How Carneyâs âbuild fastâ push divides Canadaâs Indigenous peoples
How Carneyâs âbuild fastâ push divides Canadaâs Indigenous peoples
Some First Nations are challenging Carneyâs resource-extraction plans to strengthen Canadian economy from US threats.
Vancouver, Canada â Prime Minister Mark Carneyâs efforts to unite Canadians around protecting the nationâs economy from the US are hitting roadblocks as he nears one year in power.
Indigenous peoples across Canada are increasingly divided over Carneyâs aggressive push to expand resource extraction and projects on their ancestral lands.
Recommended Stories
list of 4 items- list 1 of 4IEA announces release of 400 million barrels of oil. But is it enough?
- list 2 of 4Hopes for justice rise as The Voice of Hind Rajab heads to Oscars
- list 3 of 4Cuban President Diaz-Canel says talks held with US amid Trump threats
- list 4 of 4A president suing himself? Why experts say Trumpâs $10bn lawsuit might fail
Some experts question how his government can advance its agenda while respecting Indigenous rights enshrined in the countryâs constitution.
March 14 will mark one year since Carney, former head of Canadaâs central bank, was sworn into office.
After an election last year, his centrist Liberal party formed a minority government with the highest share of the popular vote in 40 years.
A key to Carneyâs victory was his pledge to âstand strongâ against US trade threats and grow Canadaâs economic sovereignty, an assertive approach the prime minister has called âelbows upâ.
âIn the face of global trade shifts ⌠we will build big and build fast to create a stronger, more sustainable, more independent economy,â Carney said in a statement on March 6.
Part of that push was to create a Major Projects Office to speed up approvals of economic developments, starting by fast-tracking 10 mega-projects.
They include two massive liquefied natural gas (LNG) plants and an open-pit mine in British Columbia, a nuclear plant in Ontario, a Quebec shipping terminal, and wind power in Atlantic Canada.
Those developments are worth 116 billion Canadian dollars ($85bn), the government estimates.
âOur rights get pushed to the sideâ
Carneyâs approach to the US trade war has gained support from Canadians, according to recent opinion surveys.
A March 3 poll of 1,500 citizens by Abacus Data found that 50 percent say Carney is protecting Canadaâs core interests when dealing with Trump â compared with 36 percent with negative views.
âWhenever Canada is threatened, the protectionist nature of the state kind of re-emerges,â said Shady Hafez, assistant politics professor at Toronto Metropolitan University.
âSelf-preservation of Canada becomes the priority.â
Hafez, a research associate with the Yellowhead Institute, is a member of the Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg First Nation in Quebec.
He said there are growing concerns in his community and others about Carneyâs push to accelerate mega-projects across the country.
âFor that to happen, Canada needs land, and it needs resources,â Hafez said, âand it takes those lands and resources from us.â
Blowback was swift after Carney pledged to build a highly controversial oil pipeline to the west coast in a late November deal signed with Alberta, Canadaâs oil powerhouse.
Carneyâs culture minister swiftly resigned, decrying âno consultationâ with Indigenous nations and âmajor environmental impactsâ.
And the Assembly of First Nations (AFN), which represents more than 600 Indigenous chiefs, unanimously passed an emergency resolution opposing a new pipeline.
âFirst Nations people, we stand with Canada against Trumpâs illegal tariffs, but not at the expense of our rights,â AFN National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak told Al Jazeera in an interview. âIf you want to fast-track anything, you better make sure that First Nations are being included right off the bat.
âTrying to sideswipe or push aside First Nations people when thereâs agreements between provinces and the feds â they have to remember that First Nations are here ⌠and they are to be respected in their own homelands.â
The rights of Indigenous people in the country are enshrined in Canadaâs constitution.
But too often, Hafez said, in the name of national prosperity, âIndigenous communities have to suffer.â
âWhenever thereâs somewhat of an emergency, our rights get pushed to the side.â
But the resistance to the major projects push isnât universal.
The First Nations Natural Gas Alliance praised Carneyâs âmuch more aggressiveâ approach compared with his predecessor on developing energy resources.
But the groupâs CEO, Karen Ogen, acknowledged thereâs a âhighly charged environmentâ on such issues.
âFirst Nations communities continue to face significant socioeconomic barriersâ, stated the former chief of Wetâsuwetâen First Nation. âLNG and natural gas development are not just an opportunity; they are a national imperative.
âBillions of dollars in procurement benefits and revenues are flowing to First Nations.â
Call for collaboration âon all major projectsâ
The trade war with the US has galvanised and united many Canadians â but with little acknowledgement of the impacts on Indigenous communities, said Sheryl Lightfoot, political science professor at the University of Toronto.
Lightfoot is vice-chair of the UN Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
âThese projects, by many accounts, are advancing without full consultation or transparencyâ, she told Al Jazeera.
