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July 13, 2026

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The Free Press Education Subject Social Studies Grade 10: Geographic Issues of the 21st Century
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Social Studies Grade 10: Geographic Issues of the 21st Century

Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.

Matt Goerzen/The Brandon Sun files
                                Manitoba Hydro is still betting on natural gas generating stations — like this one in Brandon — instead of considering battery storage solutions for peak energy needs.

If it works in Ontario, why not in Manitoba?

James Wilt 5 minute read Preview

If it works in Ontario, why not in Manitoba?

James Wilt 5 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Grid-scale battery storage has fundamentally changed the global energy landscape — and Manitoba needs to get on board.

Battery systems store large amounts of excess electricity for when it’s most needed. While they can be charged from any generation source, they are especially beneficial for integrating wind and solar power, which vary with weather and time of day. Batteries allow electrical grids to meet the need for firm, dispatchable and affordable capacity using renewable energy, rather than relying on coal, nuclear and fossil gas. They also provide numerous other benefits, including reducing overloading of transmission infrastructure and helping to regulate the grid’s frequency and voltage.

Average costs for grid-scale batteries plummeted by more than half between 2023 and 2025 and installations have skyrocketed in China, the U.S., Australia and Europe. Texas now has 16,500 megawatts (MW) of battery storage, while California has 15,200 MW. Closer to home, Ontario recently awarded 640 MW of contracts to three battery storage projects in a competitive auction, with batteries beating out fossil gas-fired power plants on cost every time. One of these projects will be built near Dryden, only four hours east of Winnipeg.

Each battery system will provide eight hours of capacity but will cost considerably less than Ontario’s previous battery procurements, which provide only four hours of capacity. With this latest auction, Ontario has now secured 3,600 MW of battery storage capacity, including the operational Oneida (250 MW), Hagersville (300 MW) and Napanee (250 MW) projects. Almost all have significant Indigenous participation, with the latest procurements boasting 50 per cent First Nations ownership.

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2:00 AM CDT
A conceptual illustration of a statue of Samuel de Champlain, proposed to be installed at a city park in Orillia, Ont., is shown in this undated handout image. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout - City of Orillia (Mandatory Credit)

Quebec municipalities express interest in Samuel de Champlain statue from Ontario

Erika Morris, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview

Quebec municipalities express interest in Samuel de Champlain statue from Ontario

Erika Morris, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Updated: 9:23 AM CDT

Some Quebec municipalities and organizations are offering to take a controversial statue of Samuel de Champlain from an Ontario city in Simcoe County.

The nearly four-metre-tall bronze monument of the 17th century explorer and founder of Quebec City was removed from a park in Orillia, Ont., and placed in storage in 2017 following debate over its colonial imagery.

Orillia Mayor Don McIsaac said a wave of offers poured in after the city recently raised the possibility of melting the statue down.

“They say it's racist, it's not our history, it is an insult to Indigenous peoples,” McIsaac said in an interview about the controversy over the statue.

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Updated: 9:23 AM CDT
Russell Wangersky / Free Press
                                Winnipeg’s tree canopy is getting a financial respite.

Mayor’s flip-flop a welcome effect of campaign

Editorial 4 minute read Preview

Mayor’s flip-flop a welcome effect of campaign

Editorial 4 minute read Saturday, Jul. 11, 2026

Trees may not have a vote, but they are poised to become among the biggest winners from this fall’s municipal elections in Winnipeg.

At the start of the week, things didn’t look good for Winnipeg’s tree population. City staff issued a report recommending city council reduce the 2026 urban forest renewal program and divert the money to improvements to the Assiniboine Park Conservancy’s Journey to Churchill exhibition.

The recommendation was triggered by a directive from the provincial government to take the same sum of money out of a strategic infrastructure fund it provides to the city to support the conservancy exhibit. This left the city with a $1.2-million hole in its infrastructure program. Staff felt the money could come from the tree-planting budget.

Mayor Scott Gillingham — who is running for re-election this fall — initially endorsed the recommendation when it was put before the executive policy committee (which he chairs) earlier this week. Seventy-two hours later, however, Gillingham was having second thoughts.

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Saturday, Jul. 11, 2026

Is Venezuela better off since the U.S. took charge?

