Investor urges Enbridge to assess risk of delay
The prospect that Enbridge Inc. [ENB-T]'s $4-billion Gateway pipeline project, which would connect Alberta's oil sands with lucrative Asian markets, could become mired in disputes with first nations groups has at least one major shareholder demanding a reckoning
Read more...BC First Nation Puts Coal Company and Investors 'On-Notice'
The West Moberly First Nations (WMFN), in northeast British Columbia, is putting Vancouver-based, privately held junior mining company First Coal Corporation (FCC) 'on notice' that WMFN intends to pursue all available means, including legal action, to protect the "Threatened" Burnt/Pine caribou herd and WMFN members' Treaty and Aboriginal rights and interests
Read more...A Story With Two Ends
A brief examination of the oil industry's impact on BC with world renowned journalist, Andrew Nikiforuk and award winning photographer Ian McAllister. Video directed by Jamie Tanner.
Read more...Double standard on WFP lands
Perhaps Murray Coell and Ida Chong should ask Community Development Minister Bill Bennett for some pointers.The government has done great damage. It will betray future generations if it does not preserve these WFP lands.
Read more...
The struggle between First Nations and the Crown over title will determine the future of BC’s environment and economy.
First Nations have strong unresolved claims to much of the land and resources of BC. Yet First Nations continue to be excluded from land use decisions, while logging, mining, and energy extraction proceed at unsustainable rates.
Resource companies now exercise almost exclusive control (through licences) on over 80% of BC’s land-base.
Until recently, indigenous communities in BC, whose cultures are often intimately connected to the lands and waters of their territories, were overwhelmed by industrial activities that commodified and sold resources from their lands.
First Nations influence is growing. Powerful opportunities exist to stop unsustainable extraction. Recent precedent-setting court decisions confirm the existence of Aboriginal title and rights over most lands in BC, and create opportunities to challenge the validity of resource tenures.
Through litigation political organizing, direct action, and strategic interventions in the financial market, First Nations are leveraging more say so over their territories.
Dogwood Initiative is assisting First Nations partners assert their title and challenge unsustainable logging, mining and drilling tenures because we believe this approach provides the best available leverage for promoting equality, justice and sustainability in BC.
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"I was going to put my $100 toward improving the bicycle I ride every day, but the thought of Shell Oil destroying the ecosystem of the North by drilling for coal-bed methane in the Sacred Headwaters area breaks my heart." 
