Sunday, May 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Controversial bill on energy project assessment passes Senate heavily amended

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jun, 2019 05:23 PM

    Legislation overhauling Canada's assessment of major energy projects is back in the hands of Environment Minister Catherine McKenna, albeit looking a lot different than when she introduced it.

    The Senate passed the Impact Assessment Act late Thursday with more than 180 amendments.

    The changes take power away from the environment minister to intervene in or slow the assessment process, reduces the ability for legal challenges of project approvals and adds more emphasis on economic considerations when deciding whether to go ahead with a particular project.

    The government now has to decide which of those amendments it will accept as it tries to fulfil a 2015 campaign promise to fix Conservative-era assessment legislation the Liberals say created a broken system that blocked public participation and negated environmental concerns.

    Environmental groups felt Bill C-69 originally delivered some balance between the environment and the economy as the country makes its way through a transition to a greener, cleaner energy sector.

    Oil industry executives decried it as a bill that would prevent any new major energy projects from ever being built while Alberta Premier Jason Kenney says the bill is a nightmare for national unity.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Woman Fired After Working 20 Years As Hospital Nurse Without A License

    Woman Fired After Working 20 Years As Hospital Nurse Without A License
    MONTREAL — Health officials in Quebec have discovered that a woman who had been working as a nurse and caring for hospital patients for 20 years was an impostor.

    Woman Fired After Working 20 Years As Hospital Nurse Without A License

    Supreme Court Sides With Toronto Man Over Detention In Race-Tinged Case

    Supreme Court Sides With Toronto Man Over Detention In Race-Tinged Case
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada has set aside a man's gun- and drug-related convictions, saying police had no reasonable cause to walk into a backyard and begin questioning him.

    Supreme Court Sides With Toronto Man Over Detention In Race-Tinged Case

    Rare White Young Killer Whale Swimming Off The British Columbia Coast

    VANCOUVER — A rare white killer whale has been spotted off the coast of British Columbia.

    Rare White Young Killer Whale Swimming Off The British Columbia Coast

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Rejects Liberal Calls To Dump Legislature Speaker Darryl Plecas

    VICTORIA — The British Columbia legislature became embroiled in political turmoil Thursday as Premier John Horgan rejected calls to replace the Speaker after the Opposition Liberals accused him of conducting a clandestine security probe.

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Rejects Liberal Calls To Dump Legislature Speaker Darryl Plecas

    We'll Work With Cities, Even When Provinces Won't Work With Ottawa: Trudeau

    In a speech today to members of the Canadian Federation of Municipalities, Trudeau specifically cited Doug Ford, accusing his Ontario Conservative government of blocking federal funding for local projects.

    We'll Work With Cities, Even When Provinces Won't Work With Ottawa: Trudeau

    With Trump's New Tariff Threats, New NAFTA Once Again Hangs In The Balance

    President Donald Trump says he'll put tariffs on all goods from Mexico starting next month, a surprise move that could blow up chances of ratifying the new North American free-trade agreement.

    With Trump's New Tariff Threats, New NAFTA Once Again Hangs In The Balance