Peter McKenna 5 minute read Saturday, Jul. 11, 2026

As if the situation wasn’t bad enough for the Venezuelan people, they now have to contend with the aftermath of two devastating earthquakes.

In any event, it’s been roughly six months since the U.S. intervened militarily in Venezuela and illegally kidnapped then-President Nicolás Maduro. Where does the beleaguered country stand today?

If you were to listen to U.S. President Donald Trump, the Venezuelan people are now some of the happiest on the planet. “The people are very happy. They’re dancing in the streets because they have a lot of money coming in through the big oil companies that are all moving in,” he said unashamedly.

Have the lives and well-being of most Venezuelans substantially improved? Or, is it just more of the same under a different leader (Delcy Rodríguez) — and, more importantly, a Venezuela under American tutelage?

BROOK JONES / FREE PRESS
                                Jaunie Young, 28, refills a plastic bottle of water at a City of Winnipeg hydration station on Princess Street, in Winnipeg where temperatures are expected to reach 37 degrees Celsius this weekend.

Homeless face even more peril in high heat after drug use crackdown, advocates say

Tiago Resko 5 minute read Preview

Homeless face even more peril in high heat after drug use crackdown, advocates say

Tiago Resko 5 minute read Friday, Jul. 10, 2026

Advocates say the recent police crackdown on open drug use on Winnipeg streets has driven members of the homeless community into the shadows and will put them at risk during the heatwave this week.

“That was a really ugly week and a half in the city’s history. The results have been devastating,” said Kate Sjoberg, executive director of Resource Assistance for Youth, who has been highly critical of the 10-day drug sweep in which more than 100 people were detained for drug use or trafficking.

She said the crackdown has made it harder for some homeless people to receive help because they’ve moved to less visible areas to avoid police.

Environment Canada issued a special weather statement for southern Manitoba that warns of intense heat that will last into next week. It’s expected to reach up to 45 degrees Celsius on Sunday, when the humidity is factored in.

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Friday, Jul. 10, 2026
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Though Winnipeg still has around 190,000 elm trees, in the last five decades the city has removed 300,000.

When it comes to our city’s tree canopy, Winnipeggers stand tall

By Melissa Martin 6 minute read Preview

When it comes to our city’s tree canopy, Winnipeggers stand tall

By Melissa Martin 6 minute read Friday, Jul. 10, 2026

Summer came to Winnipeg a little late, and a whole lot wet, but at least it finally came. It felt as if, in the last week or so, the rain finally took a backseat to the sun and heat, and the brief but blissful days of a Manitoba summer were truly here to stay. Not a moment too soon, either: just in time for Folk Fest this weekend, and the Fringe Fest after that.

To make the most of the pleasant weather, I spent most recent afternoons and evenings working on my balcony on a quiet street in Osborne Village, watching the red squirrels careening through the trees. They’ve been busy, rushing to replenish their stashes. The best perk of a treetop-level balcony is watching them at work, flying through the branches.

Every year, there are a little fewer such wonderlands for them to work and play.

On the corner across from my apartment, the big old elm that used to stand there is gone, cut down four years ago after it was marked with the “red dot of death,” the splash of paint that earmarked it for removal. I remember watching city crews bring it down. Chainsaws whined, and then the sun suddenly glared more more harshly through my windows.

Read
Friday, Jul. 10, 2026
TIM SMITH / THE BRANDON SUN FILES
                                Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew

Pipeline could be Kinew’s legacy or a slick disappointment

Dan Lett 5 minute read Preview

Pipeline could be Kinew’s legacy or a slick disappointment

Dan Lett 5 minute read Friday, Jul. 10, 2026

Is Wab Kinew poised to become Manitoba’s Pipeline King?

Developments on several fronts are giving Manitoba’s premier the opportunity to make oil and gas pipelines not only the cornerstone of his current economic policy, but also the lasting legacy from his time governing the province.

On the one hand, Prime Minister Mark Carney has promised significant sums of federal money to develop the Port of Churchill into the major shipping hub it has always aspired to be. The catch is that Manitoba must come up with a firm plan to ship liquefied natural gas (LNG) through the port by 2030, a goal that almost certainly requires a pipeline.

