eastern travels in fall // new brunswick, canada // september 2007 // ©

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eastern travels in fall // new brunswick, canada // september 2007 // ©

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Energy infrastructure company TC Energy (TRP.TO) said on Wednesday it had terminated the $9 billion Keystone XL pipeline project, months after U.S. President Joe Biden revoked a key permit in a blow to Canada's oil sector.

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Stop Keystone XL Pipeline
In the summer of 2012, Tar Sands Blockade began coordinated grassroots actions across Texas, including blockading pipeline roads and locking themselves directly to heavy machinery. The Tar Sands Blockade is an open invitation for people across North America to join a peaceful direct action campaign to stop the Keystone XL Pipeline, standing with people of all backgrounds who are fighting to save their homes, land and the planet from destruction by tar sands pumped by TransCanada.
"If built, the Coastal GasLink pipeline project, first proposed in 2012 and approved in October 2018, would run approximately 670 kilometres across northern B.C., bringing fracked gas from Dawson Creek to the Port of Kitimat."
Ground zero in the global battle against climate chaos this week is in Wet’suwet’en territory, northern B.C. As pipeline companies try to push their way onto unceded Indigenous territories, the conflict could become the next Standing Rock-style showdown over Indigenous rights and fossil fuel infrastructure.
Since 2010, the Unist’ot’en clan, members of the Wet’suwet’en First Nation, have been reoccupying and re-establishing themselves on their ancestral lands in opposition to as many as six proposed pipeline projects.
The Unist’ot’en camp now houses a pit-house (a traditional dug-out dwelling), a permaculture garden, a solar-powered mini-grid and a healing lodge, where community members receive holistic and land-based treatment for substance abuse. The camp also defends the sacred headwaters of the Talbits Kwah (Gosnell Creek) and Wedzin Kwah (Morice River), spawning grounds for salmon.
If built, the Coastal GasLink pipeline project, first proposed in 2012 and approved in October 2018, would run approximately 670 kilometres across northern B.C., bringing fracked gas from Dawson Creek to the Port of Kitimat. It is part of a recently approved $40-billion fracked-gas project, called LNG Canada, the single-largest private-sector investment in Canadian history.
But the Unist’ot’en territory is in the pipeline’s path. Community members are committed to resisting pipelines through their unceded lands.
They have turned back TransCanada’s contractors by reviving their own traditions of “free, prior and informed consent,” where the community has established a protocol controlling who accesses their territory. As a result, no pipeline work has yet been done on their lands.
TransCanada, the company behind the Coastal GasLink pipeline project, recently served an injunction and civil lawsuit to the members of the Unist’ot’en camp. The injunction will be heard in Prince Rupert. If granted, it will allow the RCMP to arrest and remove everyone from the camp.
Continue Reading.
(via TCA Vang952 CF-TKD OHare 664 | Mel Lawrence | Flickr)
Trans-Canada Airlines
O’Hare Field
June 1964
Photo by Mel Lawrence