Canada and Alberta sign memo of understanding on pipelines, natural resources development
Prime Minister Mark Carney
Prime Minister Mark Carney said after signing a ‘Canada-Alberta’ MOU on Nov. 27, 2025 with Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, ‘we will make Canada an energy superpower, drive down our emissions and diversify our export markets. We want to build big things, and we’re building bigger and faster together.’

Thursday, November 27, 2025 @ 5:48 PM

In a move the Liberal government says will help make Canada an “energy superpower,” Ottawa and Alberta signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) that the two governments agreed would facilitate the construction and expansion of pipelines, thus enabling Western Canada to produce and sell more oil and gas (including liquefied natural gas), as well as expand the development of renewable energy, critical minerals, and other resources that the world needs. ... [read more]

Federal Court orders CN to pay grain exporter over $23M for railcar shortfall

Thursday, November 27, 2025 @ 5:39 PM

The Federal Court has ordered Canadian National Railway to pay a major grain exporter more than $23 million after CN failed to deliver 3,376 railcars during the historically large 2013–14 crop year, causing lost profits and heightened demurrage costs. ... [read more]

Law360 Canada Pulse survey 2025: AI sparks debate on legal industry's future

Thursday, November 27, 2025 @ 12:36 PM

Canadian lawyers are somewhat split on the impact artificial intelligence will have on their industry, a new Law360 Canada survey shows. According to the 2025 Lawyer Satisfaction Survey — which marks Law360 Canada’s third deep dive into the feelings and thoughts that legal professionals have about their jobs — nearly half of respondents agreed that both the pros and cons of AI are sizable. ... [read more]

Judge deplores ‘abusive & vexatious’ litigation, squandering of court resources: ‘Enough is enough’ Federal Court Justice Denis Gascon

Thursday, November 27, 2025 @ 12:34 PM

In a judgment which stands as a warning against wasting finite court resources, a Federal Court judge has terminated a self-represented plaintiff's third repetitive motion for reconsideration, stating “enough is enough — this type of recurring behaviour must be stopped for good, and with this order and reasons the bell tolls” for the plaintiff's failed efforts to challenge the validity of court orders featuring electronic typed judicial signatures, rather than the judge’s own handwritten signatures. ... [read more]

Court revives economic tort claims tied to co-founder’s wrongful dismissal suit

Wednesday, November 26, 2025 @ 2:33 PM

The B.C. Court of Appeal has revived economic tort claims brought by a co-founder ousted from an automotive-tech startup against the company, its directors and an investor. ... [read more]