At the same time, Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe and, most recently, Ontario Premier Doug Ford are signing deals to build LNG pipelines that connect western oil fields to major shipping hubs in eastern Canada.

Read
Friday, Jul. 10, 2026
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS FILES
                                The 113-year-old Fort Garry Hotel was put up for sale in May and could sell for as much as $70 million.

Fort Garry Hotel on Métis federation’s radar

Scott Billeck 4 minute read Preview

Fort Garry Hotel on Métis federation’s radar

Scott Billeck 4 minute read Friday, Jul. 10, 2026

One of Winnipeg’s most iconic buildings, the Fort Garry Hotel on Broadway, is next on the Manitoba Métis Federation’s list of acquisitions.

“We are not done with our commitment to investing in Winnipeg’s downtown,” president David Chartrand said Friday, the same day the federation announced it has purchased the former National Research Council property on Ellice Avenue downtown.

“One potential new acquisition we’re considering, if the price is right and the partnership is positive, is the Fort Garry Hotel. It is an iconic part of Winnipeg’s history and its future, just like the Red River Métis,” Chartrand said.

The 113-year-old hotel was co-listed for sale in May by real estate brokerage firms Avison Young and Cushman & Wakefield Winnipeg, but doesn’t have a list price.

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Friday, Jul. 10, 2026
People ride in an electric tricycle equipped with a solar panel in Havana, Cuba, Friday, July 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa)

Solar-powered tricycles help Cubans navigate fuel shortages and blackouts

Andrea Rodríguez, The Associated Press 4 minute read Preview

Solar-powered tricycles help Cubans navigate fuel shortages and blackouts

Andrea Rodríguez, The Associated Press 4 minute read Saturday, Jul. 11, 2026

HAVANA (AP) — Cuba’s iconic vintage cars have all but disappeared and in their place, small electric tricycles — most of them made in China — have become the primary means of transportation for hundreds of thousands of Cubans grappling with a prolonged fuel crisis.

These are no ordinary electric tricycles — many Cubans have outfitted them with solar panels, allowing the vehicles to recharge without relying on the island nation's strained power grid.

The three-wheelers are a far cry from the old-timers that only a year ago cruised the streets spewing clouds of black smoke.

“This is how people get around now,” said 40-year-old Liecer de la Cruz, who owns one of these vehicles.

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Saturday, Jul. 11, 2026
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Wind turbines in southern Manitoba.

Westman residents fear power project’s wind turbines will sully their idyllic landscape

Julia-Simone Rutgers 16 minute read Preview

Westman residents fear power project’s wind turbines will sully their idyllic landscape

Julia-Simone Rutgers 16 minute read Friday, Jul. 10, 2026

POLONIA — Leonard Kaspick can list just about every household in the valley.

“There’s someone living right across the northeast, someone living behind here, about a quarter mile there’s a house there, then a half mile there’s another house there, I’m here, and then on top of the hill there’s someone else there,” he says, standing in the heart of the hamlet — a community hall just off the main drag.

Besides the hall and the smattering of homes, there’s a historic (though out-of-commission) church next door and a single general store further down the road.

“There’s less people here now than there was in 1885,” Kaspick, 83, jokes as he wraps up a condensed history of the western-Manitoba community.

Read
Friday, Jul. 10, 2026
Ruth Bonneville / Free Press
                                The former National Research Council building, on Ellice Avenue and the end of Vaughan Street, will house nurse training, research labs and, the federation hopes, an MRI machine.

MMF buys long-vacant federal lab

Scott Billeck 5 minute read Preview

MMF buys long-vacant federal lab

Scott Billeck 5 minute read Friday, Jul. 10, 2026

The Manitoba Métis Federation has taken another major step in its effort to help revitalize downtown Winnipeg by acquiring the former National Research Council property on Ellice Avenue.

The federation has scheduled a news conference today to announce it has purchased the office tower, laboratory and parking lot at 435-445 Ellice Ave. The acquisition expands its downtown footprint to more than one million square feet of owned property and will eventually house about 70 per cent of its 1,300 employees.

The sale ends a years-long legal dispute between the federation and the research council. The federation had sued the federal agency after an earlier agreement to purchase the property collapsed in 2020.

“Everybody’s happy, they’re happy, we’re happy. And now we just got to start the transition of our plan,” federation president David Chartrand told the Free Press Thursday.

