The federal government has a 2030 goal of eliminating diesel-powered electricity in remote communities
Heather Shilton with the Nunavut Nukkiksautiit Corporation and Bill Nippard with the Qulliq Energy Corporation discuss whether the federal target is achievable.
UP NEXT
UP NEXT
-
New York Philharmonic trombonist on the new sound
cbc.ca
-
Zach Zoya says Montreal’s bilingual hip-hop scene is ‘like one big melting pot’
cbc.ca
-
Above the rim: How Coach Gittens is changing the game
cbc.ca
-
Reporter says this is Democrats' fatal flaw
CNN -
Watch: Dangerously cold conditions in Northeast US
CNN -
'It's tone deaf': Finney on Black History Month police cruisers
CNN -
How a Mafioso was arrested while moonlighting as a pizza chef
CNN -
Can you tackle debt and enjoy life? | Quick Question
cbc.ca
-
Why the future is bright for hockey star Connor Bedard
cbc.ca
-
Vancouver man, boyfriend targeted with homophobic slurs
cbc.ca
-
11-year-old Nunavut hockey star makes debut at 2023 Arctic Winter Games
cbc.ca
-
Chinese spy balloon poses no threat, Pentagon says
cbc.ca
-
Federal government scraps controversial gun ban amendments
cbc.ca
-
Ukraine's Zelenskyy meets top EU officials in continued push for stronger weapons
Global News -
Why is China using a spy balloon in the age of advanced technology?
Global News -
How Canada is responding to suspected Chinese spy balloon that flew over country
Global News
-
See path the suspected spy balloon may have taken
CNN -
Here's how spy balloons work
CNN -
Spy balloon will create new tensions in U.S.-China relation ,' says Canada's former Ambassador to Beijing
cbc.ca
-
Pentagon officials are convinced the object floating over the U.S. is a Chinese surveillance balloon
CNN -
Ohio education officials investigate a homeschool network that distributed white supremacist, pro-nazi materials
CNN -
902ManUp staffing 3 warming centres in HRM for people experiencing homelessness
cbc.ca