Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alice Munro Among Nobel Prizewinners Urging Trudeau To Deny Oilsands Project

The Canadian Press, 21 Feb, 2020 09:56 PM

    Canadian author Alice Munro is among dozens of Nobel prizewinners urging Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to deny approval to a massive oilsands project in Alberta.

     

    Munro, Canadian biologist Jack W. Szostak and 40 other global winners from various fields signed a letter published in the Guardian decrying the Teck Resources Ltd. proposal.

     

    Also addressed to Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland, the letter in the U.K. publication declares: "There is no room for expansion of the fossil-fuel sector."

     

    The signatories call fossil-fuel projects "an affront to our state of climate emergency," as well as incompatible with Canada's pledge to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and work towards reconciliation with First Nations.

     

    A decision on the $20.6-billion, 260,000-barrel-per-day project is supposed to come before the end of the month. The project is expected to produce about four million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions per year over 40 years.

     

    Munro won the 2013 literature prize while Szostak won the 2009 prize in medicine. The project has also drawn criticism from Hollywood stars Jane Fonda, Martin Sheen, Susan Sarandon, and Joaquin Phoenix.

     

    The letter, which appeared on the Guardian's website Friday afternoon, takes Trudeau to task for considering any new fossil fuel developments at all.

     

    "The mere fact that they warrant debate in Canada should be seen as a disgrace," the prizewinners write.

     

    "They are wholly incompatible with your government’s recent commitment to net-zero greenhouse-gas emissions by 2050. And with clear infringements on First Nations rights, such projects fly in the face of rhetoric and purported efforts towards reconciliation."

     

    Those in favour of Teck Resources' proposed project say it will create thousands of jobs and bolster Alberta's struggling economy.

     

    But opposition is strong even among Trudeau's own Liberal caucus, where many Liberal MPs have openly campaigned against approval and consider it antithetical to Trudeau's pledge to combat climate change.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Supreme Court Of Canada To Hear Appeals On Solitary Confinement

    Supreme Court Of Canada To Hear Appeals On Solitary Confinement
    The Supreme Court of Canada will revisit the decisions of courts in British Columbia and Ontario that said the federal law allowing prolonged solitary confinement in prison was unconstitutional.

    Supreme Court Of Canada To Hear Appeals On Solitary Confinement

    Federal NDP Seeks Provincial Support For National Pharmacare Plan

    The New Democrats are asking the provinces to support their promised universal pharmacare legislation, hoping to win premiers over by calling on Ottawa to increase federal health transfers.

    Federal NDP Seeks Provincial Support For National Pharmacare Plan

    Auctioneer Ordered To Pay Collector For Knowingly Selling Fake Inuit Statue

    A high-end auction house has been ordered to further compensate a British art collector for selling him a statue it claimed was by a renowned Inuit artist, even though it knew the piece was fake.

    Auctioneer Ordered To Pay Collector For Knowingly Selling Fake Inuit Statue

    Supreme Court Won't Hear Appeals Of Couple Convicted In Diabetic Son's Death

    The Supreme Court of Canada will not hear the appeal of a couple found guilty of killing their diabetic teenage son.

    Supreme Court Won't Hear Appeals Of Couple Convicted In Diabetic Son's Death

    Canada's Climate Goals For Power On Track

    Canada's Climate Goals For Power On Track
    Canada appears poised to rack up a climate-change win, says a recent government report submitted to the United Nations.

    Canada's Climate Goals For Power On Track

    Horgan Says Pipeline Protests At Legislature Left Him 'Despondent'

    Premier John Horgan says anti-pipeline protests that saw hundreds of people block entrances to the B.C. legislature are unacceptable and wrong.

    Horgan Says Pipeline Protests At Legislature Left Him 'Despondent'