Read
Friday, Jul. 10, 2026
In this photo released by Xinhua News Agency, a drone photo shows the successful capture of the returned first stage of Long March-10B carrier rocket on a seaborne platform via a net-capture system near Wenchang in southern China's Hainan province on Friday, July 10, 2026. (Xing Guangli/Xinhua News Agency via AP)

China takes a page from SpaceX and recaptures the first stage of a rocket to reuse it

The Associated Press 3 minute read Preview

China takes a page from SpaceX and recaptures the first stage of a rocket to reuse it

The Associated Press 3 minute read Saturday, Jul. 11, 2026

BEIJING (AP) — China successfully recaptured the first stage of a rocket after a launch on Friday in a breakthrough for the country's space program, state media said.

The first stage of a Long March-10B rocket separated from the second stage after liftoff and returned to a platform in the sea, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

It was the first time China recovered the first stage of a rocket. America's SpaceX has been doing so for several years to drive down launch costs by reusing the booster that helps lift the satellites or whatever the rocket is carrying into space.

Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin have been recovering their rockets since 2015, saving vast amounts of money by recycling them rather than ditching them after liftoff. SpaceX leads the pack with more than 600 landings of its first-stage Falcon boosters, steering them to ocean barges as well as landing zones near the launch pads. Just this week, SpaceX launched a booster for the 36th time, a new record.

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Saturday, Jul. 11, 2026
Trainee pipe fitters learn their trade at a union facility in Calgary, Friday, May 15, 2026.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

FIFA World Cup, youth job gains gave the labour market a lift in June

Craig Lord, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview

FIFA World Cup, youth job gains gave the labour market a lift in June

Craig Lord, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Saturday, Jul. 11, 2026

OTTAWA - The FIFA World Cup and a better summer jobs market for young workers appeared to drive steady gains in Canada's labour market last month.

Employers added 18,000 jobs in June, Statistics Canada said Friday, mostly in part-time and private sector work.

That pushed the unemployment rate down a tenth of a point to 6.5 per cent, back to where it stood in January.

Employment gains narrowly topped economists’ expectations heading into the release but mark a slowdown from the 88,000 jobs added in May.

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Saturday, Jul. 11, 2026
The Canadian Press files
                                Winnipeg saw an increase in the average rent prices of apartments of 0.9 per cent to $1,678 according to a July 2026 Rentals.ca report, which shows June data.

Apartment rents continue to climb in Manitoba

Free Press staff 2 minute read Preview

Apartment rents continue to climb in Manitoba

Free Press staff 2 minute read Friday, Jul. 10, 2026

Winnipeg saw a marginal increase — 0.9 per cent — to $1,678, according to a July 2026 Rentals.ca report, which shows June data.

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Friday, Jul. 10, 2026

Manitoba needs clean, publicly owned data centres

Hersh Seth 5 minute read Friday, Jul. 10, 2026

Some might disagree, but I believe Winnipeg needs an AI data centre.

In this photo released by Xinhua News Agency, firefighters work at the scene of a footwear factory fire in Jiangtou village, Chendai township of Jinjiang city, southeastern China's Fujian province, on Thursday, July 9, 2026. (Zhou Yi/Xinhua News Agency via AP)

A shoe factory fire that killed 28 highlights China’s persisting worker safety risks

The Associated Press 3 minute read Preview

A shoe factory fire that killed 28 highlights China’s persisting worker safety risks

The Associated Press 3 minute read Friday, Jul. 10, 2026

BEIJING (AP) — Authorities were investigating a blaze at a shoe factory in southeastern China’s Fujian province that killed 28 people, raising renewed concern over worker safety.

The state-run Xinhua News Agency said Friday that a search had ended while an investigation was underway into the cause of the fire Thursday that gutted the Fujian Huiteng factory in Jinjiang, a manufacturing hub for sports shoes.

According to product listings on online sales and import platforms, Fujian Huiteng makes shoes for both Chinese and foreign brands.

Local media footage showed people trapped on the roof of the five-floor building, enveloped in thick black smoke, while the spray from fire truck hoses fell short of flames showing through windows on its upper floors. Xinhua said the factory’s owner and managers were arrested and the company’s accounts were frozen.

