Big oil, big banks and environment leaders link up to solve climate crisis
OTTAWA — In a courtroom in British Columbia Monday, Indigenous communities were arguing the federal government overstepped in approving the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion and that it has to be stopped over concerns about its impact on the environment.
One province over, lawyers were in a courtroom in Edmonton, arguing the federal government barged into Alberta’s provincial jurisdiction in imposing a carbon tax and want it stopped over concerns about its impact on the economy.
And in a boardroom in Toronto, executives from some of Canada’s biggest oil companies were sitting across the table from environment leaders, academics, Indigenous leaders and government officials hoping to find a way to bridge the Grand Canyon-sized divide.
“I think this is particularly about the future of Canada’s oil and gas sector in a low carbon world,” said Stewart Elgie, director of the Environment Institute at the University of Ottawa.