 'consistent with life in developing countries'. By Leyland Cecco. DOES THE FUTURE OF SUSTAINABLE SALMON LIE ON DRY LAND It may sound incompatible with our idea of seafood, but land-based salmon farming is emerging as a sustainable source of protein for the world’s growing population. The practice is increasingly taking hold, but like any technological advancement, it comes with both risks and advantages. As wild fisheries collapse or reach peak harvest, land FAIRY CREEK BLOCKADERS SAY B.C. TO BLAME FOR OLD-GROWTH As Fairy Creek blockaders brace for arrests, B.C.’s failure to enact old-growth protections draws fire. The Pacheedaht First Nation is asking protesters to withdraw from its territory, where a battle is brewing to protect some of the province’s last-remaining ancient trees. It’s a battle some say could have been prevented if the HOME - THE NARWHALNEWSIN-DEPTHEXPLAINERSINVESTIGATIONSON THEGROUNDPHOTO ESSAYS
From representing BIPOC and non-binary folks in the outdoors, to addressing race in food sovereignty, to documenting the intimate relationship between Kaska Dene and caribou, our reader-funded fellowship program is changing the lens when it comes to reporting on the natural world. By Josie Kao. May 27, 2021 7 min. read. B.C.'S OLD-GROWTH FOREST PANEL EXPERT GARRY MERKEL WEIGHS Last fall, during the B.C. election campaign, NDP leader John Horgan promised to implement the recommendations of an old-growth strategic review panel led by foresters Garry Merkel and Al Gorley. After hearing from thousands of people all over the province, Merkel and Gorley called for a paradigm shift in the way B.C. manages itsold-growth
SCIENTISTS URGE B.C. TO IMMEDIATELY DEFER LOGGING IN KEY Photo: TJ Watt. B.C.’s rarest forest ecosystems are rapidly disappearing and if the province doesn’t act immediately to defer logging in key areas, as recommended by the 2020 Old Growth Strategic Review, they will be lost forever, according to a report released CANADA’S OIL AND GAS SECTOR RECEIVED $18B IN PANDEMIC Canada’s oil and gas sector received $18 billion in subsidies, public financing during pandemic: report. Oil and gas infrastructure on a roadside near Calgary, Alta., on December 30, 2020. A new report from Environmental Defence found support for the oil and gas sector grew to $18 billion in 2020. Photo: Todd Korol. HOW THE SALMONBERRY CONNECTS SALMON, NATURE AND THE Photo: Louise Whitehouse / The Narwhal. For most Haíɫzaqv (Heiltsuk) children, the relationship between salmon and salmonberries is the first indicator — a sign from the natural world — we are taught. A good crop of salmonberries, we are told, corresponds to a good salmon run and luck in the harvest, and a poor crop is an early signal ‘WHO WOULD FEEL SAFE?’ SITE C DAM CONCERNS BUILD ALONG Concerns about the safety of the Site C dam are mounting in some downstream communities along the Peace River, despite the B.C. government’s assurances that the project can be completed safely after two independent experts approved BC Hydro’s proposed fix for the dam’s weak foundation.. The fix involves driving as many as 125 concrete-filled pipes 25 metres into the ground — INDIGENOUS LEADERS LAUNCH $2.1 BILLION CLASS-ACTION Indigenous leaders launch $2.1 billion class-action lawsuits against Canada over lack of drinking water. The claimants argue the federal government failed to provide clean water and forced First Nations communities to live in a manner 'consistent with life in developing countries'. By Leyland Cecco. FAIRY CREEK BLOCKADERS SAY B.C. TO BLAME FOR OLD-GROWTH As Fairy Creek blockaders brace for arrests, B.C.’s failure to enact old-growth protections draws fire. The Pacheedaht First Nation is asking protesters to withdraw from its territory, where a battle is brewing to protect some of the province’s last-remaining ancient trees. It’s a battle some say could have been prevented if the DOES THE FUTURE OF SUSTAINABLE SALMON LIE ON DRY LAND It may sound incompatible with our idea of seafood, but land-based salmon farming is emerging as a sustainable source of protein for the world’s growing population. The practice is increasingly taking hold, but like any technological advancement, it comes with both risks and advantages. As wild fisheries collapse or reach peak harvest, land B.C. FIRST NATIONS, DFO PROTECT DUNGENESS CRAB IN LANDMARK B.C. First Nations, Fisheries and Oceans Canada protect crab for Indigenous food, social and ceremonial purposes. Groups agree to close 17 Dungeness crab harvest sites on the central coast to commercial and recreational fishing in landmark decision. THE NARWHAL’S SITE C DAM REPORTING WINS CANADIAN 1 day ago · The Narwhal was honoured for its contributions to excellence in journalism at the Canadian Journalism Foundation’s awards gala on Wednesday night. The Narwhal received the award in the small media category for B.C. investigative reporter Sarah Cox’s tenacious reporting on the Site C dam, the TECK GIVES B.C. $1.5 MILLION TOWARDS TULSEQUAH CHIEF MINE 7 hours ago · Mining giant Teck Resources is contributing more than $1.5 million to support reclamation efforts at the infamous Tulsequah Chief mine in northwest B.C., which has been polluting a salmon-rich transboundary watershed that feeds into Alaska with acid rock drainage for more than six decades.. The question of who will pay the estimated $48.7 million cleanup and closure costs for the remote 5 WAYS B.C.’S FORESTRY PLAN SETS STAGE FOR MORE OLD-GROWTH 5. B.C. forestry plan does not address the biodiversity crisis. The 2020 old-growth strategic review urged the province to prioritize biodiversity and at-risk species over the economic benefits of the forest industry. The intentions paper does not mention biodiversityand
HUNTING ARCHIVES
As B.C. faces a biodiversity crisis, a new coalition of unlikely allies is calling on Get The Narwhal in your inbox! People always tell us they love our newsletter. Find out yourself with a weekly dose of our ad‑free, independent journalism B.C. HUNTING, CONSERVATION ADVOCATES CALL ON NDP TO As B.C.’s landscapes are fragmented by industrial activities and the province faces biodiversity collapse, with more than 2,000 species at risk of extinction, guide outfitters, hunters, fishers and trappers are standing shoulder-to-shoulder with naturalists, ecotourism operators and conservation B.C. DEFERS OLD-GROWTH FOREST LOGGING IN FAIRY CREEK 1 day ago · B.C. has accepted a request by the Pacheedaht, Ditidaht and Huu-ay-aht First Nations to defer old-growth logging for two years in the Fairy Creek watershed and Central Walbran areas on southwest Vancouver Island, Premier John Horgan announced on Wednesday. “Today, cabinet has approved a request by the Pacheedaht to defer old-growth forestry in Fairy Creek as well as the Central Walbran B.C. FAILING TO MEET INTERNATIONAL BIODIVERSITY TARGETS B.C. is failing to protect nature and has missed international targets for conserving wildlife and biodiversity, according to a report card released on Thursday that gives the provincial government a failing grade in four out of five key categories. “Biodiversity is the backbone of life,” said Charlotte Dawe, conservation and policy campaigner for the Wilderness Committee, which co B.C.’S SITE C DAM: 10 THINGS WE KNOW ABOUT THE LATEST Then, on Feb. 26, the B.C. government released a barrage of information about the Site C dam’s stability issues and dropped a financial bombshell. The dam, announced in 2010 as a $6.6 billion project, will now cost $16 billion to complete. That makes Site C the most expensive dam in Canadian history — and nowhere near thebiggest.