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Friday, Jul. 10, 2026
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS FILES
                                The tree canopy looking towards Osborne Village, as seen from the Woodsworth Building, in Winnipeg on Wednesday, Aug. 19, 2020. For Gabrielle Piche. Winnipeg Free Press 2020.

Mayor flip-flops on cutting tree-planting budget after intense criticism

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Preview

Mayor flip-flops on cutting tree-planting budget after intense criticism

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Thursday, Jul. 9, 2026

Public opposition has prompted Mayor Scott Gillingham to change his mind about chopping $1.2 million from the city’s tree-planting program.

Read
Thursday, Jul. 9, 2026
An aerial view of Kinder Morgan's Trans Mountain marine terminal filling an oil tanker in Burnaby, B.C., is shown on Tuesday, May 29, 2018. THE CANADIAN PRESS Jonathan Hayward

B.C. First Nation challenges dredging plan to accommodate larger tankers in Vancouver

The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview

B.C. First Nation challenges dredging plan to accommodate larger tankers in Vancouver

The Canadian Press 3 minute read Friday, Jul. 10, 2026

NORTH VANCOUVER - A British Columbia First Nation says it has launched a legal challenge against a plan by the Vancouver Fraser Port Authority to dredge Burrard Inlet to make room for oil tankers with larger loads to operate.

In a release, the Tsleil-Waututh Nation says it has filed for a judicial review, seeking to overturn the permits issued by the port authority to allow for the dredging to take place.

The plan calls for the dredging along northern and southern edges of the navigation channel in Vancouver's Burrard Inlet underneath the Second Narrows bridge, starting in September.

The Tsleil-Waututh Nation says while it understands the project's importance for Canada's trade needs, the approval process was "rushed" and did not address any of its concerns about the impacts of the operation — including the "risks of more fully laden oil tankers traversing the inlet."

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Friday, Jul. 10, 2026
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS FILES
                                Pictured, Winkler City Hall. The Manitoba municipality, about 115 kilometres southwest of Winnipeg, is the latest to grapple with cybersecurity incidents leaving phone and payment systems unavailable as the city works to resolve the issue.

City of Winkler hit by cyberattack

Zoe Pierce 4 minute read Preview

City of Winkler hit by cyberattack

Zoe Pierce 4 minute read Thursday, Jul. 9, 2026

Winkler has become the latest Manitoba municipality to grapple with cybersecurity incidents.

On Tuesday morning, the city’s cybersecurity protection systems detected an incident, prompting officials to isolate affected systems and take certain municipal systems and services offline as a precaution while the situation is assessed.

Phone and payment systems are unavailable as the city, about 115 kilometres southwest of Winnipeg, works to resolve the issue.

“We’re fortunate that we have a very good IT team, and security has always been a significant investment for us,” Winkler Mayor Henry Siemens said. “So we were maybe better prepared than others potentially would have been because of the strength of our staff and the strength of our security protocols.”

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Thursday, Jul. 9, 2026
Meta, the tech giant behind Facebook and Instagram, says it's building a new AI date centre in Sturgeon County, Alta. The facility, shown in this rendered image, will be a one-gigawatt, nearly 270,000-square-metre data centre powered by a natural gas-fired plant. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout - Sturgeon Data Centre (Mandatory Credit)

Keeping cool: How Meta plans to cut down on water use at its Alberta data centre

Lauren Krugel, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview

Keeping cool: How Meta plans to cut down on water use at its Alberta data centre

Lauren Krugel, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Friday, Jul. 10, 2026

CALGARY - A Meta Platforms Inc. executive garnered applause at a news conference this week after he boasted that a gargantuan data centre planned for north of Edmonton would use less water annually than a typical Alberta golf course.

The tech behemoth was announcing a $13-billion-plus investment in a complex the size of 33 Canadian Football League fields. It will be powered by a new natural gas plant that could eventually produce more electricity than what the City of Edmonton uses.

The data centre in Sturgeon County, like other hyperscale proposals in Canada, is to use what's known as a closed-loop cooling system to keep servers from overheating. That differs from an evaporative cooling system, which requires enormous amounts of cool water that is not reused.

Gary Demasi, vice-president of data centre strategy and development at Meta, told a news conference Wednesday that no water will be needed for regular cooling operations.

