Friday, February 20, 2026

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Friday, February 20, 2026 | Latest Paper

Alberta: the province that is down, but not out

Make no mistake, it is bad for sure.” Mary Moran, president and CEO for Calgary Economic Development (CED), doesn’t bother to sugar coat her city’s current economic situation. As Alberta slogs through its second year of recession following an oil price slump, Moran—who has spent the last seven years working her way up the city-run […]

Indigenous leaders fighting for real power on resource development projects

Indigenous leaders and activists who oppose pipelines and other natural resource development projects, such as the proposed Pacific NorthWest LNG project recently approved by the federal government, say they are not being heard by the federal government. Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, who is president of the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs, said there is a […]

On oil, Saudi Arabia admits defeat

LONDON, U.K.—“God be with the citizens, we are back to the time of poverty,” wrote Saudi Arabian Twitter user Rayan al-Shamri last week. That’s a bit strong, but he and his fellow citizens are certainly no longer living in the time of plenty. Saudi Arabia is cutting back on all fronts. The wages of government […]

Rethinking Canada: is there life beyond the oil patch?

OTTAWA—Twenty-six years after the Exxon Valdez hit a reef and dumped 11 million gallons of crude oil into the clear, cold waters of Prince William Sound, the people of Alaska are still trying to clean up the damage, which befouled more than 1,000 miles of coastline. The event arguably changed the course of the oil […]

Growing the forest of tomorrow

Whether it’s reduced ice cover and longer summers in Canada’s Far North, or rising water levels in the tropics, the effects of climate change have progressed from what used to be a more theoretical discussion to what is now our new reality. The effects and the debate that surround this new reality will of course […]

Pipeline pandering and broken promises

OTTAWA—I don’t know about all y’all, but I’m wondering when the social licence shows up. “Social licence” is a term, never too carefully defined, for broad social acceptance of some big change. It came into vogue in the late years of Stephen Harper’s government to explain why he couldn’t get oil pipelines built even though […]

Harper’s Environmental Assessment Act overhaul failed mining. Let’s fix it

The headline may surprise you. After all, didn’t the mining industry benefit from the “streamlining” measures of the Harper government in 2012? The answer is no. If mining could turn back the clock to 2011, we would—in a heartbeat. We have a strong interest in the new Trudeau government’s review of the Canadian Environmental Assessment […]

Politics this morning: Trudeau, Bibeau in New York City

Today is Tuesday, September 20.   Here are the seven political events happening today that you should know about: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will give his first address as prime minister at the United Nations General Assembly in New York City today. He will likely try to rebrand Canada to the multilateral organization, which the previous […]