ENBRIDGE LINE 5 PIPELINE DISPUTE, EXPLAINED March 27, 2021 17 min. read. Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer is seeking to shut down the Enbridge Line 5 pipeline, which runs underneath the Straits of Mackinac in the Great Lakes. But the company is vowing to fight back and Canadian politicians are entering the fray, saying the pipeline is needed to deliver fuel and maintain jobs. HOW THE GLOBAL STEEL INDUSTRY IS CUTTING OUT COAL The end of an era: how the global steel industry is cutting out coal. As backlash erupted last year in response to the Alberta government's plans to open up large swaths of the Rocky Mountain region to metallurgical coal mines, alternative plans were already afoot in the global steel-making industry. Companies have introduced technologiesthat
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From representing BIPOC and non-binary folks in the outdoors, to addressing race in food sovereignty, to documenting the intimate relationship between Kaska Dene and caribou, our reader-funded fellowship program is changing the lens when it comes to reporting on the natural world. By Josie Kao. May 27, 2021 7 min. read. B.C.'S OLD-GROWTH FOREST PANEL EXPERT GARRY MERKEL WEIGHS Last fall, during the B.C. election campaign, NDP leader John Horgan promised to implement the recommendations of an old-growth strategic review panel led by foresters Garry Merkel and Al Gorley. After hearing from thousands of people all over the province, Merkel and Gorley called for a paradigm shift in the way B.C. manages itsold-growth
SCIENTISTS URGE B.C. TO IMMEDIATELY DEFER LOGGING IN KEY Photo: TJ Watt. B.C.’s rarest forest ecosystems are rapidly disappearing and if the province doesn’t act immediately to defer logging in key areas, as recommended by the 2020 Old Growth Strategic Review, they will be lost forever, according to a report released CANADA’S OIL AND GAS SECTOR RECEIVED $18B IN PANDEMIC Canada’s oil and gas sector received $18 billion in subsidies, public financing during pandemic: report. Oil and gas infrastructure on a roadside near Calgary, Alta., on December 30, 2020. A new report from Environmental Defence found support for the oil and gas sector grew to $18 billion in 2020. Photo: Todd Korol. HOW THE SALMONBERRY CONNECTS SALMON, NATURE AND THE Photo: Louise Whitehouse / The Narwhal. For most Haíɫzaqv (Heiltsuk) children, the relationship between salmon and salmonberries is the first indicator — a sign from the natural world — we are taught. A good crop of salmonberries, we are told, corresponds to a good salmon run and luck in the harvest, and a poor crop is an early signal ‘WHO WOULD FEEL SAFE?’ SITE C DAM CONCERNS BUILD ALONG Concerns about the safety of the Site C dam are mounting in some downstream communities along the Peace River, despite the B.C. government’s assurances that the project can be completed safely after two independent experts approved BC Hydro’s proposed fix for the dam’s weak foundation.. The fix involves driving as many as 125 concrete-filled pipes 25 metres into the ground — INDIGENOUS LEADERS LAUNCH $2.1 BILLION CLASS-ACTION Indigenous leaders launch $2.1 billion class-action lawsuits against Canada over lack of drinking water. The claimants argue the federal government failed to provide clean water and forced First Nations communities to live in a manner 'consistent with life in developing countries'. By Leyland Cecco. FAIRY CREEK BLOCKADERS SAY B.C. TO BLAME FOR OLD-GROWTH As Fairy Creek blockaders brace for arrests, B.C.’s failure to enact old-growth protections draws fire. The Pacheedaht First Nation is asking protesters to withdraw from its territory, where a battle is brewing to protect some of the province’s last-remaining ancient trees. It’s a battle some say could have been prevented if the DOES THE FUTURE OF SUSTAINABLE SALMON LIE ON DRY LAND It may sound incompatible with our idea of seafood, but land-based salmon farming is emerging as a sustainable source of protein for the world’s growing population. The practice is increasingly taking hold, but like any technological advancement, it comes with both risks and advantages. As wild fisheries collapse or reach peak harvest, land B.C. FIRST NATIONS, DFO PROTECT DUNGENESS CRAB IN LANDMARK B.C. First Nations, Fisheries and Oceans Canada protect crab for Indigenous food, social and ceremonial purposes. Groups agree to close 17 Dungeness crab harvest sites on the central coast to commercial and recreational fishing in landmark decision. HOME - THE NARWHALNEWSIN-DEPTHEXPLAINERSINVESTIGATIONSON THEGROUNDPHOTO ESSAYS
From representing BIPOC and non-binary folks in the outdoors, to addressing race in food sovereignty, to documenting the intimate relationship between Kaska Dene and caribou, our reader-funded fellowship program is changing the lens when it comes to reporting on the natural world. By Josie Kao. May 27, 2021 7 min. read. B.C.'S OLD-GROWTH FOREST PANEL EXPERT GARRY MERKEL WEIGHS Last fall, during the B.C. election campaign, NDP leader John Horgan promised to implement the recommendations of an old-growth strategic review panel led by foresters Garry Merkel and Al Gorley. After hearing from thousands of people all over the province, Merkel and Gorley called for a paradigm shift in the way B.C. manages itsold-growth
