Ottawa Citizen

Feds pledge $800M to Indigenous projects

- MORGAN LOWRIE

• Ottawa will spend up to $800 million to support four major Indigenous-led conservati­on projects across the country covering nearly one million square kilometres of land and water, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Wednesday.

Trudeau made the announceme­nt at the Biosphere environmen­t museum in Montreal, accompanie­d by Indigenous leaders and federal Environmen­t Minister Steven Guilbeault, as the COP15 UN meeting on global biodiversi­ty takes place in the city. He said the four projects — in British Columbia, the Northwest Territorie­s, northern Ontario and Nunavut — will be developed in partnershi­p with the communitie­s in question.

“Each of these projects is different, because each of these projects is being designed by communitie­s, for communitie­s,” he said.

Chief Jackson Lafferty, of the Tlicho government in the Northwest Territorie­s, said Indigenous groups have long been working to protect their lands and water but have lacked resources and tools to fully do so.

Lafferty, who attended the announceme­nt, called the funding “a significan­t step forward on a path to reconcilia­tion across Canada.”

Among the projects to be funded is a marine conservati­on and sustainabi­lity initiative in the Great Bear Sea along British Columbia's north coast, championed by 17 First Nations in the area.

Another project includes protection for boreal forests, rivers and lands across the Northwest Territorie­s, spearheade­d by 30 Indigenous government­s.

Funds will also go to an Inuit-led project involving waters and land in Nunavut's Qikiqtani region and to a project in western James Bay to protect the world's third largest wetland, led by the Omushkego Cree in Ontario.

Trudeau told reporters that the exact details of the agreements have yet to be worked out — including which portions of the lands will be shielded from resource extraction.

The Indigenous partners, he said, will be able to decide which lands need to be completely protected and where there can be “responsibl­e, targeted developmen­t.”

“We know we need jobs, we know we need protected areas, we know we need economic developmen­t,” he said. “And nobody knows that, and the importance of that balance, better than Indigenous communitie­s themselves that have been left out of this equation, not just in Canada but around the world, for too long.”

Dallas Smith, president of Nanwakolas Council, said the B.C. funding to help protect the Great Bear Sea would allow Indigenous groups to build on previous agreements to protect the terrestria­l lands of Great Bear Rainforest.

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