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Corporate Governance

  • Fast food players take tentative steps towards sustainable packaging

    Two McDonald's Canada restaurants will soon be testbeds for the company's greener packaging initiatives, serving wooden cutlery, paper straws and other recycling-friendly packaging.
  • Business leaders welcome pipeline approval but fear it may not be completed

    Ottawa's approval of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion pleased business leaders, but they say they will hold off on popping champagne corks until construction begins on new pipe from Edmonton to the West Coast.
  • 11 million people employed in renewable energy worldwide in 2018

    Eleven million people were employed in renewable energy worldwide in 2018 according to the latest analysis by the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA).
  • Study: Younger generations show preference for cannabis over alcohol

    Consumer preference has reached an intersection.
  • Is lab-grown dairy the next food frontier

    Lab-grown meat is getting a lot of attention along with plant-based meat substitutes.
  • Edibles, other pot products, will hit shelves after mid December: Ottawa

    Canadians looking to buy cannabis-infused brownies or lotions will find a "limited selection'' in legal stores in mid-December at the earliest, the federal government says, but industry players expect the full rollout of next-generation pot products to come in 2020 or later.
  • 'We're deeply sorry:' Husky fined $3.8M for leak into North Saskatchewan River

    Husky Energy was fined $3.8 million for a pipeline oil leak that fouled a major river, harmed fish and wildlife and tainted the drinking water supply for thousands of people in Saskatchewan.
  • Single-use plastics ban poses challenge for Canada’s fossil fuel sector

    The oil industry’s next threat could be in the grocery aisle.A worldwide movement to limit single-use plastics in food packaging poses a challenge for Canada’s fossil fuel sector, at the same time that large companies struggle with volatile prices, pipeline constraints and the global rise of electric vehicles.Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Canada would join other countries and ban as early as 2021 a range of everyday plastics that are frequently discarded after a single use, including forks and knives, shopping bags and stir sticks.The move is part of wider efforts by the Liberal government to improve Canada’s dismal recycling rates and reduce pollution, just five months shy of a federal election in which the environment and climate change promise to be major issues.The proposed ban would align with European Union regulations on single-use plastics, and a global push that some analysts and energy companies say has major implications for global oil demand and industry revenues.The oil industry supplies chemical manufacturers with the building blocks needed to make resins that are used to create plastic products.
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