Table des matières

  • : Introduction
  • : Karyn Sharp, Prince George
  • : Jasmine Thomas, Saik’uz Traditional Territory
  • : John Phair, Burns Lake
  • : John Ridsdale, Hereditary Chief Na’moks, Wet’suwet’en First Nation
  • : Pat Moss, Smithers
  • : Nikki Skuce, ForestEthics
  • : Shannon McPhail, Skeena Watershed Conservation Coalition
  • : Roy Henry Vickers & John Olson
  • : Murray Minchin, Kitimat
  • : Des Nobels & Luanne Roth, Prince Rupert

La description

“The oil and gas industry has wanted into the west coast for decades. This is an ongoing struggle between the people who live here and have access to the marine resources now, the fish, and the industry, which wants in either for tanker traffic or offshore drilling. The government is on the oil industry side and they implement policies to weaken us. ”— Luanne Roth, Prince Rupert

“[There is] is a great saying: ‘If we don’t speak for the animals, the fish and the birds, who will?’ Simple, very simple, very to the point. And how could we give up something that our great-great-grandchildren will ask us one day ‘Why don’t we have this anymore? Why didn’t you stop this then?’ We don’t have a right to let that happen. ”— John Ridsdale, Hereditary Chief Na’Moks, Office of the Wet’suwet’en

The Answer Is Still No is an important, urgent book that compiles interviews with people who live along the route of the proposed Enbridge pipeline in Northern British Columbia. The oil pipeline and supertankers — linking the tar sands of Alberta to the demand of the growing Asian market — are a key component of Canada’s strategy of natural resource extraction. But for the people living along the proposed pipeline route, Enbridge poses a massive environmental risk, which threatens their way of life. This edited collection takes the passionate words and voices of twelve citizens and activists and results in one powerful position when it comes to blind economic development at the expense of our environment and communities: The answer is still “no. ”

Reviews

“The oil and gas industry has wanted into the west coast for decades. This is an ongoing struggle between the people who live here and have access to the marine resources now, the fish, and the industry, which wants in either for tanker traffic or offshore drilling. The government is on the oil industry side and they implement policies to weaken us.”

- Luanne Roth, Prince Rupert

“[There is] is a great saying: ‘If we don’t speak for the animals, the fish and the birds, who will?’ Simple, very simple, very to the point. And how could we give up something that our great-great-grandchildren will ask us one day ‘Why don’t we have this anymore? Why didn’t you stop this then?’ We don’t have a right to let that happen.”

- John Ridsdale, Hereditary Chief Na’Moks, Office of the Wet’suwet’en