Mikisew Cree chief links cancer concerns to oilsands pollution in meeting with Carney

The chief of a Cree First Nation downstream from Alberta’s oilsands told Prime Minister Mark Carney he will not support new fast-tracked fossil fuel projects until Ottawa addresses toxic water and elevated cancer rates in his community.

Carl Meyer reports for The Narwhal.


In short:

  • Chief Billy-Joe Tuccaro of Mikisew Cree First Nation said residents face months-long delays for cancer treatment and suspects local pollution worsens illnesses.
  • The community sits north of oilsands tailings ponds shown to leak into groundwater; a 2014 report linked higher cancer rates to employment in the oilsands and consumption of local fish and game.
  • Tuccaro criticized the federal Building Canada Act, which fast-tracks “national interest” projects without guaranteeing Indigenous consent, and invited Carney to visit Fort Chipewyan.

Key quote:

“You want my consent? You improve my people’s health.”

— Chief Billy-Joe Tuccaro, Mikisew Cree First Nation

Why this matters:

Communities downstream from the Alberta oilsands live amid vast tailings ponds that store toxic byproducts of oil extraction. Peer-reviewed studies have documented leaks into groundwater, raising fears about cancer clusters and contamination of traditional food sources like fish and game. Health access is also limited: Residents often travel long distances for care, meaning diagnoses come late and outcomes worsen. As Canada pushes carbon-capture projects to frame oilsands oil as “decarbonized,” local First Nations warn that air and water pollution remain even if emissions drop. Their stance highlights a broader debate over what counts as clean energy — and whether fast-tracked projects can proceed without fully addressing Indigenous health and environmental risks.

Related: Canada funds long-awaited health study for Indigenous communities downstream of oilsands

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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