
TORONTO, ON – November 26, 2024 – Indigenous Clean Energy (ICE) is proud to announce the 2024 ICE Gathering, presented in partnership with The Globe and Mail, from November 27 to 29, 2024, at the Fairmont Royal York in Toronto.
OTTAWA, ON, September 11, 2024 – Indigenous Clean Energy (ICE) is excited to announce the second on-site of its flagship initiative, the 20/20 Catalysts Program. Taking place at the Hôtel-Musée Premières Nations in Wendake, QC, from September 15 to 20, this session will bring together 18 Indigenous leaders (Catalysts) as they continue their hands-on clean energy training.
VANCOUVER, BC / Unceded xʷməθkʷəy̓əm, Sḵwx̱wú7mesh and səlilwətaɬ territories, 27 JUNE 2024 — A scoping paper released today explores a new approach to address a concern Indigenous Peoples have been raising for decades: poor quality homes are causing severe health impacts in Indigenous communities across Canada.
OTTAWA, ON, June 12, 2024 – Indigenous Clean Energy (ICE) is excited to announce the first on-site intensive session of its flagship clean energy capacity-building program, 20/20 Catalysts. The program welcomes its seventh cohort, comprised of 19 Indigenous individuals who are driving transformative change within their communities.
OTTAWA, ON. June 3, 2024 – Indigenous Clean Energy (ICE) and the Bringing It Home initiative are excited to announce the opening of applications for the second cohort of the Project Accelerator program.
OTTAWA, ON, January 31, 2024 — Program participants from 16 Indigenous communities across Canada are coming together in Wakefield, QC, for the Project Accelerator program’s second and final on-site intensive training session.
The Pointer — Amid the swirl of intensifying climate disasters, surging renewable potential and the mounting economic inaction, a question looms: will Mark Carney’s legacy be the of a clean energy champion, or the leader who missed our last best chance?
CBC — In remote northern communities, diesel is king. But breakthrough solar energy projects are underway that could begin to reduce fossil fuel reliance.
CBC — When people in B.C.’s Kootenay region saw electric vehicles and chargers multiplying in urban communities on the coast, they realized they were missing out on potential visitors and customers.
National Observer — In a big step toward a sustainable future, First Nations and Inuit communities across Canada will get federal funding to transition from diesel to clean energy solutions.
Le Devoir—Dans les grands projets éoliens qui verront le jour au Québec d’ici 2035, les Autochtones jouent un nouveau rôle : celui d’actionnaires, aux côtés des MRC et d’Hydro-Québec. Un « modèle positif » pour le reste du pays, croit James Jenkins, le directeur général d’Indigenous Clean Energy.
The Globe and Mail — Last year, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government put in place a refundable investment tax credit (ITC) to help cover up to 30 per cent of the capital costs of investments by private companies in non-emitting power sources such as wind, solar, energy storage and small modular nuclear reactors.
For media inquiries, please contact:
Lina Forero, Senior Communications Manager
lforero@indigenouscleanenergy.com