From the BBC:
“Five reasons why Canada's
'shutdown' is a big deal”
Canadian Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau is under pressure from all sides. At the forefront is a conflict first
sparked over indigenous opposition to a natural gas pipeline project, that has
now evolved to include broader complex issues like indigenous governance and
indigenous rights. It has led to rail blockades and protests that have crippled
rail lines and disrupted the flow of the country's economy. Those events have underscored a pressure point
for Mr Trudeau - he has struggled to deliver on his promise to chart a path for
Canada that balances oil and gas development, environmental stewardship and
indigenous reconciliation.
Here are five reasons why the
current unrest is a big deal.
1 - It's bad news for Justin
Trudeau: The conflict has forced work
to be paused on a major natural gas pipeline, the Coastal GasLink project, that
Mr Trudeau's Liberal government supports. Until this week, his ministers had a hard time
trying to set up a meeting with the Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs who led the
calls for protests in support of their cause. It is the latest resource project
to hit gridlock amid opposition by some First Nations and environmental
campaigners. Justin Trudeau's leadership has been called into question. The
prime minister's political opponents have seized on the crisis to argue that he
has shown weak leadership in his handling of the rail blockades and upholding
of the rule of law. They are also laying the blame for the country's struggling
oil and gas sector at his feet. And
Canadians are feeling frustrated - a poll published this week by the National
Post newspaper suggested that almost 60% of Canadians don't think the country
is headed in the right direction, while 63% of respondents said Mr Trudeau was
"not governing well". Three areas - resource development,
environmental stewardship and indigenous rights - have become more challenging
for countries like Canada as climate change becomes a greater public concern
and indigenous communities are increasingly empowered, says former interim
Liberal leader Bob Rae. Says Mr Rae:
"Where governments and companies are prepared to embrace the need for
dialogue and inclusion and recognition and so on, projects proceed and in fact
benefit the First Nations quite significantly in terms of economic
development". "Frankly nothing else works."
2 - Businesses are hit by
crippled rail troubles - and farms are getting cold: Rail blockades have meant that parts of the
cross-country rail system have ground to a halt over the past weeks as the
current conflict drags on. Almost 1,500
rail workers are temporarily out of work and many industries are struggling
with the impact, including agriculture. Quebec
dairy and grain farmer Martin Caron says farmers are under "real
stress" amid shortages of soy and propane used for food and heating. About
80% of the province's propane and 65% of its soy is transported by rail, he
says. Some is now being shipped by trucks at a significant mark-up. Propane is used to heat buildings holding
livestock, critical in Canadian winters. "[There is] stress because we have
animals and if we can no longer heat them properly, we put them at risk,"
says Mr Caron. "So there's an economic stress but also a mental health
aspect to this - the animals are part of our families. The producers don't want
to put the animals at risk." While
rail blockades have subsided this week and the Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs
have sat down with government officials, it will take a number of weeks before
the rail system is fully up and running. "People are hoping with all their hearts
that the federal government, among others, will position itself quickly to prevent
crises like this," says Mr Caron.
3 - Companies are spooked by the
uncertainty: The University of
Calgary's Harrie Vredenburg, an expert on the global energy industry, says
Canada has traditionally been a low risk political environment for investment.
This helped it become the world's fourth largest oil and gas exporter. But the lack of certainty around the
regulatory and approval process is now chilling business interest in the
sector, he says. A company can spend
years getting environmental and First Nations approvals. "In Canada you do
all that and at the end it's still a political decision that depends on what
activists are doing and what the media is saying and it's a totally
unpredictable outcome," says Mr Vredenburg. This month, mining company Teck Resources
pulled its application to build a major oil sands mine in northeastern Alberta.
The firm said the global capital
markets, investors and customers are looking to places that reconcile
"resource development and climate change". "This does not yet exist here today and,
unfortunately, the growing debate around this issue has placed [the project]
and our company squarely at the nexus of much broader issues that need to be
resolved." The decision also came amid questions about the project's
financial viability. "It had become
a political football and I think in the end, the Teck board and management just
said it isn't worth it," says Mr Vredenburg.
4 - It adds to the sense of
'western alienation': The economic
recovery in the province of Alberta, after an overabundance of supply caused
the worldwide price of oil to plummet a few years ago, has been slow. The oil
woes led to the loss of more than 100,000 jobs in Alberta and a full-on
recession. In October's general election, the resource-rich provinces of
Alberta and Saskatchewan turned solidly away from Mr Trudeau's Liberal party
amid a sense in western Canada that its interests were not represented. Several
pipeline projects - seen by the industry as critical for gaining access to
global markets - hang in limbo, fuelling more frustration. Some provincial premiers are also at
loggerheads with Mr Trudeau over his main climate initiative, a carbon tax,
which will be challenged in the country's top court. The Teck decision and the Wet'suwet'en conflict
have only ramped up tensions. Mr
Vredenburg says "constant bickering" between provincial and federal
leaders over energy and climate "doesn't help Canada's brand".
5 - It highlights the challenges
facing indigenous reconciliation and rights:
Mr Trudeau came to power promising to transform the country's
relationship with indigenous people. This
conflict has highlighted the challenges involved in moving forward with that
reconciliation. Karen Joseph, CEO of the charity Reconciliation Canada, says
the country is at the "very early stages of this process of
reconciliation" with many systemic challenges that reinforce inequality
still in place. She says amid the unrest
everybody needs "to stop and think about how we can do better, how we can
show our children how we resolve conflict as leaders and as peoples so that
they can move forward". Canada has a duty to consult with indigenous
peoples before they begin any projects on their land. But there is ambiguity around the rules for
consultation - one of the roots of the civil unrest seen in recent weeks. There have been occasional confrontations
during the protests Coastal GasLink
received the support of 20 First Nations along its route, including some
Wet'suwet'en and their band council, though not a number of Wet'suwet'en
hereditary chiefs. Some First Nations
have been vocal opponents of major resource projects. Other indigenous communities have chosen to
participate in the oil and gas sectors, seeing agreements with resource firms
as an opportunity to close the gap in living standards that exists between
indigenous peoples and the rest of Canada. In a recent op-ed in the Globe and
Mail newspaper, Abel Bosum, Grand Chief of the Grand Council of the Crees of
Northern Quebec, shared how his community and the province were able to come to
the table after a bitter conflict over large-scale resource development, and
found a beneficial path forward. Canada
is not alone in facing many of these challenges that need a "significant
shift" in how countries look at issues raised by the Wet'suwet'en
conflict, says Ms Joseph. "The
difference in Canada is we have a opportunity and a number of policies that can
facilitate a new way forward that's potentially shareable globally."
^ This shutdown has been going on
for a long time now with no end in sight and it is starting to really hurt
ordinary Canadians. While the rights and of the Canadian First Nations People
need to be respected and their lives helped it is also the responsibility of
the Canadian Federal Government to resolve this quickly – something that
Trudeau has not been able to do. Clearly the status quo imposed by this shutdown
can not go on and it is going to be interesting to see who has the leadership
abilities to end the shutdown so that all sides get something. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-51636831
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.