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"No amount of money can compare to the richness of the river and what it gives us.” said First Nation

Canada’s Lax Kw’alaams show us how we can be saved: by loving the natural world and local living economies more than mere money and profit

Everything has a price. Everyone can be bought. We assume this principle is endemic to modern life — and that accepting it is most obvious to the impoverished. Except all over the world, people are defying it for a greater cause. That courage may be even more contagious.

It has been in full supply in north-west Canada, where an oil giant is aiming to construct one of the country’s biggest fossil fuel developments: a pipeline to ship liquified natural gas (LNG) out of British Colombia. To export it overseas via tankers, Malaysian-owned Petronas must first win approval for a multi-billion dollar terminal on the coast.

That happens to be at the mouth of Canada’s second-largest salmon river, on the traditional territory of the Lax Kw’alaams First Nation. One of the world’s longest un-dammed rivers, the Skeena abounds in the fish relied on by surrounding wildlife — and by First Nations and an entire regional economy.

Last year, following our modern principle, Petronas offered the First Nation an offer they imagined couldn’t be refused: in exchange for their support, a whopping $1.15 billion in cash. But put to a vote, the Lax Kw’alaams resoundingly said “no” — every single community member.


When Petronas made the offer, Lax Kw’alaams hereditary chief Yahaan says he believed the community — poor and with few employment prospects — might vote yes.

“Opportunities like that don’t come to your door every day,” he says. “But I give my people credit for taking that bold step. They showed their love and their passion for the land and water. No amount of money can compare to the richness of the river and what it gives us.”

They knew something even a billion dollars couldn’t persuade them to ignore: that you couldn’t pick a worse place to transform into an industrial landscape. The proposed site for the LNG plant is smack in the middle of a unique estuary, a coastal Mecca for fish: where every year hundreds of millions of young salmon, having travelled down the river after birth, feed and nurture as part of their journey to adulthood.

Responses to "Our salmon are priceless: Canada's First Nation rejects $1bn from pipeline"

  1. Praise be to god for you stony spirited people

  2. Unknown says:

    I couldn't agree with this more!

  3. Unknown says:

    May the Creator send every blessing to the Lax Kw’alaams. Ahรณ.

  4. Unknown says:

    Thank you so very much.... too many have sold out!! Your Nation is a shining light. Bless you all!!

  5. Unknown says:

    As it should be.. There's a stand that must be taken against industrialzation at any cost; whether it be salmon fisheries, or rain forests, there's a line that shouldn't be crossed...

  6. Unknown says:

    BLESSINNGS TO YOUR TRIBE. I AM GREATFUL FOR THE HONOR AND UNDERSTANDING OF WHAT IS THE MOST IMPORTANT THINGS IN THIS LIFE. THE MOTHER EARTH CHOSE OUR PEOPLE TO TAKE CARE OF HER. IT IS GOOD TO KNOW THAT YOU CHOSE HONOR OVER MONEY.

  7. Anonymous says:

    Too bad the director of UBC's fish biology and marine mammal department just disproved all theory that pipelines will effect salmon population and just proved that massive increase in seal population is the biggest threat

  8. https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=9Zz8aEAg7dI&fbclid=IwAR105nH5X4T2_0FxNa5nV_S6Xt6NhR1hk8Mv-QOW7MCKXQJ2qepoKvL5awI

  9. Unknown says:

    Save your praise........seems they may want to build their own pipeline...even though many of their members are against it.

  10. Unknown says:

    So proud of them for refusing . . . the result of a "spill' from the supposedly empty tanker, Nathan E. Stewart, in the Tanker Exclusion Zone (it should not have been there) - cost MY people (Heiltsuk - Bella Bella) their crabbing and fishing industry FOREVER two years ago.

    That Petronas money would NOT have compensated for the loss of the wild salmon - nor would it have paid for any clean-up - as we have seen with the situation in Alberta . . . and any/all effluents/poisons/spills - emptying into the ocean.

    Hiy, hiy to the Water protectors and defenders - and of the Salmon. Chi Miigwetch !!!

  11. No amount of money can replace what nature offers us freely. Big compliments to you! You're an example to the world.

  12. Unknown says:

    ❤๐Ÿ’š๐Ÿ’š๐Ÿ’š❤

  13. Anonymous says:

    Wow! ๐Ÿ’ฏ๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ‘

  14. May your brilliant brave wisdom counterbalance the sick hungry ghosts of the high tech corporations; and hold steadfast, so that we can save our Planet from more imperial human destruction. I fall on my knees and kiss the Earth for the Rising Up of the Indigenous Spirit.

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