Cease and desist. That’s the demand from the Sturgeon Lake Cree Nation in an open letter to Alberta Premier Danielle Smith. “We just want to make sure that we were heard when it comes to this type of thing.
Sturgeon Lake Cree Nation is raising concerns about a proposed AI data centre in their traditional territory. Celebrity investor Kevin O'Leary plans to fund and develop the "world’s largest" AI data centre in the Municipal District of Greenview near Grande Prairie.
Venture capitalist Kevin O’Leary has plans for a massive AI data centre project in northern Alberta that he calls Wonder Valley. But that ambitious project is just the tip of what might come.
Calling Mar-a-Lago the “new Davos,” Canadian investor Kevin O’Leary defended the “successful” weekend trip he and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith made to hang out with incoming president Donald Trump.
Canada’s First Nation in Sturgeon Lake is opposing a data center build in Alberta in an open letter to the Alberta premier Danielle Smith. The Municipal District of Greenview and O’Leary Ventures announced plans to build a data center, natural gas plant, and geothermal project in the Greenview Industrial Gateway (GIG) in December last year.
An early glitch in Alberta’s plan to reach the global stage in the artificial intelligence industry has the NDP again deriding the government’s approach to Indigenous consultation.
Shark Tank star and businessman Kevin O’Leary said he helped Alberta Premier Danielle Smith achieve something “no other Canadian politician” currently has with President-elect Donald Trump, which is vital amid negotiating disagreements between Canada and the United States.
Sturgeon Lake Cree Nation's chief has raised concerns over whether Alberta's premier has given permits to Kevin O'Leary for gas or water access to plan for the proposed project.
The premier of Canada’s oil-rich province of Alberta says she would not support any move to stop energy shipments to the United States as a way to combat U.S.
Sun political columnist Brian Lilley speaks with Kevin O’Leary who just spent time with Alberta Premier Danielle Smith at Florida’s Mar-a-Lago with president-elect Donald Trump. O’Leary said you have to separate the noise from the signal when speaking with Trump.
Trudeau blasted Smith, reminding her that the federal government bought the Trans Mountain pipeline, which now has a C$34.5 billion price tag, giving Alberta its only route to export oil from Canada’s Pacific coast.
Canada’s survival faces challenges not only from the U.S., but from within: fraying internal alliances and elite detachment from economic and demographic realities.