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Friday, Jul. 10, 2026
Secretary of State for Sport Adam van Koeverden speaks during a news conference in Vancouver, on Friday, May 1, 2026. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ethan Cairns

Canada objects to Olympics loosening restrictions on Russia athletes amid Ukraine war

Dylan Robertson, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview

Canada objects to Olympics loosening restrictions on Russia athletes amid Ukraine war

Dylan Robertson, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Friday, Jul. 10, 2026

OTTAWA - Canada objected on Thursday to the International Olympic Committee loosening its suspension on Russian athletes.

The move, announced Tuesday, would apply to the 2028 games in Los Angeles, opening the door for Russian athletes to compete, but the IOC says it will decide later if they could do it with the Russian flag and anthem.

"I am appalled by the IOC’s decision," wrote Secretary of State for sport Adam van Koeverden, a former Olympian.

"The countries of Russia and Belarus should not be represented in international sports competitions while Russia's illegal and unjustifiable full-scale invasion against Ukraine continues," he wrote.

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Friday, Jul. 10, 2026
Passengers arrive at Pearson Airport in Mississauga, Ont., Tuesday, March 14, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young

Court rules confidentiality clause for air travel complaints violates Charter

Sammy Hudes and Christopher Reynolds, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview

Court rules confidentiality clause for air travel complaints violates Charter

Sammy Hudes and Christopher Reynolds, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Friday, Jul. 10, 2026

An Ontario Superior Court judge has struck down a rule that blocks travellers from sharing the outcome of passenger complaints made to the country’s transport regulator.

The ruling Wednesday found that federal regulations barring travellers from disclosing the result of complaints on matters ranging from refunds to accessibility violate Canadians' Charter right to freedom of expression.

The Canadian Transportation Agency's complaint resolution process, in place since 2023, had prevented consumers and airlines from publicly disclosing such information unless both parties agreed to waive confidentiality.

Canada’s biggest airlines, including Air Canada, WestJet, Air Transat, Jazz Aviation and the industry group that represents them, had opposed the court challenge.

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Friday, Jul. 10, 2026
A Meta logo is shown on a video screen at LlamaCon 2025, an AI developer conference, in Menlo Park, Calif., Tuesday, April 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

Meta to build $13B data centre north of Edmonton, its first in Canada

Lauren Krugel, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview

Meta to build $13B data centre north of Edmonton, its first in Canada

Lauren Krugel, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Thursday, Jul. 9, 2026

CALGARY - The tech behemoth behind Facebook and Instagram says it plans to make Alberta home to its first artificial intelligence data centre in Canada and its largest outside the United States.

Meta announced Wednesday that the $13-billion-plus project is to be built in Sturgeon County, in the Industrial Heartland region north of Edmonton.

The one-gigawatt, nearly 270,000-square-metre data centre would be powered by a natural gas-fired plant to be built by a consortium that includes Calgary-based Pembina Pipeline Ltd.

It takes about 1.4 gigawatts to power Edmonton, and the proposed data centre campus could fit 33 Canadian Football League fields.

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Thursday, Jul. 9, 2026
The area of Olds, Alta., where Synapse Real Estate Corp. is planning a data centre complex with 1.4 gigawatts of natural gas-fired power generation is shown on Thursday, June 4, 2026. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Lauren Krugel

Data centre capacity could soar to 20 GW in planned projects: government document

Anja Karadeglija, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Preview

Data centre capacity could soar to 20 GW in planned projects: government document

Anja Karadeglija, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Thursday, Jul. 9, 2026

OTTAWA - A document prepared for the federal artificial intelligence minister to use when pitching international investors on Canada’s AI ecosystem identifies a massive proposed increase in Canada’s data centre capacity.

But spokespeople for the government pushed back strongly on the figure, saying it is not a projection of the capacity Canada expects to build, and the total capacity will be much less.

It says Canada currently has about 337 megawatts of AI data centre capacity, and there are more than 20 gigawatts — or 20,000 megawatts — in projects that are "under planning or development."

The number was included in a presentation prepared by a government department for Artificial Intelligence Minister Evan Solomon to use with international investors. It was obtained by The Canadian Press through access-to-information.

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Thursday, Jul. 9, 2026
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