New plank to reconciliation?
Toronto Star|July 27, 2024
First Nation sees green energy project as a path to a prosperous future, but there are many hurdles
MARCO CHOWN OVED
New plank to reconciliation?

Aboard the W.H. Wheeler, Captain Francis Lavalley navigates the familiar waters of Georgian Bay with his rubber boots on the wheel.

At 61 years old, he has been setting nets since before Indigenous fishing rights were respected and he had to play cat-and-mouse with the authorities.

"It's my inherent right to do what I do because of my father and forefathers. I don't live in a teepee. Fishing is the tradition I partake in," he said, gesturing through the cabin windows toward the rising ridge of the Niagara Escarpment.

Despite the plentiful Whitefish and Perch, the people of the Saugeen Ojibway Nation do not share the wealth that's evident in the million-dollar waterfront cottages that dot the shoreline. Employment opportunities are few and far between, Lavalley says, and fishing has barely provided enough for him to survive.

A proposed clean energy storage project, however, promises lasting jobs and a share in the revenues for the local First Nations - if it can ever get built.

Obtaining Indigenous consent is supposed to be a prerequisite for major energy or resource projects. But what that means in practice is muddy. As a result, infrastructure projects have become very hard to get off the ground across Canada, with a lack of First Nations consent blamed for project delays and cancellations from the Ring of Fire mines in Ontario to the Northern Gateway pipeline in B.C.

The quiet progress made on the Ontario Pumped Storage project 180 kilometres north of Toronto shows a promising path forward that goes beyond seeking Indigenous consent to forging a long-term partnership. It's an approach that avoids past practices of buying-off First Nations with one-off community projects and short-term construction jobs and instead brings them in as design consultants and equity partners.

And it could add a new plank to reconciliation, one that bridges clean energy and Indigenous prosperity.

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