Les Premi猫res Nations de l'Alberta demandent des r茅ponses sur le captage du carbone

Seven Alberta First Nations have banded together to seek answers as industry and government move on billion-dollar plans to inject and store millions of tonnes of greenhouse gases underneath or adjacent to their traditional lands. Roger Marten, right, Chief of Cold Lake First Nations, and Curtis Monias, centre, Chief of Heart Lake First Nation, speak after Cenovus CEO Alex Pourbaix made an annoucement at a news conference in Calgary, Alta., Thursday, Jan. 30, 2020. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

Seven Alberta First Nations have banded together to seek answers as industry and government move on billion-dollar plans to inject and store millions of tonnes of greenhouse gases underneath or adjacent to their traditional lands.

"We don't know how pumping carbon underground will affect our lakes, our rivers 鈥 even our underground reservoirs," said councillor Michael Lameman of Beaver Lake Cree Nation, one of the members of the Treaty 6 working group.

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