Montreal Gazette

A sucker punch to First Nations

2030 EMISSIONS REDUCTION PLAN IS A PRODUCTION REDUCTION PLAN THAT WILL WORSEN ENERGY CRISIS

- CHRIS SANKEY Chris Sankey is a former elected councillor for Lax Kw' Alaams Band, a business leader and a Senior Fellow at the Macdonald-laurier Institute.

Just when First Nations on the west coast were making real economic advances, with the Haisla Nation led Cedar LNG terminal in Kitimat close to becoming a reality and other Indigenous-led projects starting to find investors, the federal government has announced perhaps their most economical­ly destructiv­e and geopolitic­ally oblivious policy yet.

The 2030 Emissions Reduction Plan is actually a production reduction plan which will worsen the energy crisis, handicap Canada's economy, and jeopardize the best opportunit­y for Indigenous prosperity since the fishing and fur trade days.

The Liberals may be thinking they're just keeping a promise to meet their United Nations Paris Agreement commitment­s. For some reason, despite their treaty obligation­s, the war in Ukraine, and a global food and energy crisis, this is their most pressing priority. But many Indigenous workers, entreprene­urs and leaders across Canada see this in a very different perspectiv­e.

For a decade, dozens of First Nations, from Treaty 8 to the West Coast, have been tirelessly preparing to be part of the LNG boom, from planning upstream production to equity in pipelines to ownership of terminals. We have done this in the face of protesting environmen­talists who either ignored us or accused us of being sellouts. We have negotiated the most sophistica­ted Indigenous equity deals that the world has ever seen, convincing government and industry of our rights to get a fair share of the pie. We've ensured common sense protection­s of our lands and waters so that future generation­s can still practice our cultures.

Despite indifferen­ce amongst nations when it comes to developmen­t, we have been seeing success. We are now global players, sitting at the boardroom table as partners. When the CGL pipeline and LNG Canada terminals are complete, Indigenous communitie­s will see revenues start to come in. That is how we build sovereign wealth.

With global demand skyrocketi­ng for natural gas, the Montney Formation's vast oil and gas resources on Treaty 8 territory in northeast B.C. mean we can expect stable returns for generation­s. We are proud that natural gas extraction will displace coal use, which this year is hitting record highs — for a lack of natural gas. After 150 years of colonizati­on, marginaliz­ation and poverty, this is a game-changing ray of hope for our peoples.

Or it was until last month, when the federal government introduced its plan to cut emissions from the oil and gas sector by 42 per cent in the next seven years. The sector cannot cut emissions by that much while at the same time creating a new LNG export industry. It's hard to look at the plan without concluding that everything we've been building for the past decade is now doomed.

Did the Liberals consult with any First Nations before planning the demise of Canada's LNG prospects? Of course not. They only consult with Indigenous people who agree with their plans. What they have done instead is offer two equally unacceptab­le and narrow options: cap-and-trade, or carbon pricing. Instead of actual dialogue, Indigenous people can submit their thoughts to a government email address and attend an online engagement session, just like every other stakeholde­r. There is no way this meets the Crown's obligation to consult, let alone the UN declaratio­n on the rights of Indigenous peoples. But that's what's on offer.

The final insult was the timing. The discussion paper on emissions reduction was announced days before Pope Francis's visit to Canada, when our nations were preoccupie­d with the apology and reflecting on the consequenc­es of residentia­l schools. This summer is also an important time, after a twoyear hiatus, for our communitie­s to gather for potlatches, powwows and culture camps, not to mention hunting and fishing and being on the land. There is no one to consult with, no one to inform of the drastic economic consequenc­es of this plan. Not only will we have no role in shaping the plan, most Indigenous people won't even know it is happening until it is too late.

How can you pontificat­e about nation-to-nation relationsh­ips, or make a big deal of passing UNDRIP legislatio­n, then announce plans that undermine the sector which offers dozens of nations the best opportunit­y for economic self-determinat­ion, without out input or consent?

Ottawa doesn't have legal authority to proceed in this fashion, but it's just another example of how our nations have to fight for every dollar, every job and every project we're involved in. Indigenous people are working to give our kids a better life than we had. Will the government ever get out of our way?

 ?? MATT ROBINSON FOR POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Did the Liberals consult with any First Nations before planning the demise of Canada's LNG prospects? Of course not. They only consult with Indigenous people who agree with their plans, writes Chris Sankey.
MATT ROBINSON FOR POSTMEDIA NEWS Did the Liberals consult with any First Nations before planning the demise of Canada's LNG prospects? Of course not. They only consult with Indigenous people who agree with their plans, writes Chris Sankey.

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