SCIENTISTS URGE B.C. TO IMMEDIATELY DEFER LOGGING IN KEY Photo: TJ Watt. B.C.’s rarest forest ecosystems are rapidly disappearing and if the province doesn’t act immediately to defer logging in key areas, as recommended by the 2020 Old Growth Strategic Review, they will be lost forever, according to a report released CANADA’S OIL AND GAS SECTOR RECEIVED $18B IN PANDEMIC Canada’s oil and gas sector received $18 billion in subsidies, public financing during pandemic: report. Oil and gas infrastructure on a roadside near Calgary, Alta., on December 30, 2020. A new report from Environmental Defence found support for the oil and gas sector grew to $18 billion in 2020. Photo: Todd Korol. HOW THE SALMONBERRY CONNECTS SALMON, NATURE AND THE Photo: Louise Whitehouse / The Narwhal. For most Haíɫzaqv (Heiltsuk) children, the relationship between salmon and salmonberries is the first indicator — a sign from the natural world — we are taught. A good crop of salmonberries, we are told, corresponds to a good salmon run and luck in the harvest, and a poor crop is an early signal ‘WHO WOULD FEEL SAFE?’ SITE C DAM CONCERNS BUILD ALONG Concerns about the safety of the Site C dam are mounting in some downstream communities along the Peace River, despite the B.C. government’s assurances that the project can be completed safely after two independent experts approved BC Hydro’s proposed fix for the dam’s weak foundation.. The fix involves driving as many as 125 concrete-filled pipes 25 metres into the ground — INDIGENOUS LEADERS LAUNCH $2.1 BILLION CLASS-ACTION Indigenous leaders launch $2.1 billion class-action lawsuits against Canada over lack of drinking water. The claimants argue the federal government failed to provide clean water and forced First Nations communities to live in a manner 'consistent with life in developing countries'. By Leyland Cecco. FAIRY CREEK BLOCKADERS SAY B.C. TO BLAME FOR OLD-GROWTH As Fairy Creek blockaders brace for arrests, B.C.’s failure to enact old-growth protections draws fire. The Pacheedaht First Nation is asking protesters to withdraw from its territory, where a battle is brewing to protect some of the province’s last-remaining ancient trees. It’s a battle some say could have been prevented if the DOES THE FUTURE OF SUSTAINABLE SALMON LIE ON DRY LAND It may sound incompatible with our idea of seafood, but land-based salmon farming is emerging as a sustainable source of protein for the world’s growing population. The practice is increasingly taking hold, but like any technological advancement, it comes with both risks and advantages. As wild fisheries collapse or reach peak harvest, land B.C. FIRST NATIONS, DFO PROTECT DUNGENESS CRAB IN LANDMARK B.C. First Nations, Fisheries and Oceans Canada protect crab for Indigenous food, social and ceremonial purposes. Groups agree to close 17 Dungeness crab harvest sites on the central coast to commercial and recreational fishing in landmark decision. THE NARWHAL’S SITE C DAM REPORTING WINS CANADIAN 21 hours ago · The Narwhal was honoured for its contributions to excellence in journalism at the Canadian Journalism Foundation’s awards gala on Wednesday night. The Narwhal received the award in the small media category for B.C. investigative reporter Sarah Cox’s tenacious reporting on B.C. HUNTING, CONSERVATION ADVOCATES CALL ON NDP TO As B.C.’s landscapes are fragmented by industrial activities and the province faces biodiversity collapse, with more than 2,000 species at risk of extinction, guide outfitters, hunters, fishers and trappers are standing shoulder-to-shoulder with naturalists, ecotourism operators and conservation 5 WAYS B.C.’S FORESTRY PLAN SETS STAGE FOR MORE OLD-GROWTH 5. B.C. forestry plan does not address the biodiversity crisis. The 2020 old-growth strategic review urged the province to prioritize biodiversity and at-risk species over the economic benefits of the forest industry. The intentions paper does not mention biodiversityand
B.C. DEFERS OLD-GROWTH FOREST LOGGING IN FAIRY CREEK 23 hours ago · B.C. has accepted a request by the Pacheedaht, Ditidaht and Huu-ay-aht First Nations to defer old-growth logging for two years in the Fairy Creek watershed and Central Walbran areas on southwest Vancouver Island, Premier John Horgan announced on Wednesday. “Today, cabinet has approved a request by the Pacheedaht to defer old-growth forestry in Fairy Creek as well as the Central B.C. FAILING TO MEET INTERNATIONAL BIODIVERSITY TARGETS B.C. is failing to protect nature and has missed international targets for conserving wildlife and biodiversity, according to a report card released on Thursday that gives the provincial government a failing grade in four out of five key categories. “Biodiversity is the backbone of life,” said Charlotte Dawe, conservation and policy campaigner for the Wilderness Committee, which coHUNTING ARCHIVES
As B.C. faces a biodiversity crisis, a new coalition of unlikely allies is calling on Get The Narwhal in your inbox! People always tell us they love our newsletter. Find out yourself with a weekly dose of our ad‑free, independent journalism PACHEEDAHT TELLS B.C. TO DEFER OLD-GROWTH LOGGING IN FAIRY The Pacheedaht, Ditidaht, and Huu-ay-aht First Nations have formally given notice to the province of B.C. to defer old-growth logging for two years in the Fairy Creek and Central Walbran areas on southwest Vancouver Island while the nations prepare resource management plans.. The notice comes as RCMP prepared on Monday morning to arrest protesters who have been camping in the Fairy Creek B.C.’S SITE C DAM: 10 THINGS WE KNOW ABOUT THE LATEST Then, on Feb. 26, the B.C. government released a barrage of information about the Site C dam’s stability issues and dropped a financial bombshell. The dam, announced in 2010 as a $6.6 billion project, will now cost $16 billion to complete. That makes Site C the most expensive dam in Canadian history — and nowhere near thebiggest.
