“…We have a very real stake in the international community and our voices need to be heard, that this is not just an inconvenience to your bottom-line, to economies. This is a climate crisis.”
– Chief Dana Tizya-Tramm, Vuntut Gwitchin First Nation
8.4.1 Climate change impacts on Indigenous economic systems
In the above sections, we have described climate change as a cumulative impact related to the history and ongoing legacy of colonialism. In the Canadian context, this is directly linked to the imposition of an economic system on First Nations, Inuit and Métis that is predicated on our forceful removal, dispossession and criminalization. Further, Canada’s colonial practices have prevented First Nations, Inuit and Métis from participating in the Canadian economy (Yellowhead Institute, 2021), while at the same time trying to assimilate Indigenous Peoples into liberal capitalist citizens (Pasternak, 2020). This context is essential to understand the impacts of a rapidly changing climate on Indigenous economic systems, which are based on relationships that protect the well-being of people, culture and knowledge systems (Kelly and Woods, 2021).
By contrast, the continued commitment to resource development on First Nations, Inuit and Métis Lands and Waters—as evident in the 2022 Government of Canada’s Critical Minerals Strategy—alters “…the ability of Indigenous people to live with the Land in miyo wiche-towin (good relationships) or be able to have miyo pimatsowin (a good or healthy life / livelihood), through hunting, fishing or harvesting” (Jobin, 2020, p. 109). This model of development is based on extracting the maximum amount possible while mitigating the “unacceptable” risks (Curran et al., 2020). Under this model, First Nations, Inuit and Métis governments and citizens are forced to fit or integrate economic systems into non-Indigenous systems. This is actively challenged by Indigenous Peoples (Hilton, 2021; Kelly, 2017; Kuokkanen, 2011), offering coherent and feasible alternatives to the mainstream economic system (see Section 8.4.3).
Progress on participation within the mainstream economy has improved for First Nations, Inuit and Métis citizens and governments in the last decade, including through Impact and Benefit Agreements, resource sharing and progressive procurement policies. However, we struggle with the authority to control decision-making, including leasing, permitting and licensing on our Lands and Waters, without constant obstruction (Pasternak, 2020). At the core of these challenges is the foundational question of who has the authority to make economic decisions (e.g., with respect to resource development, highway construction or other infrastructure-related decisions) on Land and Waters. Kelly (2017) highlights this clearly: “[t]he challenge ahead for Indigenous People[s] contesting the foundations of capitalism lies in questioning who benefits from economic success, and who pays the cost of exploited land and resources” (p. 107). Decisions underlying the transition to a low-carbon future, including decarbonization decisions, cannot proceed without clearly considering the simultaneous goal of decolonization.
8.4.2 Indigenous participation in shaping a low-carbon future
First Nations, Inuit and Métis participate in the global economy and the transition to a low-carbon future in myriad ways. In highlighting this diversity, our intent is not to create divisions between Indigenous Peoples who are for or against development, or to the extreme, those who have “sold out” or “remained true” to their Indigenous values (Atleo, 2021). First Nations, Inuit and Métis can be both grounded in our culture and participate in the modern economy. Rather, our exploration seeks to highlight the complexity that First Nations, Inuit and Métis citizens, governments and communities need to navigate in the face of settler colonialism, neoliberal capitalism, environmental decision-making and the ongoing struggles for Indigenous self-determination. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission (2015) summarizes this well: “sustainable reconciliation involves realizing the economic potential of Indigenous [Peoples] in a fair, just and equitable manner that respects their right to self-determination” (p. 207). Therefore, addressing climate change and its connection to the low-carbon transition is, at its foundation, about self-determination.
The Toward Net Zero by 2050 Conference Findings and Report prepared by the First Nations Major Projects Coalition (2022) explored opportunities for Indigenous Peoples within the net-zero energy transition. By providing examples of critical minerals, clean power generation, carbon capture, utilization and storage, and sustainable finance, they introduced a new vision in which Indigenous nations own or are presented with the opportunity to own or enter equity ownership in net zero energy and climate-resilient infrastructure projects. There are First Nations, Inuit and Métis governments that continue to seek equity-partnerships in resource development, including both conventional oil and gas development (such as liquid nitrified gas) and the infrastructure supporting its transmission (such as pipelines). In these contexts, there are also questions on whether equity-partnerships, without addressing the underlying decision-making frameworks in federal, provincial or territorial systems, are sufficient to truly advance decolonization and support the self-determination of First Nations, Inuit and Métis governments.
There are many other examples of First Nations, Inuit and Métis working to disrupt the mainstream economic system in both formal and informal ways. Indigenous Peoples have turned to the courts through strategic litigation to reinstate our jurisdiction and authority over resource development, such as the Delgamuukw case (The Canadian Encyclopedia, 2019). When these efforts do not materialize, First Nations, Inuit and Métis may resort to other forms of resistance. Indigenous Climate Action (2022; 2021a; 2021b) released several documents as part of its Decolonizing Climate Policy work that calls out market-based mechanisms—such as carbon offsets and techno-innovations like geo-engineering—that perpetuate the colonial and capitalist systems driving the climate crisis. In whatever way First Nations, Inuit and Métis citizens and governments participate in climate action and the net-zero transition, they uphold our right to self-determination.
8.4.3 Indigenous-led regeneration of meaningful economies
Potawatomi scholar Robin Wall Kimmerer speaks to the origin of the western economic system as one of scarcity, accumulation and competition (Kimmerer, 2013). Through describing her relationship with the Bozakmin (serviceberry in Potawatomi), she presents an alternative approach to economic organization—a gift economy that “arise[s] from the abundance of gifts from the Earth, which are owned by no one and therefore shared.” Carol Anne Hilton (2021), in her book Indigenomics, describes this difference: “While the Western mainstream economy is geared toward monetary transactions as a source of exchange, the Indigenous economy is based on relationship. Indigenous economies are the original sharing economy, the original green economy, regenerative economy, collaborative economy, circular economy, impact economy, and the original gift economy. The Indigenous economy is the original social economy” (p. 91).
This foundation of relationships and the extension of justice to all beings is a key element of Indigenous economies (Trosper, 2022). Coulthard (2013) challenges us to avoid thinking that these are products of the past. Instead, through the application of Indigenous governance principles to non-traditional economic activities, we can support thriving Indigenous economies. Cash Back, a special report by the Yellowhead Institute (2021), summarizes this well:
“The multiplicity of Indigenous economies is not a future prospect: it is already here. It is in the community-regulated fisheries and the dismantled dams that usher home fish kin. They exist in community freezers of wild meat, at feasts that fill bellies and hearts with connection and care. They can be seen in the governance protocols of sugar bush camps and salmon harvests. They live in lipstick lines, airlines, and moccasin making micro-enterprises. They are the multi-billion-dollar rental housing developments, tobacco trade, and lumber shops. They are in defund police movements, harm reduction initiatives, friendship centre childcares. At their core, what makes them Indigenous economies is that they do not exploit that which they depend upon to live, including people. And they protect a world that is not prepared to value people’s time, homelands, and harvests solely in cash” (p. 8).
Indigenous Peoples face challenges in the expressions of our economies both from a rapidly changing climate and from the structural and ongoing legacy of colonization. Making space for thriving Indigenous economies—and our basis in an ethic of relationality, reciprocity and responsibility—can offer important insights for efforts to advance both decolonization and decarbonization, while opening space for Indigenous-led climate action.