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International Business

  • Fuel prices and Canadian dollar expected to show gains in 2020

    [caption id="attachment_22097" align="alignright" width="300"] Shutterstock[/caption]A spike in current and long-range gasoline pricing will come as no surprise to retailers and most Canadians.
  • A tribute to Alan Glass, executive chairman, EnsembleIQ

    In Memoriam Alan Glass Executive Chairman, EnsembleIQ  Aug.
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  • Couche-Tard balances acquisitions with organic growth

    Over the past several years, Alimentation Couche-Tard Inc.
  • 'You can call anything a national concern:' Alberta questions federal carbon tax

    Allowing Ottawa's carbon tax law to stand would give the federal government a tool it could use to repeatedly chip away at provincial powers, lawyers for the Alberta government argued Monday.
  • N.B. premier hopeful final sign off on carbon plan coming early in the new year

    The premier of New Brunswick said Monday he hopes to hear back early in the new year about whether the federal government will sign-off on his province's plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from large industrial emitters.Blaine Higgs met with the prime minister Monday morning, the latest - and likely last - of the provincial and territorial leaders to meet face-to-face with Justin Trudeau this year in the wake of the October election.He described the meeting as a cordial get together reflective of a changed tone in federal-provincial relations, a change that's the result of concerted efforts by provinces, territories and Trudeau to renew a national bond strained by the election results.One tangible example of those efforts, said Higgs, was the federal government's decision last week to approve New Brunswick's consumer carbon pricing plan.“Getting that behind us .
  • Feds approve Alberta's carbon tax on big industrial emitters

    The federal government is giving the Alberta government a passing grade for its industrial carbon tax.
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  • Feds won't explain claim pipeline expansion will raise $500M in tax revenue

    The federal government says the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion will bring another $500 million a year in corporate tax revenue to be spent on fighting climate change, but the Liberals won't say where they got that number.
  • Western separatism, pipeline delays weigh on corporate mood at Alberta forum

    Ongoing environmental criticism, delays in building oil pipelines and a surge of separatist sentiment following the last federal election are hurting Alberta's reputation, presenters at a business forum in the Alberta mountain resort town of Lake Louise said Friday.The rise of the western Canadian separation movement or "Wexit'' cost Calgary an opportunity to attract a major technology head office, said CEO Mary Moran of Calgary Economic Development during a speech at the event."We as an organization just lost a 1,000-person company that didn't come to Calgary, selected another city, because they're concerned about Wexit,'' she said.
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