Close X
Monday, October 7, 2024
ADVT 
National

Shale gas industry needs more study, Justin Trudeau says in New Brunswick

Kevin Bissett, The Canadian Press, 23 Aug, 2014 04:47 PM
    MONCTON, N.B. - Greater scientific study is required before Canada expands its shale gas industry, federal Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau said Saturday while campaigning alongside his provincial counterpart in New Brunswick.
     
    Trudeau waded into the controversial issue while at a rally in Moncton with New Brunswick Liberal Leader Brian Gallant, who is vying to become premier after the Sept. 22 provincial election.
     
    "I'm very much in agreement with Mr. Gallant that in terms of fracking and shale gas, we need to make sure that we have all the information, that there is proper science done," Trudeau said.
     
    "That's why we need to make sure that we're strong on both the science and the long-term vision for New Brunswick and for Canada before we move ahead with that."
     
    The question over whether to develop New Brunswick's reservoir of shale gas has dominated the early days of the election campaign.
     
    Progressive Conservative Premier David Alward launched his re-election bid Thursday in front of a field of natural gas wells, promoting the merits of an industry he says can reverse its economic struggles.
     
    The issue has been controversial. Nearly a year ago, protests over shale gas development spiralled into violence when the RCMP enforced an injunction to end a blockade outside an energy company's storage compound in Rexton, N.B. Police cars were torched and dozens were arrested.
     
    Trudeau was also asked what if any advice he would give to Gallant. Like Trudeau, Gallant, 32, has faced criticism from some who say he is too inexperienced to lead.
     
    Trudeau dismissed that concern, saying Gallant has surrounded himself with a strong team and will make for a co-operative partner in Ottawa should he become premier.
     
    The two leaders rode Gallant's campaign bus to a Tim Hortons in Moncton and went from table to table shaking hands and posing for pictures.
     
    Some opponents of abortion attended the campaign stop, which Trudeau said was a sign of one of Canada's strengths — the ability to express oneself freely. Still, he said his view that abortion should be accessible to all women has not changed.
     
    Access to abortion has dogged both the provincial Tories and Liberals since the Morgentaler Clinic in Fredericton, the only private clinic that offered the procedure in the province, closed this summer.
     
    "A baby has a right to live," said Rhonda Farrer as she waved a placard near the Liberal campaign bus. "They can't make that decision and they need somebody to make it for them."
     
    Farrer said she was able to adopt two children because their mothers decided against abortion.
     
    Later at a rally in Fredericton, Trudeau and Gallant were greeted by abortion rights advocates who want section 84-20 of the province's Medical Services Payment Act to be scrapped.
     
    By law, a woman in New Brunswick who wants an abortion covered by medicare must have two doctors certify in writing that it is medically necessary and it must be done by a specialist in one of two approved hospitals.
     
    Alward has said there is no need to change the law.
     
    Gallant said Saturday it is a barrier and he would launch a review aimed at getting rid of all barriers to abortion.
     
    Jaden Fitzherbert, an activist with Reproductive Justice New Brunswick, stood outside the Fredericton rally and said the politicians need to clearly say what they would do to ensure access to abortion.
     
    "We think that pro-choice actions speak louder than pro-choice words," she said.
     
    Elsewhere on the campaign, provincial NDP Leader Dominic Cardy promised to rescind a shared-risk pension deal with New Brunswick public pension retirees. Critics have said the changes put pensioners in financial jeopardy.
     
    The government moved to a shared-risk pension model late last year for 17,000 current and 13,000 former government employees.
     
    At dissolution, the Tories had 41 seats, the Liberals 13 and there was one Independent.
     
    This election is being fought on a new electoral map that cuts the number of seats to 49 from 55.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Tekmira stock soars after FDA relaxes precautions on experimental Ebola drug

    Tekmira stock soars after FDA relaxes precautions on experimental Ebola drug
    TORONTO - Shares of Tekmira Pharmaceuticals Corp. (TSX:TKM) shot up about 46 per cent Friday following a U.S. regulatory decision that relaxes safety precautions on the Vancouver-based company's experimental drug for treating Ebola.

    Tekmira stock soars after FDA relaxes precautions on experimental Ebola drug

    Multimillion-Dollar Billing Error: ICBC Says The Cheque Is In The Mail To Overcharged Drivers

    Multimillion-Dollar Billing Error: ICBC Says The Cheque Is In The Mail To Overcharged Drivers
    VANCOUVER - Four months after B.C.'s public auto insurer identified a multimillion-dollar billing error, cheques are being mailed to customers reimbursing them for the mix-up.

    Multimillion-Dollar Billing Error: ICBC Says The Cheque Is In The Mail To Overcharged Drivers

    Vancouver Whitecaps Looking For More Ahead Of Date With Sporting Kansas City

    Vancouver Whitecaps Looking For More Ahead Of Date With Sporting Kansas City
    VANCOUVER - Carl Robinson needs a little bit extra from the Vancouver Whitecaps. The rookie head coach has watched his team earn points in seven of its last Major League Soccer games but with just one win over that span Vancouver has tumbled out of a Western Conference playoff position.

    Vancouver Whitecaps Looking For More Ahead Of Date With Sporting Kansas City

    Shocking: Canada Sees Drop In Full-Time Jobs In July, 35,400 Stop Looking For Work

    Shocking: Canada Sees Drop In Full-Time Jobs In July, 35,400 Stop Looking For Work
    OTTAWA - Trouble in Canada's anemic jobs market continued into July as a paltry 200 jobs were added during the month, falling spectacularly short of expectations.

    Shocking: Canada Sees Drop In Full-Time Jobs In July, 35,400 Stop Looking For Work

    Justin Bourque Pleads Guilty To First-Degree Murder Charges In RCMP Shootings

    Justin Bourque Pleads Guilty To First-Degree Murder Charges In RCMP Shootings
    MONCTON, N.B. - A New Brunswick man pleaded guilty today to three first-degree murder charges in the fatal shootings of three RCMP officers in Moncton.

    Justin Bourque Pleads Guilty To First-Degree Murder Charges In RCMP Shootings

    How Sweet It Is: Saskatchewan Woman Wins National Cheesecake Prize

    How Sweet It Is: Saskatchewan Woman Wins National Cheesecake Prize
    MELVILLE, Sask. - She isn't from the culinary centres of Canada, but a Saskatchewan woman has taken the cake in a national baking contest.

    How Sweet It Is: Saskatchewan Woman Wins National Cheesecake Prize