ENBRIDGE LINE 5 PIPELINE DISPUTE, EXPLAINED March 27, 2021 17 min. read. Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer is seeking to shut down the Enbridge Line 5 pipeline, which runs underneath the Straits of Mackinac in the Great Lakes. But the company is vowing to fight back and Canadian politicians are entering the fray, saying the pipeline is needed to deliver fuel and maintain jobs. HOW THE GLOBAL STEEL INDUSTRY IS CUTTING OUT COAL The end of an era: how the global steel industry is cutting out coal. As backlash erupted last year in response to the Alberta government's plans to open up large swaths of the Rocky Mountain region to metallurgical coal mines, alternative plans were already afoot in the global steel-making industry. Companies have introduced technologiesthat
HOME - THE NARWHALNEWSIN-DEPTHEXPLAINERSINVESTIGATIONSON THEGROUNDPHOTO ESSAYS
From representing BIPOC and non-binary folks in the outdoors, to addressing race in food sovereignty, to documenting the intimate relationship between Kaska Dene and caribou, our reader-funded fellowship program is changing the lens when it comes to reporting on the natural world. By Josie Kao. May 27, 2021 7 min. read. B.C.'S OLD-GROWTH FOREST PANEL EXPERT GARRY MERKEL WEIGHS Last fall, during the B.C. election campaign, NDP leader John Horgan promised to implement the recommendations of an old-growth strategic review panel led by foresters Garry Merkel and Al Gorley. After hearing from thousands of people all over the province, Merkel and Gorley called for a paradigm shift in the way B.C. manages itsold-growth
SCIENTISTS URGE B.C. TO IMMEDIATELY DEFER LOGGING IN KEY Photo: TJ Watt. B.C.’s rarest forest ecosystems are rapidly disappearing and if the province doesn’t act immediately to defer logging in key areas, as recommended by the 2020 Old Growth Strategic Review, they will be lost forever, according to a report released CANADA’S OIL AND GAS SECTOR RECEIVED $18B IN PANDEMIC Canada’s oil and gas sector received $18 billion in subsidies, public financing during pandemic: report. Oil and gas infrastructure on a roadside near Calgary, Alta., on December 30, 2020. A new report from Environmental Defence found support for the oil and gas sector grew to $18 billion in 2020. Photo: Todd Korol. HOW THE SALMONBERRY CONNECTS SALMON, NATURE AND THE Photo: Louise Whitehouse / The Narwhal. For most Haíɫzaqv (Heiltsuk) children, the relationship between salmon and salmonberries is the first indicator — a sign from the natural world — we are taught. A good crop of salmonberries, we are told, corresponds to a good salmon run and luck in the harvest, and a poor crop is an early signal ‘WHO WOULD FEEL SAFE?’ SITE C DAM CONCERNS BUILD ALONG Concerns about the safety of the Site C dam are mounting in some downstream communities along the Peace River, despite the B.C. government’s assurances that the project can be completed safely after two independent experts approved BC Hydro’s proposed fix for the dam’s weak foundation.. The fix involves driving as many as 125 concrete-filled pipes 25 metres into the ground — INDIGENOUS LEADERS LAUNCH $2.1 BILLION CLASS-ACTION Indigenous leaders launch $2.1 billion class-action lawsuits against Canada over lack of drinking water. The claimants argue the federal government failed to provide clean water and forced First Nations communities to live in a manner 'consistent with life in developing countries'. By Leyland Cecco. FAIRY CREEK BLOCKADERS SAY B.C. TO BLAME FOR OLD-GROWTH As Fairy Creek blockaders brace for arrests, B.C.’s failure to enact old-growth protections draws fire. The Pacheedaht First Nation is asking protesters to withdraw from its territory, where a battle is brewing to protect some of the province’s last-remaining ancient trees. It’s a battle some say could have been prevented if the DOES THE FUTURE OF SUSTAINABLE SALMON LIE ON DRY LAND It may sound incompatible with our idea of seafood, but land-based salmon farming is emerging as a sustainable source of protein for the world’s growing population. The practice is increasingly taking hold, but like any technological advancement, it comes with both risks and advantages. As wild fisheries collapse or reach peak harvest, land B.C. FIRST NATIONS, DFO PROTECT DUNGENESS CRAB IN LANDMARK B.C. First Nations, Fisheries and Oceans Canada protect crab for Indigenous food, social and ceremonial purposes. Groups agree to close 17 Dungeness crab harvest sites on the central coast to commercial and recreational fishing in landmark decision. HOME - THE NARWHALNEWSIN-DEPTHEXPLAINERSINVESTIGATIONSON THEGROUNDPHOTO ESSAYS
From representing BIPOC and non-binary folks in the outdoors, to addressing race in food sovereignty, to documenting the intimate relationship between Kaska Dene and caribou, our reader-funded fellowship program is changing the lens when it comes to reporting on the natural world. By Josie Kao. May 27, 2021 7 min. read. B.C.'S OLD-GROWTH FOREST PANEL EXPERT GARRY MERKEL WEIGHS Last fall, during the B.C. election campaign, NDP leader John Horgan promised to implement the recommendations of an old-growth strategic review panel led by foresters Garry Merkel and Al Gorley. After hearing from thousands of people all over the province, Merkel and Gorley called for a paradigm shift in the way B.C. manages itsold-growth
SCIENTISTS URGE B.C. TO IMMEDIATELY DEFER LOGGING IN KEY Photo: TJ Watt. B.C.’s rarest forest ecosystems are rapidly disappearing and if the province doesn’t act immediately to defer logging in key areas, as recommended by the 2020 Old Growth Strategic Review, they will be lost forever, according to a report released CANADA’S OIL AND GAS SECTOR RECEIVED $18B IN PANDEMIC Canada’s oil and gas sector received $18 billion in subsidies, public financing during pandemic: report. Oil and gas infrastructure on a roadside near Calgary, Alta., on December 30, 2020. A new report from Environmental Defence found support for the oil and gas sector grew to $18 billion in 2020. Photo: Todd Korol. HOW THE SALMONBERRY CONNECTS SALMON, NATURE AND THE Photo: Louise Whitehouse / The Narwhal. For most Haíɫzaqv (Heiltsuk) children, the relationship between salmon and salmonberries is the first indicator — a sign from the natural world — we are taught. A good crop of salmonberries, we are told, corresponds to a good salmon run and luck in the harvest, and a poor crop is an early signal ‘WHO WOULD FEEL SAFE?’ SITE C DAM CONCERNS BUILD ALONG Concerns about the safety of the Site C dam are mounting in some downstream communities along the Peace River, despite the B.C. government’s assurances that the project can be completed safely after two independent experts approved BC Hydro’s proposed fix for the dam’s weak foundation.. The fix involves driving as many as 125 concrete-filled pipes 25 metres into the ground — INDIGENOUS LEADERS LAUNCH $2.1 BILLION CLASS-ACTION Indigenous leaders launch $2.1 billion class-action lawsuits against Canada over lack of drinking water. The claimants argue the federal government failed to provide clean water and forced First Nations communities to live in a manner 'consistent with life in developing countries'. By Leyland Cecco. FAIRY CREEK BLOCKADERS SAY B.C. TO BLAME FOR OLD-GROWTH As Fairy Creek blockaders brace for arrests, B.C.’s failure to enact old-growth protections draws fire. The Pacheedaht First Nation is asking protesters to withdraw from its territory, where a battle is brewing to protect some of the province’s last-remaining ancient trees. It’s a battle some say could have been prevented if the DOES THE FUTURE OF SUSTAINABLE SALMON LIE ON DRY LAND It may sound incompatible with our idea of seafood, but land-based salmon farming is emerging as a sustainable source of protein for the world’s growing population. The practice is increasingly taking hold, but like any technological advancement, it comes with both risks and advantages. As wild fisheries collapse or reach peak harvest, land B.C. FIRST NATIONS, DFO PROTECT DUNGENESS CRAB IN LANDMARK B.C. First Nations, Fisheries and Oceans Canada protect crab for Indigenous food, social and ceremonial purposes. Groups agree to close 17 Dungeness crab harvest sites on the central coast to commercial and recreational fishing in landmark decision. THE NARWHAL’S SITE C DAM REPORTING WINS CANADIAN 16 hours ago · The Narwhal was honoured for its contributions to excellence in journalism at the Canadian Journalism Foundation’s awards gala on Wednesday night. The Narwhal received the award in the small media category for B.C. investigative reporter Sarah Cox’s tenacious reporting on B.C. DEFERS OLD-GROWTH FOREST LOGGING IN FAIRY CREEK 18 hours ago · B.C. has accepted a request by the Pacheedaht, Ditidaht and Huu-ay-aht First Nations to defer old-growth logging for two years in the Fairy Creek watershed and Central Walbran areas on southwest Vancouver Island, Premier John Horgan announced on Wednesday. “Today, cabinet has approved a request by the Pacheedaht to defer old-growth forestry in Fairy Creek as well as the Central B.C. HUNTING, CONSERVATION ADVOCATES CALL ON NDP TO As B.C.’s landscapes are fragmented by industrial activities and the province faces biodiversity collapse, with more than 2,000 species at risk of extinction, guide outfitters, hunters, fishers and trappers are standing shoulder-to-shoulder with naturalists, ecotourism operators and conservationHUNTING ARCHIVES
As B.C. faces a biodiversity crisis, a new coalition of unlikely allies is calling on Get The Narwhal in your inbox! People always tell us they love our newsletter. Find out yourself with a weekly dose of our ad‑free, independent journalism 5 WAYS B.C.’S FORESTRY PLAN SETS STAGE FOR MORE OLD-GROWTH 5. B.C. forestry plan does not address the biodiversity crisis. The 2020 old-growth strategic review urged the province to prioritize biodiversity and at-risk species over the economic benefits of the forest industry. The intentions paper does not mention biodiversityand
B.C.’S SITE C DAM: 10 THINGS WE KNOW ABOUT THE LATEST Then, on Feb. 26, the B.C. government released a barrage of information about the Site C dam’s stability issues and dropped a financial bombshell. The dam, announced in 2010 as a $6.6 billion project, will now cost $16 billion to complete. That makes Site C the most expensive dam in Canadian history — and nowhere near thebiggest.
B.C. FAILING TO MEET INTERNATIONAL BIODIVERSITY TARGETS B.C. is failing to protect nature and has missed international targets for conserving wildlife and biodiversity, according to a report card released on Thursday that gives the provincial government a failing grade in four out of five key categories. “Biodiversity is the backbone of life,” said Charlotte Dawe, conservation and policy campaigner for the Wilderness Committee, which co B.C. FIRST NATIONS, DFO PROTECT DUNGENESS CRAB IN LANDMARK B.C. First Nations, Fisheries and Oceans Canada protect crab for Indigenous food, social and ceremonial purposes. Groups agree to close 17 Dungeness crab harvest sites on the central coast to commercial and recreational fishing in landmark decision. HOW THE GLOBAL STEEL INDUSTRY IS CUTTING OUT COAL The end of an era: how the global steel industry is cutting out coal. As backlash erupted last year in response to the Alberta government's plans to open up large swaths of the Rocky Mountain region to metallurgical coal mines, alternative plans were already afoot in the global steel-making industry. Companies have introduced technologiesthat
ENBRIDGE LINE 5 PIPELINE DISPUTE, EXPLAINED March 27, 2021 17 min. read. Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer is seeking to shut down the Enbridge Line 5 pipeline, which runs underneath the Straits of Mackinac in the Great Lakes. But the company is vowing to fight back and Canadian politicians are entering the fray, saying the pipeline is needed to deliver fuel and maintain jobs. HOME - THE NARWHALNEWSIN-DEPTHEXPLAINERSINVESTIGATIONSON THEGROUNDPHOTO ESSAYS
From representing BIPOC and non-binary folks in the outdoors, to addressing race in food sovereignty, to documenting the intimate relationship between Kaska Dene and caribou, our reader-funded fellowship program is changing the lens when it comes to reporting on the natural world. By Josie Kao. May 27, 2021 7 min. read. ABOUT US - THE NARWHAL The Narwhal is a founding member of Press Forward, Canada’s association for independent media, and a proud partner organization of Covering Climate Now, a collaborative global journalism project to bring more coverage to climate issues. The Narwhal’s reporting is frequently cited in The Globe and Mail, Toronto Star, CBC and others.VIVIAN KRAUSE
Vivian Krause Biography. Vivian Krause was born in Vancouver, British Columbia and spent a part of her childhood living in Kitimat, B.C., the terminus point of the Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline. As a teen Krause lived in Kamloops where she graduated from Westsyde Secondary.. Vivian Krause has a B.Sc. (McGill) and M.Sc. in Nutrition (l’Université de Montréal) and worked on children’s BC HYDRO SUING OPPONENTS OF SITE C DAM IN SLAPP-STYLE SUIT Nothing remains at the Rocky Mountain Fort site where Peace Valley farmers and First Nations camped for 60 days in the hopes of stopping clear-cut logging for the Site C dam.The camp was dismantled in March and the old-growth spruce and cottonwood forest was logged, as BC Hydro prepares to convert the Class 1 heritage site into a Site Cwaste rock dump.
