Northern Indigenous leaders meet with banks over investment in Arctic energy
TORONTO — First Nations leaders from Yukon are meeting with bankers in Toronto this week to try to persuade them not to invest in energy development on the range of a vital caribou herd.
“We are going down to encourage them not to invest in the lease sales that are going on in Alaska,” said Cheryl Charlie, a band councillor with the Vuntut Gwich’In First Nation.
The United States government is about to sell exploration leases on the calving grounds of the Porcupine caribou herd, which crosses the border into Yukon from Alaska.
Gwich’In from both regions have long fought repeated attempts at oil exploration that would affect the herd, which they say is crucial to their way of life.