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Building Stronger Communities Together in a Transitioning World

Fri, May 03

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St. John's

Building Stronger Communities Together in a Transitioning World: A Strategic Retreat to Plan for the Rapid Transition Away from Oil and Gas and Generate Responsible Renewable Industries in Newfoundland and Labrador

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Building Stronger Communities Together in a Transitioning World
Building Stronger Communities Together in a Transitioning World

Time & Location

May 03, 2024, 9:00 a.m. NDT – May 05, 2024, 1:00 p.m. NDT

St. John's, 125 Water St, St. John's, NL A1C 5X4, Canada

About the event

Join us for a transformative strategic session aimed at fostering collaboration and action towards a just transition away from oil and gas in Newfoundland and Labrador (NL), with a particular focus on addressing concerns related to the Bay du Nord project as a tangible reference to stop future oil and gas projects from happening and convincing industry owners and investors to turn to responsible renewables.

This strategic session offers a unique opportunity to contribute to meaningful change in NL's energy landscape and to work towards a more sustainable and equitable future. Join us as we come together to build a stronger, more resilient community committed to environmental stewardship and social justice.

Schedule


  • 30 minutes

    Registration and introduction


  • 1 hour

    Leadership session

2 more items available

Tickets

  • General Admission

    CA$20.00
    +CA$0.50 service fee
    Sale ended

Total

CA$0.00

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We acknowledge that Ktaqamkuk is the unceded and unsurrendered land of the Mi'kmaq peoples who have taken care of this land for centuries. We also wish to acknowledge the Inuit and Innu of Labrador. We acknowledge that the white settler colonial state has been built through Indigenous genocide and land theft, the enslavement and labour theft of people of African descent through the trans-Atlantic slave trade, the fifteen thousand Chinese men who worked under exploitative conditions to build Canada’s first transcontinental railroad, the internment and forced labor of twelve thousand Japanese Canadians, and the thousands of refugees and migrants denied refuge into so-called Canada throughout its history. (Credit: ARC NL)

©2024 by Mixed Coast Collective.

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