by Clive Tesar
Some early findings are beginning to flow from the oil and gas assessment being conducted by the Arctic Council under the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Program. Michael Baffrey, from the United States Department of the Interior is working on one of the chapters in the Assessment, dealing with social and economic effects of oil and gas development.
Speaking to the K’atlodeeche Summit of Arctic leaders, Baffrey gave a summary of the chapter, including some draft findings:
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Posted on Tuesday, January 24th, 2006
Under: Arctic, Oil and Gas, Sustainable Development | No Comments »
by Clive Tesar
In early December, Indigenous Leaders from all across the Arctic came together to talk about issues affecting them all. This was the Arctic Leaders’ Summit, a special meeting that only happens every four years. The Leaders meet at other times, usually at the Arctic Council , but those meetings centre on the Arctic Council ’s agenda. At the Leaders’ Summit, the Indigenous Peoples are free to set their own agenda, to discuss the concerns that they have, and work out how to tackle those concerns.This year’s Summit took place at two different places and times. This was because a big gathering of people was taking place in Montreal, Canada, to talk about climate change. The Arctic Leaders were keen to make sure that the thousands of Delegates to this meeting understood the impacts of climate change in the Arctic. To help this happen, they wrote an Arctic Leaders Declaration on climate change.
At the end of the Montreal meeting, the Leaders Summit began again, thousands of kilometres to the north, in the Dene community of [GP:Katlodeeche] (near to the town of Hay River) in the Northwest Territories of Canada. This was hosted by the Arctic Athabaskan Council .
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Posted on Sunday, January 15th, 2006
Under: Arctic, Climate Change, Indigenous Peoples, Oil and Gas, Sustainable Development | No Comments »