B.C. LNG AND FRACKING CANADIAN MINING COMPANIES WILL NOW FACE HUMAN RIGHTS Canadian mining companies will now face human rights charges in Canadian courts. Canada is the undisputed powerhouse of the mining industry, home to 75 per cent of its companies — but the industry is plagued by allegations of rape and slavery abroad. Now those who feel harmed or violated can seek justice back in Canada. OIL FOR EXPORT: TAR SANDS BITUMEN CANNOT BE REFINED IN The misconception with 'west-to-east' pipeline proposals like Enbridge’s Line 9 or TransCanada’s Energy East is shipping western Canadian oil to eastern Canada means ‘Canadian oil for Canadian refineries.’ This assumption overlooks the fact eastern Canadian refineries cannot refine a certain type of Canadian oil – tar sands bitumen. Bitumen is the heavy unconventional oil found HERE’S WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE VISTA MINE, ALBERTA While Canada champions a global shift away from burning coal for electricity, a new proposal — to build one of North America's largest thermal coal mines — seems to tell a different story ‘WHEN ARE THEY GOING TO ENSURE THE POLLUTER PAYS A plan to update the province’s antiquated Mines Act will bring more independent oversight of mines but doesn’t address lax regulations that leave responsibility for clean-up costs, such as in the Mount Polley mine disaster, in the hands of taxpayers A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE PUBLIC MONEY PROPPING UP THESEE MORE ONTHENARWHAL.CA
HOME - THE NARWHALNEWSIN-DEPTHEXPLAINERSINVESTIGATIONSON THEGROUNDPHOTO ESSAYS
From representing BIPOC and non-binary folks in the outdoors, to addressing race in food sovereignty, to documenting the intimate relationship between Kaska Dene and caribou, our reader-funded fellowship program is changing the lens when it comes to reporting on the natural world. By Josie Kao. May 27, 2021 7 min. read. ABOUT US - THE NARWHAL The Narwhal is a founding member of Press Forward, Canada’s association for independent media, and a proud partner organization of Covering Climate Now, a collaborative global journalism project to bring more coverage to climate issues. The Narwhal’s reporting is frequently cited in The Globe and Mail, Toronto Star, CBC and others.VIVIAN KRAUSE
Vivian Krause Biography. Vivian Krause was born in Vancouver, British Columbia and spent a part of her childhood living in Kitimat, B.C., the terminus point of the Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline. As a teen Krause lived in Kamloops where she graduated from Westsyde Secondary.. Vivian Krause has a B.Sc. (McGill) and M.Sc. in Nutrition (l’Université de Montréal) and worked on children’s BC HYDRO SUING OPPONENTS OF SITE C DAM IN SLAPP-STYLE SUIT Nothing remains at the Rocky Mountain Fort site where Peace Valley farmers and First Nations camped for 60 days in the hopes of stopping clear-cut logging for the Site C dam.The camp was dismantled in March and the old-growth spruce and cottonwood forest was logged, as BC Hydro prepares to convert the Class 1 heritage site into a Site Cwaste rock dump.
B.C. LNG AND FRACKING CANADIAN MINING COMPANIES WILL NOW FACE HUMAN RIGHTS Canadian mining companies will now face human rights charges in Canadian courts. Canada is the undisputed powerhouse of the mining industry, home to 75 per cent of its companies — but the industry is plagued by allegations of rape and slavery abroad. Now those who feel harmed or violated can seek justice back in Canada. OIL FOR EXPORT: TAR SANDS BITUMEN CANNOT BE REFINED IN The misconception with 'west-to-east' pipeline proposals like Enbridge’s Line 9 or TransCanada’s Energy East is shipping western Canadian oil to eastern Canada means ‘Canadian oil for Canadian refineries.’ This assumption overlooks the fact eastern Canadian refineries cannot refine a certain type of Canadian oil – tar sands bitumen. Bitumen is the heavy unconventional oil found HERE’S WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE VISTA MINE, ALBERTA While Canada champions a global shift away from burning coal for electricity, a new proposal — to build one of North America's largest thermal coal mines — seems to tell a different story ‘WHEN ARE THEY GOING TO ENSURE THE POLLUTER PAYS A plan to update the province’s antiquated Mines Act will bring more independent oversight of mines but doesn’t address lax regulations that leave responsibility for clean-up costs, such as in the Mount Polley mine disaster, in the hands of taxpayers A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE PUBLIC MONEY PROPPING UP THESEE MORE ONTHENARWHAL.CA
CANADA’S OIL AND GAS SECTOR RECEIVED $18B IN PANDEMIC Canada’s oil and gas sector received $18 billion in subsidies, public financing during pandemic: report. Oil and gas infrastructure on a roadside near Calgary, Alta., on December 30, 2020. A new report from Environmental Defence found support for the oil and gas sector grew to $18 billion in 2020. Photo: Todd Korol. PACHEEDAHT TELLS PROVINCE TO DEFER OLD-GROWTH LOGGING IN 1 day ago · The Pacheedaht, Ditidaht, and Huu-ay-aht First Nations have formally given notice to the province of B.C. to defer old-growth logging for two years in the Fairy Creek and Central Walbran areas on southwest Vancouver Island while the nations prepare resourcemanagement plans.
CANADIAN NEWS ORGS FILE LEGAL ACTION FOR PRESS FREEDOM AT A coalition of Canadian news organizations and press freedom groups, which includes The Narwhal, has announced it will file legal action to allow journalists substantive access to report on continuing demonstrations against old-growth logging in the Fairy Creek and Caycuse watersheds near Port Renfrew, B.C. NATURAL CLIMATE SOLUTIONS COULD OFFSET 11 PER CENT OF A new report, published Friday in the journal Science Advances, lays out a pathway for Canada to offset 11 per cent of its emissions annually through natural climate solutions, such as protecting grasslands and other carbon-rich landscapes.. Overall, the study’s more than three dozen authors found Canada has the potential to offset 78 megatonnes of greenhouse gas emissions INSIDE THE COMPLICATED FIGHT FOR B.C.’S LAST ANCIENT From its beginning on Aug. 9, 2020, the Fairy Creek Blockade has been defined by this kind of urgency. This little valley — one of the last unlogged watersheds on the Island — has become the epicentre in the kind of fight to save B.C.’s temperate rainforests LOGGING, WILDFIRES AND THE FUTURE OF B.C.’S PURCELL FOREST The composition of the forest shifts in sometimes subtle ways between the shores of Kootenay Lake and the mountaintops at the edge of the Purcell Wilderness Conservancy. Among a diverse array are species of fir and hemlock, spruce and larch. Cedar concentrate in the cool shadow of the creek beds THE RADICAL ACT OF PAYING ATTENTION Canada’s disconnect from the experiences and the voices of Indigenous people is not just a form of denial — it is a form of ongoing violence. And the public’s surprise at the discovery of the 215 children’s remains in Kamloops is yet another signal that non KWANLIN DÜN ACCELERATES LAND USE PLANNING AS YUKONERS A lynx crosses Fish Lake road outside Whitehorse, Yukon, and near Fish Lake, where outdoor enthusiasts are recreating in increasing numbers. The popularity of the surrounding area is prompting the Kwanlin Dün First Nation to ask for respect as land use planning processes areunderway.
