Search KAIROS
Your search topic Ethical Reflections on Northern Gateway returned the following articles:
Kairos
Northern Gateway Pipeline
The proposed Northern Gateway pipeline from Alberta to Kitimat, British Columbia, posed profound challenges for Indigenous rights and ecological justice. The proposed pipeline would have run 1172 kilometers and carried 525,000 barrels a day of diluted bitumen to the west…
News
Joint Review Panel report on proposed Northern Gateway Pipeline Project downplays Indigenous and ecological concerns
December 24, 2013
Despite overwhelming opposition from First Nations and their allies, the Joint Review Panel has given the Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline project conditional approval.
Post filed in: Ecological Justice, Indigenous Rights, UNDRIP Blog Updates
News
Pull Together with Indigenous Nations Challenging the Flawed Review Process for the Northern Gateway Pipeline
November 4, 2014
Join in solidarity with eight First Nations from British Columbia who have been granted leave by the federal Court of Appeal to apply for a judicial review of the government’s decision to allow the Northern Gateway Pipeline. Given the landmark…
Post filed in: Ecological Justice, Indigenous Rights
Kairos
ECOLOGICAL JUSTICE
KAIROS is committed to a vision of ecological justice where humanity lives within natural limits, in connected relation to all of creation. Ecological justice includes social justice–participation in decision making and sustainable use of natural resources–and requires putting the economy…
News
Ethical Reflections on the Northern Gateway Pipeline
July 13, 2012
In its Fall 2011 meeting, the KAIROS Ecumenical Circle of Collaboration on Sustainability identified the Northern Gateway pipeline as a topic of concern for the work on tar sands, energy, and climate change. Given its proposed route, the pipeline is…
Post filed in: Ecological Justice, Indigenous Rights, Spirited Reflections
Resource
Ethical Reflections on the Northern Gateway Pipeline (pdf) (2012)
This Ethical Reflection is based on the following framework of questions: Naming the issue What are the facts? Which communities does the issue affect? Why does the issue matter? What can guide our decision-making? What is urgent about this issue?…
Resource filed in: Discussion Papers, Ecological Justice