News

Canada's energy regulator has granted a company trying to develop a second port on Hudson Bay the authorization to export ...
The western Hudson Bay is home to 57,000 beluga whales, and every summer roughly 4,000 whales make their way to the Churchill River estuary to feed, mate and give birth, according to Travel Manitoba.
Minutes after declaring the second wildfire state of emergency this summer, Premier Wab Kinew stood by his support for the ...
Manitoba is exploring the idea of building a second deepwater port on Hudson Bay as part of a plan to ship potash from Saskatchewan and petroleum products from Alberta through the Arctic Ocean.
We should make economic decisions centred on the 94 calls to action of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, not lock into ...
Manitoba Premier and Member of Parliament for Saint Boniface–Saint Vital Heather Stefanson, and Minister for PrairiesCan, Minister of Northern Affairs and Minister for CanNor Daniel Vandal announced ...
Artifacts displayed in the Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC) Gallery at the Manitoba Museum in Winnipeg, Thursday, April 17, 2025. In 1994 the HBC collection of over 10000 objects was gifted to Canada ...
Artifacts displayed in the Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC) Gallery at the Manitoba Museum in Winnipeg, Thursday, April 17, 2025. In 1994 the HBC collection of over 10,000 objects was gifted to Canada ...
An exhibit in the Hudson’s Bay Company wing of Winnipeg’s Manitoba Museum. The company, established in 1670, grew the fur trade in what later became Canada using knowledge from Indigenous ...
The bears in the Western Hudson Bay area are predicted to become one of the first groups of polar bears at risk of disappearing due to climate change. Their numbers have decreased by 30% since the ...
A beluga whale swims in Hudson Bay outside Churchill, northern Canada, on August 9, 2022. The town of Churchill, which once depended on polar bear tourism, is increasingly relying on beluga whale ...
The western Hudson Bay is home to 57,000 beluga whales, and every summer roughly 4,000 whales make their way to the Churchill River estuary to feed, mate and give birth, according to Travel Manitoba.