CODE OF ETHICS
The Narwhal’s mission is to bring evidence-based news and analysis to the surface for all Canadians. In doing this work, we adhere to a set of professional journalistic principles to ensure fairness, independence and accuracy in our work. Independence We serve the public interest, and put the needs of our readers at the forefront of THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO BUYING AN ELECTRIC CAR IN CANADA New: 2018 marks a step change for electric vehicles, with the Chevy Bolt, Tesla Model 3, next generation Nissan Leaf and others achieving 50 to 100 per cent more range than previous years at comparable price points. These will run you anywhere from $36,000 for 2018 Nissan Leaf (243 km range) to $43,000 to $45,000 for base models of the Chevy HOME - THE NARWHALNEWSIN-DEPTHEXPLAINERSINVESTIGATIONSON THEGROUNDPHOTO ESSAYS
From representing BIPOC and non-binary folks in the outdoors, to addressing race in food sovereignty, to documenting the intimate relationship between Kaska Dene and caribou, our reader-funded fellowship program is changing the lens when it comes to reporting on the natural world. By Josie Kao. May 27, 2021 7 min. read. ABOUT US - THE NARWHALNARWHAL THE PUPPY The Narwhal is a founding member of Press Forward, Canada’s association for independent media, and a proud partner organization of Covering Climate Now, a collaborative global journalism project to bring more coverage to climate issues. The Narwhal’s reporting is frequently cited in The Globe and Mail, Toronto Star, CBC and others.VIVIAN KRAUSE
Vivian Krause Biography. Vivian Krause was born in Vancouver, British Columbia and spent a part of her childhood living in Kitimat, B.C., the terminus point of the Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline. As a teen Krause lived in Kamloops where she graduated from Westsyde Secondary.. Vivian Krause has a B.Sc. (McGill) and M.Sc. in Nutrition (l’Université de Montréal) and worked on children’s BC HYDRO SUING OPPONENTS OF SITE C DAM IN SLAPP-STYLE SUIT Nothing remains at the Rocky Mountain Fort site where Peace Valley farmers and First Nations camped for 60 days in the hopes of stopping clear-cut logging for the Site C dam.The camp was dismantled in March and the old-growth spruce and cottonwood forest was logged, as BC Hydro prepares to convert the Class 1 heritage site into a Site Cwaste rock dump.
B.C. LNG AND FRACKING CANADIAN MINING COMPANIES WILL NOW FACE HUMAN RIGHTS Canadian mining companies will now face human rights charges in Canadian courts. Canada is the undisputed powerhouse of the mining industry, home to 75 per cent of its companies — but the industry is plagued by allegations of rape and slavery abroad. Now those who feel harmed or violated can seek justice back in Canada. OIL FOR EXPORT: TAR SANDS BITUMEN CANNOT BE REFINED IN The misconception with 'west-to-east' pipeline proposals like Enbridge’s Line 9 or TransCanada’s Energy East is shipping western Canadian oil to eastern Canada means ‘Canadian oil for Canadian refineries.’ This assumption overlooks the fact eastern Canadian refineries cannot refine a certain type of Canadian oil – tar sands bitumen. Bitumen is the heavy unconventional oil found HERE’S WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE VISTA MINE, ALBERTA While Canada champions a global shift away from burning coal for electricity, a new proposal — to build one of North America's largest thermal coal mines — seems to tell a different story ‘WHEN ARE THEY GOING TO ENSURE THE POLLUTER PAYS A plan to update the province’s antiquated Mines Act will bring more independent oversight of mines but doesn’t address lax regulations that leave responsibility for clean-up costs, such as in the Mount Polley mine disaster, in the hands of taxpayers A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE PUBLIC MONEY PROPPING UP THESEE MORE ONTHENARWHAL.CA
HOME - THE NARWHALNEWSIN-DEPTHEXPLAINERSINVESTIGATIONSON THEGROUNDPHOTO ESSAYS
From representing BIPOC and non-binary folks in the outdoors, to addressing race in food sovereignty, to documenting the intimate relationship between Kaska Dene and caribou, our reader-funded fellowship program is changing the lens when it comes to reporting on the natural world. By Josie Kao. May 27, 2021 7 min. read. ABOUT US - THE NARWHALNARWHAL THE PUPPY The Narwhal is a founding member of Press Forward, Canada’s association for independent media, and a proud partner organization of Covering Climate Now, a collaborative global journalism project to bring more coverage to climate issues. The Narwhal’s reporting is frequently cited in The Globe and Mail, Toronto Star, CBC and others.VIVIAN KRAUSE
Vivian Krause Biography. Vivian Krause was born in Vancouver, British Columbia and spent a part of her childhood living in Kitimat, B.C., the terminus point of the Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline. As a teen Krause lived in Kamloops where she graduated from Westsyde Secondary.. Vivian Krause has a B.Sc. (McGill) and M.Sc. in Nutrition (l’Université de Montréal) and worked on children’s BC HYDRO SUING OPPONENTS OF SITE C DAM IN SLAPP-STYLE SUIT Nothing remains at the Rocky Mountain Fort site where Peace Valley farmers and First Nations camped for 60 days in the hopes of stopping clear-cut logging for the Site C dam.The camp was dismantled in March and the old-growth spruce and cottonwood forest was logged, as BC Hydro prepares to convert the Class 1 heritage site into a Site Cwaste rock dump.
