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Carney to meet Coastal First Nations in British Columbia on Tuesday
Summary
Prime Minister Mark Carney will meet Coastal First Nations in British Columbia to discuss major natural-resources projects, and the meeting comes amid reported frustration from B.C. First Nations over an Alberta–Ottawa energy accord that supports a proposed West Coast oil pipeline.
Content
Prime Minister Mark Carney will meet with Coastal First Nations in British Columbia on Tuesday to discuss major natural-resources projects. The meeting is reported to come amid frustration and anger from B.C. First Nations over a recent energy accord between Alberta and the federal government. The accord includes a memorandum of understanding that the article says supports a proposed oil pipeline to the West Coast and would involve considering a change to the federal oil tanker ban. After visiting Prince Rupert, Carney is scheduled to travel to China, Qatar and Switzerland.
Key facts:
- Mr. Carney will meet Coastal First Nations in B.C. to discuss major natural-resources projects.
- The meeting takes place amid reported frustration from some B.C. First Nations over an Alberta–Ottawa energy accord linked to a proposed West Coast pipeline.
- The memorandum of understanding mentioned in the article says the federal government would consider lifting the oil tanker ban to allow shipments from a pipeline terminus.
- Following the B.C. visit, Mr. Carney is scheduled to travel overseas to China, Qatar and Switzerland.
Summary:
The meetings are positioned as discussions about project partnerships and Indigenous involvement while tensions over the energy accord persist. Undetermined at this time.
