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N.L. and federal governments, Innu Nation reach agreement, injunction will be dropped

The Innu Nation, the government of Newfoundland and Labrador and the federal government have reached an agreement that will provide for consultation with the Innu Nation on the financial restructuring of the Lower Churchill projects, said the three parties in a joint statement.

3 parties asked judge to defer injunction ruling last week

Three people standing in front of court house
Innu Nation Grand Chief Etienne Rich, Deputy Grand Chief Mary Ann Nui and Chief Eugene Hart stand outside Newfoundland and Labrador Supreme Court in St. John's in August. (Submitted by Greg Locke)

The Innu Nation, the government of Newfoundland and Labrador and the federal government have reached an agreement that will provide for consultation with the Innu Nation on the financial restructuring of the Lower Churchill projects, said the three parties in a joint statement Wednesday evening.

As part of the agreement, the InnuNation has agreed to discontinue underlying litigation and withdraw its injunctionapplication against the $5.2-billion agreement-in-principleMuskrat Falls rate mitigation deal.

The Innu Nation announced its intention to sue in August, saying the provincial and federal governments failed in their duty to consult the Innu Nation on the deal.

In 2008, the Innu Nation made an agreement with Nalcor that would give it a percentage of the profits from the Lower Churchill projects. The new mitigation deal could threaten the financial benefits the Innu Nation would receive as a part of its deal with Nalcor, saidInnu Nation Grand Chief Etienne Rich.

"When the Newfoundland and Labrador government talks about collaboration there is no collaboration, because this is where we end up," Richtold reporters outside the St. John's courthouse in mid-September, during the litigation process.

The new joint agreement comes after all three parties asked Judge Alexander MacDonald to defer a decision on the injunction on Friday.

When the Muskrat Falls mitigation deal was announced in July, government officials said they hoped to finalize the deal by the end of September. On Monday, the Department of Industry, Energy and Technology released a statement that said that deadline would likely not be met.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Mark Quinn