Not exact matches
The appointment of Ottawa MP Catherine McKenna as
Minister of Environment and Climate Change, and former environment minister Stephane Dion as Minister of Foreign Affairs signals that the new federal government may not be as singularly focused on pipelines as the previous gov
Minister of
Environment and Climate Change, and former environment minister Stephane Dion as Minister of Foreign Affairs signals that the new federal government may not be as singularly focused on pipelines as the previous
Environment and Climate Change, and former
environment minister Stephane Dion as Minister of Foreign Affairs signals that the new federal government may not be as singularly focused on pipelines as the previous
environment minister Stephane Dion as Minister of Foreign Affairs signals that the new federal government may not be as singularly focused on pipelines as the previous gov
minister Stephane Dion as
Minister of Foreign Affairs signals that the new federal government may not be as singularly focused on pipelines as the previous gov
Minister of Foreign Affairs signals that the
new federal government may not be as singularly focused on pipelines as the previous government.
Prime
Minister Trudeau has mandated no fewer than five cabinet
ministers (
Environment and Climate Change, Natural Resources, Fisheries, Indigenous and Norther Affairs, and Science) with reviewing
federal environmental assessment processes, with the aim of introducing «
new, fair processes.»
ABlawg.ca To Be (Justified) or Not To Be: That is (Still) the Question A couple of weeks ago, the
federal Minister of the
Environment, Leona Aglukkaq, released another highly anticipated «decision statement» pursuant to section 54 of the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act, 2012 (CEAA 2012), this time regarding Taseko's
New Prosperity Mine project.
A CBC interviewer asked
federal Environment Minister Catherine McKenna if Trans Mountain would have received the green light under the
new assessment process.
Downstream Emissions in Canada's
New Environmental Assessment «Climate Test» In late January 2016, Canada's
federal Minister of
Environment and Climate Change, Catherine McKenna, and
Minister of Natural Resources, Jim Carr, announced interim changes to environmental assessment processes as part of «efforts to restore public trust.»