âIt appears that economic or geopolitical pressures ⌠are being used to justify bypassing Indigenous rights and environmental safeguards.â
But Canadaâs Major Projects Office insists it will âseek input, hear concerns and ideas, and work in partnership moving forwardâ with Indigenous communities â and âwill not be skipping over vital project steps including consultations with Indigenous Peoples,â an agency spokesperson wrote in an emailed statement.
âWe are unlocking Canadaâs economic potential, while respecting our environmental responsibilities and the rights of Indigenous Peoples,â
A significant number of projects on Carneyâs fast-track list are concentrated in British Columbia (BC).
Those include two liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminals on the Pacific coast â LNG Canada and Ksi Lisims LNG â as well as the electric transmission line to power the sector, and a copper and gold mine.
BC is unique in the country because, historically, very little of its land was subject to treaties between the Crown and First Nations. Canadaâs top court has repeatedly ruled in favour of First Nations rights and title in the westernmost province.
All four major projects in the province have proven divisive among the regionâs Indigenous peoples â even though several have the backing of individual First Nations governments.
One of those is the massive Ksi Lisims LNG plant, in which the Nisgaâa Nation is a direct partner.
Co-developed with Texas-based Western LNG, the mega-project will âbenefit all Canadians,â said Nisgaâa President Eva Clayton.
In 2000, her nation became the first in BC to reach a modern self-government treaty.
âWe are co-developing the Ksi Lisims LNG project on land that our nation owns under our treaty,â she told a parliamentary committee on February 24.
âThis project is expected to bring in 30 billion [Canadian] dollars [$22bn] in investment, create thousands of skilled careers, and strengthen Canadaâs leadership in low-emission LNG.â
âElbows upâ meets opposition
But LNG is fiercely opposed by other nearby First Nations.
Tara Marsden is Wilp sustainability director for the Gitanyow Hereditary Chiefs, traditional leaders of the 900-member Gitanyow community.
âWe have a lot more concerns and evidence regarding impacts in our territory,â she said.
âThe federal government has done zero consultation on their fast-track list and the projects that actually affect our territory.â
Gitanyow oppose the BC projects on the fast-track list as harming their interests.
She said Ottawa cannot ignore First Nations opposition, even if there is support from others like the Nisgaâa.
âThey have a right to develop in their own territoriesâ, said Marsden. âBut if you have maybe 20 to 30 First Nations whose territory would be crossed â and you get maybe three on board â thatâs not a resounding consensus.
âTheyâre just trying to use this small handful of nations to steamroll over everybody else.â
If Canada truly wants to strengthen its sovereignty and economy, she said, it must do so alongside Indigenous people.
âThis is something that First Nations across the country have been saying since Carney took the âelbows upâ approach,â Marsden said.
âThe government has really just ignored that ⌠and actually now back-stopping these mega-projects with taxpayer dollars.â
Free, prior and informed consent
McGill University economics lecturer Julian Karaguesian served for decades in the Department of Finance and Canadaâs Embassy in Washington, DC.
He agreed that most Canadians support Carneyâs attempt to boost the economy with ânation-buildingâ projects.
âI think theyâre a fantastic ideaâ, he told Al Jazeera. âBut weâve committed to consultations with First Nations, Metis and Inuit people.
âOnce weâve started compromising on economic and social justice ⌠we can create bitterness. First Nations leaders understand the situation weâre in, and I think [Ottawa] can work with them.â
Even on projects endorsed by some First Nations, the international legal principle of âfree, prior and informed consentâ must still apply to other communities impacted, said Lightfoot.
Thatâs ânot simply a procedural requirementâ to rubber-stamp projects, she said.
âIt is a substantive right, anchored in Indigenous peoplesâ self-determination and their ability to make decisions about matters that affect their lands, communities, and futures.â
And that could risk slowing down Carneyâs hopes to speed through projects if there is no Indigenous consensus â potentially tying more divisive ones up in the courts.
âFailure to include Indigenous knowledge and decision-making early in the process,â Lightfoot said, âcan undermine the legitimacy and fairness of project approvals.â
Carneyâs ratings among First Nations are âmixed,â says AFNâs national chief. One positive, she noted, is his openness to meeting Indigenous leaders raising concerns.
But with many of the prime ministerâs economic hopes dependent on building ânational interestâ infrastructure on First Nations homelands, Woodhouse Nepinak said the relationship needs care.
âCarney is at a crossroads in his personal relationship with First Nations,â she said.
âAnd we understand First Nations rights are under threat in new ways by this government.â
How it works
Once you click Generate, Ollama reads this article and crafts 5 comprehension questions. Your answers are graded against the article content â general knowledge won't be enough. Score 70+ to count toward your certificate.
Questions are cached â you'll always get the same 5 for this article.