B.C. LNG AND FRACKING CANADIAN MINING COMPANIES WILL NOW FACE HUMAN RIGHTS Canadian mining companies will now face human rights charges in Canadian courts. Canada is the undisputed powerhouse of the mining industry, home to 75 per cent of its companies — but the industry is plagued by allegations of rape and slavery abroad. Now those who feel harmed or violated can seek justice back in Canada. OIL FOR EXPORT: TAR SANDS BITUMEN CANNOT BE REFINED IN The misconception with 'west-to-east' pipeline proposals like Enbridge’s Line 9 or TransCanada’s Energy East is shipping western Canadian oil to eastern Canada means ‘Canadian oil for Canadian refineries.’ This assumption overlooks the fact eastern Canadian refineries cannot refine a certain type of Canadian oil – tar sands bitumen. Bitumen is the heavy unconventional oil found HERE’S WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE VISTA MINE, ALBERTA While Canada champions a global shift away from burning coal for electricity, a new proposal — to build one of North America's largest thermal coal mines — seems to tell a different story ‘WHEN ARE THEY GOING TO ENSURE THE POLLUTER PAYS A plan to update the province’s antiquated Mines Act will bring more independent oversight of mines but doesn’t address lax regulations that leave responsibility for clean-up costs, such as in the Mount Polley mine disaster, in the hands of taxpayers A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE PUBLIC MONEY PROPPING UP THESEE MORE ONTHENARWHAL.CA
CANADA’S OIL AND GAS SECTOR RECEIVED $18B IN PANDEMIC Canada’s oil and gas sector received $18 billion in subsidies, public financing during pandemic: report. Oil and gas infrastructure on a roadside near Calgary, Alta., on December 30, 2020. A new report from Environmental Defence found support for the oil and gas sector grew to $18 billion in 2020. Photo: Todd Korol. CANADIAN NEWS ORGS FILE LEGAL ACTION FOR PRESS FREEDOM AT A coalition of Canadian news organizations and press freedom groups, which includes The Narwhal, has announced it will file legal action to allow journalists substantive access to report on continuing demonstrations against old-growth logging in the Fairy Creek and Caycuse watersheds near Port Renfrew, B.C. PACHEEDAHT TELLS PROVINCE TO DEFER OLD-GROWTH LOGGING IN 23 hours ago · The Pacheedaht, Ditidaht, and Huu-ay-aht First Nations have formally given notice to the province of B.C. to defer old-growth logging for two years in the Fairy Creek and Central Walbran areas on southwest Vancouver Island while the nations prepare resource management plans. INSIDE THE COMPLICATED FIGHT FOR B.C.’S LAST ANCIENT From its beginning on Aug. 9, 2020, the Fairy Creek Blockade has been defined by this kind of urgency. This little valley — one of the last unlogged watersheds on the Island — has become the epicentre in the kind of fight to save B.C.’s temperate rainforests NATURAL CLIMATE SOLUTIONS COULD OFFSET 11 PER CENT OF A new report, published Friday in the journal Science Advances, lays out a pathway for Canada to offset 11 per cent of its emissions annually through natural climate solutions, such as protecting grasslands and other carbon-rich landscapes.. Overall, the study’s more than three dozen authors found Canada has the potential to offset 78 megatonnes of greenhouse gas emissions LOGGING, WILDFIRES AND THE FUTURE OF B.C.’S PURCELL FOREST The composition of the forest shifts in sometimes subtle ways between the shores of Kootenay Lake and the mountaintops at the edge of the Purcell Wilderness Conservancy. Among a diverse array are species of fir and hemlock, spruce and larch. Cedar concentrate in the cool shadow of the creek beds THE RADICAL ACT OF PAYING ATTENTION Canada’s disconnect from the experiences and the voices of Indigenous people is not just a form of denial — it is a form of ongoing violence. And the public’s surprise at the discovery of the 215 children’s remains in Kamloops is yet another signal that non KWANLIN DÜN ACCELERATES LAND USE PLANNING AS YUKONERS A lynx crosses Fish Lake road outside Whitehorse, Yukon, and near Fish Lake, where outdoor enthusiasts are recreating in increasing numbers. The popularity of the surrounding area is prompting the Kwanlin Dün First Nation to ask for respect as land use planning processes areunderway.
CODE OF ETHICS
The Narwhal’s mission is to bring evidence-based news and analysis to the surface for all Canadians. In doing this work, we adhere to a set of professional journalistic principles to ensure fairness, independence and accuracy in our work. Independence We serve the public interest, and put the needs of our readers at the forefront of THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO BUYING AN ELECTRIC CAR IN CANADA New: 2018 marks a step change for electric vehicles, with the Chevy Bolt, Tesla Model 3, next generation Nissan Leaf and others achieving 50 to 100 per cent more range than previous years at comparable price points. These will run you anywhere from $36,000 for 2018 Nissan Leaf (243 km range) to $43,000 to $45,000 for base models of the Chevy__Become a Narwhal
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BETWEEN THE THREAT OF WILDFIRE AND LOGGING, A COMMUNITY GRAPPLES WITH THE FUTURE OF B.C.’S PURCELL FOREST The struggle over whether to protect or log an untouched mountainside between Argenta and Johnsons Landing within the last intact ecosystem in the province's southeast is highlighting the challenge of managing landscapes in a changing climate By Ainslie Cruickshank June 5, 2021 __ 18 min. readContinue reading
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June 4, 2021 __ 8 min. read Study published in Science Advances finds protecting and restoring natural ecosystems, such as wetlands, forests...Newsletter
THE RADICAL ACT OF PAYING ATTENTION By Carol Linnitt June 4, 2021 __ 4 min. read Canada’s disconnect from the experiences and the voices of Indigenous people is not just a...Explainer
FIVE WAYS B.C.’S NEW FORESTRY PLAN SETS THE STAGE FOR MOREOLD-GROWTH CONFLICT
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In the midst of escalating protests over logging, Horgan released an intentions paper on Tuesday...In-Depth
‘IT’S MORE THAN A PARTY ZONE’: KWANLIN DÜN ACCELERATES LAND USE PLANNING AS YUKONERS FLOCK TO FISH LAKEBy Rhiannon Russell
June 2, 2021 __ 7 min. read ‘I'm hoping that heightened awareness will result in people taking better care of the land...In-Depth
HOW EIGHT IDLE WELLS MIGHT DETERMINE THE FUTURE OF OIL AND GAS INYUKON
By Carol Linnitt June 1, 2021 __ 10 min. read A plan to assess suspended wells in the territory’s Eagle Plains region is reigniting debate...News
THE NARWHAL WINS NATIONAL AWARD FOR PHOTO ESSAY ON MANITOBA HYDRO’S IMPACTS ON INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES By Carol Linnitt May 30, 2021 __ 1 min. read The feature documents the many ways five decades of hydroelectric development has transformed the lives...Become a Narwhal
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